Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Is a High x School Education Worthwhile? By ROY CLIFT (Wasatch high school Heber City) Teacher Nell Madsen One of the greatest problems facing the American people Is the educa tion of the youth of America Only five million or slightly more than half of the total population between the ages of 14 and 18 who should be The In high school are attending percentage of attendance in the larger cities 67 per cent is more than twice that of the rural districts 31 per cent What is happening to this other half of America's youth who are not being educated as they should be? Some few are employed In the civilian conservation corps in the navy on the farm etc but the vast majority of those not attending school are not regularly employed It is estimated that in 1932 and 1933 there were two hundred fifty thousand young people on the road as tramps The education of our youth is a wise investment for the people as a Whole rather than a great expense with no return Of each dollar of public money 17 cents Is spent for education Of this 17 cents 12 cents goes to elementary schools three cents to high schools and two cents to colleges This ts an expenditure of approximately $67 per student In and is a the school year reduction of $23 dollars per student The from the $90 spent m total cost of education in the United dolbillion half a States is two and lars This is about equal to the amount spent for relief and only a small part of the total amount spent for crime which is estimated to cost between one and 18 billion dollars annually The great majority of our criminals come from Jhe poorer classes of people especially those who live in the slum districts of the city Education would give these people a better chance to make a living and in this way help to improve these slum districts and their resulting bad environment Iq high school a student learns to be more companionable and acquires the art of living with other people A survey of nine hundred twenty-ongraduates of high schools m Ohio revealed that 44 per cent have their own homes and are substantial citizens and leaders in their respective communities Only one out of 38 was divorced whereas the general rate in the United States is one out of every six None were paupers or m poverty and there was a reduced proportion of criminals One of the greatest values of education is the preparation it gives for an intelligent use of leisure time It is only reasonable to believe that in the near future we shall have a working day only three hours Admitting this to be the case and adding to this amount an average of eight hours for sleep and two hours for eating we have left eleven hours of leisure time every day What is to be done with this leisure time’ One answer is hobbies Education helps the young people to choose a hobby which is worth while and which will have a beneficial effect on the hobby rider Through hobbies a student Jeam to appreciate fner things art good literature etc If he has no acquaintance with the finer things he usually resorts to the coarser forms of entertainment becomes listless and makes an undesirable citizen seldom trying to better himself or his surroundings He may even degrade himself by his selection of associates and entertainments to the extent of be coming a criminal Thus iLcan easily be seen that unless air the youth of America are brought into the schools and given a reasonable amount of education they will in future years become a very serious problem to the nation and the public Their standards of living will be low there Will probably be a great amount of crime among them and the public will be forced to care for many because they cannot find jobs in an era of highly skilled workers Also their children will probably be as bad as the parents because of the undesirable environment they will be subjected to and because they will imitate the lack of ambition and initiative exhibited by their parents An adequate education for all the youth of America should change this and prevent such an undesirable situation from arising m the future 1933-19- 1929-193- 0 e -- ) r The Many Uses of Wood By ELEANOR SULLIVAN Payson Senior High School Teacher Ray B West Jr Have you ever stopped while looking at a tree and just thought of the many uses we have for wood? Wood ahares with iron the honor of being one of tha most useful products that nature has provided for man In early times it was the one great servant of the human race Before coal was known it was the only fuel and before iron was known it served man for almost every purpose of life For ages wood has been the great building material Man has lived in wooden houses crossed the streams on wooden bridges inclosed his fields with wooden fences used wood for furniture in his homes the handles of his tools and for various other purposes The railroad system has furnished another use for wood in the building of some passenger cars freight cars and the innumerable ties on W'hich the rails are fastened The telegraph pole has become another great consumer of the forest product While steel has lately taken its place in competing with wood new duties have arisen which are rapidly filling these places The common lead pencil seems a thing of small importance yet it has made serious destruction in our cedar groves The bet wood for this purpose is a soft close grained cedar which grows along the coat of Florida and which is used in great quantites both in Amer- - A Very Good Shot SUNDAY MORNING By LOIS BENSON By ADOLPH PEDERSEN Roosevelt High School Jordan High School Teacher D Leacher Orolie Rawaon Instructor — BELL RICHARD MiU" “The Edwin By Suggested by Logan High School Many bov have dcsried of Rob Robinson Arlington Teacher: Mary Aldyth Thain The miller’s wife had waited long lnson Crusoe but I know him in perAhead of ui the barn stood defianttea was cold and the lire was son At least I am well acquainted The sworn were In the barn three ly enemies In their hands were three dead An icy frosty atmosphere was with a man ’ who could double for m Hollymenacing flippers Rocks strewn about the place She set nervously him at any time either arid again conveniently around the floor were in her arm chair with an old shawl wood or In life and time has held me this modern Robinson the ammunition They were in the watchshoulders about her thrown have and I he both as We were on the ground This spellbound barn was the situation ing hopefully out of the kitchen win- relived his experiences Early In his life the sea put her The above condition grew out of dow her eager eyes longingly waita childhood quarrel with the resultant ing for the sight of the miller’s re- claim upon the fancies of John Hanson in the little town of Coppervich ganging up of adolescent neighbors turn Even as a small Four including myself were angry Into the darkness stared her m northern Norway at the three in the bam The particud tleTolong lar instance which fomented the en- trail which led from tha house dreaming that some day he mity was an act of one of the hated through a grove of tall trees and to sea three He had stolen our monkey the mill where her husband worked would sail upon it to new countries wrench from my garage Dad said There she had sat since supper time and new adventures only 14 years old he made that he could have it as it wasn't when the tea was hot and the room hisWhen The fancies become realities worth anything anyway But I got was warm and cozy Be4rha a German ship came to his "mad” The nerve of the little span- She had watched the dusk gather home port John applied for a job ker “griped” me about and had grown excited and t a deck boy We had flippers also and were en- worried Still she waited Darkness and as the crew needed he After getting the got the place The a in hot skirimish them had she had entirely surrounded her gaging told his mother four of us pelted that poor old barn ceased her gazing long enough to berth on the ship he sailor Because his desire to be a with dolies until it seemed as if it light a candle and had kindled the of was so young sherbegged him not would fall down It didn’t Instead fire once before and then back to he go but he was determined and a steady fusillade of rocks kept her former position she returned and to ran away swishing extremely close to us Then had stayed thus but still there was The first experience of the youngconturrent with the swish of an en- no sign of his approach Now and ster on shipboard was a bitter one emy rock came the agonized yelp of then she would startle as she heard bitter enough it would seem to kill a pal close by The spot where it the chirping of a cricket or the call almost desire to become a had hit was well cushioned for sitting of a hoot owl but would again set- sailor anyone’s While the ship wax still in down but not for absorbing flipper tle into a daze of watching the first mate told him to turn rocks My poor fellow soldier was The clock struck seven eight and port the skysail loose and make it fast In some circles for around nine had but she waited still she running did so and accomplished the task He was also rub- never in her life spent such long He reason or other perfectly The mate then asked him bing frantically the spot where the hours Oh why should he keep her if he had ever sailed before As he rock had doruj its damage Of course waiting like this She reflected over hadn’t he said "No” The mate bewe had to retreat with our wounded and over again the way he had left lieving that he had lied hit him on pal In an adjacent chicken coop we that morning She could see nothing the chin The blow was square and examined the wound of the injured wrong in how he had left and what laid John full length upon the deck one He himself was too scared to he had said “There are no millers But even after this bitter experilook at it I don’t blame him If he any more” then he had lingered long ence John's love for adventure was had seen it he would have fainted A In the doorway She could see him so great that he stayed with the ship welt as big as an egg yolk was rap- now as he had stood there that mornAfter six months of sailing he loved idly turning blue and yellow I ing Somehow a peculiar deathlike pasisonataly the wide open ocean gasped as I saw it an unpsychological pain would stab her heart each time But the ocean unfeeling seemed to thing to do Seeing the amazement she repeated those words to herself reward the devotion with ill on my face he leaped into the air The trail was now so dark that she usage During one ofonly his- to and without noticing the unbuttoned couldn’t see him if he were coming South Amerida the Burma wastrips caught for tore clothes of his nevertheless she sat hopefully watch- in one of the fierce storms of the condition home ing What was this dark object ap- South Seas For two weeks c proaching the house? Could it be the day and night John heavedstraight to setone she waited for? Running to the sails up and down At last he door she quickly flung it open but ting became so tired that the lulls instead of the miller’s arms ready to of the storm he wouldduring tie himself to embrace her she met only Bruno the rail for a few moment’s sleep the pet dog A sudden feah gripped only to be awakened by the huge her as she discovered that the dog waves over the rail On splashing had come home without his master the fourteenth day when the storm Raising her voice to a loud call she finally abated he was again put on sounded his name far and wide but a regular schedule of work four no answer came only the far off bowl hours on duty and four hours off of a coyote could be heard Again she Not long after this storm the BurHANKS WHITNEY called and of stillness the the By ma encountered another even more again night was her reply terrible than the first The high (East High School Salt Lake City) Back the went house into she She waves rocked the ship so violently Alvira Cox Teacher kindled the fire and put the tea on thht the barrels in which the supplies (With Apologies to “Get Up and the stove to heat thinking that prob- were stored were broken What supBar the Door”) ably her husband would soon come plies were left were soon not appenow that the dog had returned The It fell about midsummer time tizing in fact the meat was spoiled woman fretted and worried because and And a warm time it was then John says he and his companto she never had a known to Ford friend the come got dog When our good ions were forced to eat beef that the home without his master before and maggots had run already started to deshe knew that something had hap- vour Once new and black it had been At first he tried to blow the pened to him then again he may crawlers off the spoon but later The sun shone hot both north and have sent Bruns home to keep her when the food became more scarce company as he had some special work even a few larvae in the soup didn’t south to finish seem to bother much By the third It shone down fierce and hard Said our fine fellow to our good An hour passed and still no sign week the rations had decreased to of the miller His wife had once more three soda crackers and a friend cup of seated hefsftf peside the window to "Get out and crank the Ford!” tree ttorfe-a-du- y Ontmsix- watch and wait The night grew still teenth day doom seemed certain but colder and then a gentle breeze came just as the crew were “My hand Is in the worn gear box giving up ail which up fanned out the small see Fine fellow as you may light hopes of ever living through the the candle through an open winAnd t shall ne’er be cranked this of another ship was sightdow Then as the wind died down catastrophe ed -- It proved to be the Telephone a — - — large soft white snowflakes began merchant vessel If it’s not cranked fort me” which had also to cover the dark ground For some fought through the terrible storm on time 'they fell until the ground was its around the way Then came along two robbers bold cape of Good covered in a thin white coat Hope At two o’clock in the morn At the last miller's wife couldbear Distress signals were hoisted to the And they could see neither Ford nor this anxious waiting no longer so top of the mainmast on the Berma street her shawl about wrapping her and the Telephone answered The tighter Nor merr there so forlorn an dtaking a tallow candle with a sea was so high however that the handful of matches she out Telephone would not risk coming ventured a mountain i "Now whether is this ito the frosty wintry night dloser than a mile To high She must find out what had be- rowboat and row to the get into a Or what is it? Good Lord?” Telephone come s of her loved one or she would the only way the crew of the But ne’er a move would one o’ them go mad Taking the Same trail her Berma could get help It was also make husband had taken sortie fifteen hours to risk one's life on the For crankmg of the Ford earlier with Bruno by her side she sea It had to be done treacherous The quesbegan her search tion then was who was to do it? A And first they stole the gasoline As she neared the dark mill tottery was decided upon large The And then took the oil those word “There are no millers names of the crew were put into a "Away1’’ said the good friend to tlftm any more” her ears hat in two and again rang names drawn those of then and as they did so a cold lonely hand the second mate and a big husky As tense as is a coil seemed to clutch her heart ' saiilor for some Pausing at time the The door big the' fellow one unto the other husky upon hearThen said she finally mustered up courage to ing his name called out as one of the "Here man ‘"take now this wrench enter Slowly the door was opened as two who were to to row the side other ship the tire Oh you take off right she stepped inside she half fright- in the face of almost certain death And I’ll rest on that bench ” ened at her own voice uttered her fainted John to husband's name No sounds reached place Since theofferedwas go in his the youngboy Oh up then started our good friend her ears save the est of the of the crew the captain's wile squeak large An angiy lad was he unoiled hinges and the to tried shame one of the other men “Will you take off the right side tire of rats upon the floor scampering into but life seemed more dear And then just leave me be’’’’ How lonely and silent it seemed in to allgoing of them than food No one this large spacious dark Dared volunteered and it s left for John Then up and jumped our fine fellow she light g candle or place to go should she And laughed he loud and hard search for her husband Together with the second mate he "Good friend you’ve made the fore- He was not here there waselsewhere’ the sound rowed to within a hundred most move of no one here She turned to leave feet of safely the Telephone It was ImGet out and crank the Ford ” but then she paused for a few nu possible to row f loser because of the ments almost hours it seemed to her danger of the rowboat's being crushed she stood in Silent wondering Doy Seriously Hurt why on the hull of the larger ship Supshe had come here She were knew plies Ice-Pic- k awaiting them m Throwing Game her husband wouldanyway come home Per- barrels thatalready had been drifted out by haps he had gone to some of the the use of ropes They loaded CLEVELAND Ohio (UP)— A knife neighbors and necessary business had the barrelsguide and succeeded in getthrowing trick done with an ice pick detained him back ting They were of course was responsible for Anthony Pirro 8 Why was she there? She could not hailed as heroes In head wounded the out She figure had being seriously waited before After yeans filled with exciting exHe Donald Morrell 8 and Harry and he had always returned Why periences John r finally left the Fedele 12 were playing together should she act so strangely now’ Then and settled down to life as a Harry had an ice pick which he was suddenly as if a sudden impulse to landsman But upon occasions even throwing at a telephone pole 18 feet look about had come over her she now he seems to hear that early call away trying to make it stick in the lighted her candle with trembling He yearns to be once wood Some of his throws were slow hands There in the light she saw the wide open ocean to again on the steady himself so Anthony according to the other answer to her questions and her wait- to the rock of the shp and to feel boys boasted he could run in front of ing For hanging from a beam cold the cool spray of salt water on his The and stiff was the miller her husband face Always when that He tried it the flying pick far awav hw He head for into whom she had waited so long Allook comes into his enes I draw nea-sharp point plunged to a low in st was taken fled of hospital him horror and fear cry collapsed in high anticipation for I know escaped her hps as she fell back that father and serious condition I — my Crusoe is real 1V my father— will soon against the door be setting the After some time the woman opened forth on the high seas to adventure lea and Europe for inclosing black lead of the pencil Another her eves- she was fever sh and was small article of the forest product shaking from the cold Slowly she re is the common friction match In this called her strang surroundings and many tons her reason for bemg-ther- e little household-treasurStruggling stiffly to her feet she again lighted of wood are daily burned to ashes the candle wood of and uses its looked about her Of all the duty in paper making stands at the lead What there was In the mill only The modern newspaper and bbok are seemed to say again what he had “There are no millers any eating into the forests like a great meant Then out into the darkness By MARGARET HARTLEY fire When it is considered that more more than 20 000 different newspapers are again she stepped the starry velvet Granite High School was silent over her head and published In the United States alone sky Teacher Gertrude Reynolds heeded where she is cut and some of them of great size and with nothing If you want to" be a glorious a daily issue of from one to several what she did And wonderfully censorious hundred thousand copies that there Person of the woild are magazines of equally great cir- blame intersections SALEM Ore (UP)— Fifty per centYou must walk a culation and that of the great numlonely road of all motor vehicle accidents and 25lAnd bv your efforts goad ber of books rtow Issued some of them l reach more than a half million copies per cent of all traffic fatalities m Yourself to fame and fortune sweet day we may account for the vast demand Oregon occur at street intersections which the reader makes upon our a report issued bv Secretary of Suite forests the laughter jPeter J Stadelman showed today (You mist un £ SMSfi 'The Cranking of the Ford’ wrf 7 in wa-j’- - A Bit of Cynicism e street i D 1934 18 9 Queen Elizabeth Held Grandest Of World Diners A Modern Robinson - NOVEMBER Queen Elizabeth of England was To' quite the grandest diner of all spread her tablecloth she required two gentlemen one bearing a rod and the other the cloth They would majestically enter the banquet hail kneel thrice lay down the cloth and wait while two more gorgeously gentlemen one brandishing another rod and the second holding aloft the salt cellar the plates and the ‘ bread marched in to kneel three times before the table After the table was set an unmar-rled duchess entered clad in white and displaying the tasting knife her was a married woV man and both prostrated themselves before the table Next they rubbed-th- e plates and bread with salt Only a company of yeomen of the guard sufficed to carry the actual' food into the room 24 dishes for one queen! Because of Elizabeth’s excessive dread of being poisoned every soldier was compelled to take a mouthful of whatever he had brought in During all this time the blare of- 12 trumpets and two kettledrum way being heard and to the tune of this music a swarm of jroung unmarried ladies now began to transport the food from the original table to the queen's What Elizabeth private chamber failed to eat had to be consumed by stone dedifront be on in will the mill The old mill in Liberty park built five years placed this cortege to relieve the queen's-min- d cated Sunday at 2:30 p m Inset shows Isaac after the arrival of the pioneers in Salt Lake valabout any danger of being poimill on first the this site and Chase who built soned ley wnich will soon become a pioneer relic hall — comowners of i of the was one A bronze plaque of the Salt Lake county the original present structure cerative colitis but to the colon Ul pany of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers to be flush have been ascribed miraculous-qualitie- s that border on quackery The physician who best serves his patients endeavors to bring bodyt e functions as close to normal as To accomplish this end he maybe compelled to employ special diets purgatives and even colon irrigation He will advise neither If the end By DR IRVING S CUTTER may be attained by natural means Tllfe MUCH ABUSED COLON Every busy physician sees scores of ' A few years ago Arthur E Hurst patients who have and probably al-began a discussion of the colon with ways will have dilated or contracted of the colon due more often His- the statement: “The sins of the colon segments are its diseases But I cometimes than not to the unwise employment of agents that upset the normal funcwonder if it is not more sinned S Leadagainst than sinning for what with at- tioning of this important part of the tacks from above with purgatives at intestinal tube tacks from below with enemas and An article on chronic colitis will ' ‘ frontal attacks by the surged its sor- appear soon numerous rows and are real” The histone mill in Liberty paik (so prominent even now in the tiees METASTASIS The functions of a healthy colon - will be the scene of a dedicatory cere- of Liberty park) and a small upright are relatively few It is called upon to R J M writes: 1 What is matastasis? to absorb water to secrete-mucu- s mony Sunday at 2 30 p ni for a saw 2 are Xrays of the chest ' bronze plaque placed on one of the His daughter the late Louisa Mc- transport and evacuate the bowel con- taken Why m cases of leg amputation? celto measure a tents and in fiom digest millstones biougnt original mother of Mrs Arthur Wel3 of chest complicaWhat Laughlin chances lulose Nauvoo 111 by Isaac Chase the first three year fol-- ” ling Mrs Arthur Tanner and the late Cellulose is contained in practical- tions are there after for miller amputation osterogenic W Detective drove Chase George ly all of tile vegetables used for food lowing The ceremonies will be under the sarcoma? direction of the Salt Lake county this wagon all the way across the This substance makes up a large part ' REPLY She then was 13 years of age of the bulk in the bowel and aids th 1 company of the Daughters of Utah plains The spreading of disease from The mill has been in proc- One thrill she experienced crossing contraction of the muscles of the one Pioneers of the body to another The ess of renovation since last June the Missouri river The company had colon wall Normally only a small term part is usually used in connection' to a as halted to cross at loss how of be cellulose should to digestover the when the city turned it portion the river A stampede of wild cat- ed or absorbed and one of the com- with cancer organization to be used as a pioneer tle rushed 2 To determine whether or not a ' her oxen into the water monest causes of constipation is the tumor relics hall growth has developed In the and across the broad stream where- absence of sufficient bulk within the O McKav be will David Speakers tissue second counselor in the fust presi- upon the entire company followed bowel This may be traced to too lit- lung 3 Sarcoma is a cancerous condi plucky girl exclaimed to her par- tle cellulose in the food or to indency of the L D S church Levi The ents when they reached her- “They creased digestion of cellulose in the tion and osteogenic means “arising ‘ Edgar Young professor of western from the bone” If a cancerous tumor killed me as colon just as well have history at the Umveisity of Utah and might ” Another cause of constipation Is due is found early In a definite area it member of the first council of sev- to scare me to death to rapid absorption of water from the may be entirely removed by good nr“ enty of the L D S church P H Camp at Square The ascending colon which gery If however the cells from the Goggin city commissioner of parks They arrived In Salt Lake valley colon tumor have spread through the blood travels and public property and Mrs Mar- September 20 1847 and upward on the ’right side of or the camped at the lymph to other parts of the cent 90 of contains M Ward body per Pioneer square jorie lse body new tumors will form must secrete colon The normal water of Isaac Chase who wall relate the Isaac Chase was assigned to a five ” where story df the mill Mrs Zina L Glade acre tract for farming in a section mucus that serves to protect its walls president of the Salt Lake company called the "Big Field” locating on against injury irritation and breaks To the limit of space questions peri’ B P U’ be sn charge tc fvtfhat fs Tie! V Liberty teund in the mypus membrane through pesrsntion of The plaque bearing the officnl a spring of clear water and thinking which bacteria may gam enhance In ishting disease will be answered in this col- inscription of the Salt Lake county of this as a prospective mill pond normal health the mucus is thoroughly umn Personal replies will be made-t- o II company D U P will be unveiled bought the adjoining 15 acres making mixed with the bowel contents inquiries under proper limitations rby Mrs Maria Y Dougall daughter a 20 acre farm Later he acauired this material is watery rapid absorp- when return ig n-- i occurs tncre tion and is oi toxins of Brigham- - Young part owner of the closed Dr Cutter will not make diagadjoining land to make up 100 acres the of Isaac This mill and granddaughter lacking consistency nosis or prescribe for Individual disbecame known as the Chase Chase the miller and Mrs Kate M farm He planted black locust trees needed for normal bowel contrac- ease ( tion Chase also a granddaughter of Mr for which the area became noted Of Own Making ChaSe With He erected a small sawmill rioneer Music In a recent study T L Hardy calls it he sawed lumber and built a tempo Pioneer music reminiscent of the raiy shanty of rough boards in which attention to the fact that any disnumerous pioneer social events and he and his family lived while he built turbances in the colon are of our own outings which have taken place near a primitive grist mill and later the making and he regards the dietary the old mill will be presented by home This mill first made coarse fads that have no scientific basis as members of the D U P under direc- meal but a successive one produced tne chief offendeis The excessive use of purgatives is tion of Mrs Aurora Hancock Duncan white flour Indicating the quality of the many In 1852 Mr Chase supervised the responsible for a reasonable amount treasured pioneer articles which will building of the present mill It is con of colon disease Dean Swift in Travels” describes the habits of be housed in the relic hall are three structed of adobes made on the old articles which will be presented Sun- Church farm at the present site of the his fellow countrymen "They take Forest Dale golf club Having no in at the orifice above a medicine day The ox yoke used in hauling the lime the adobes were fastened with equally annoying and disgustful to the If you live where space bowels which relaxing the belly millstones from Nauvoo will be pre- clay mortar j is limited — in a small home and this drives down all before sented by the Chase family ComChief Carpenter or we a call apartment — here is a missioner Goggin will give one of the The Unfortunately purge” they chief carpenter employed was are modem Singer Elecstill taking in at the orifice above new few remaining stage coaches which Thares Wells Sr Illustrating the more purgatives per capita than were in a beautiful new tric played so prominent a part in the great care the in took early used at the time Swift wrote in 1727 eaily development of the stale and all their work is thepioneers cabinet made especially the that fact Willard B Richards Sr 88 a pioThere are many and important uses for you timbers which were mortised of purgatives but it is safe to say neer will give an earlv racing sulky heavy It’s quiet swift smoothThe story of the mill reaches back and held together with wooden pins that they aie not needed in one case to the little town of Sparta Livings are also bored through from end to- in ten in which they are used Reaand the cost is running holes to preton countv New York where Isaac end with clean attention to a balanced diet i low You can nt dry rot It is said that Mr Wells sonable amazingly to of food the to Chase miller resided for a number in regularity takng a larSe upr amon his tools and ea’ting tohdd o’? went and masticahis He with family thorough years slowly wollld bore at one cnd of the Lmber to habits of Nauvoo Ill in 1840 taking with them and tion and to then the other until the holes stool will doregular with the going the mill irons he had used m New met If largest away was not the augur long enough York and the rean extension was fastened to it The need for strong laxatives Sell Property insult to the colon was sulting which manner this in perfect Work Towards Normal )Vith the exodus of L D B rhurrh accomplished ws noticed a shot I members from Nauvoo Jthe Chase time ago when workmen found it necthe bowel but rarely Furthermore family sold most of their property at essary to remove one of the supports requires irrigation Pliny relates that a nominal figure and with tnree wag- to make room for improvements the Egyptians imitated the habits of ons started for the west They joined The large house the ibis and thus learned to wash out the Jedediah M Grant company of which no Vi stands north of the old their fooweLs “The He says lbs pioneers m the spring of 1847 afters mill and is used as the home of the washes the inside of his body by in Quar-teiWinter spending the winter at soon of built adobes with water his beak into park keeper troducing after the mill was finished Chase'sjthe the A eompiet channel” Unfortunately In one of the three wagons were mill and the Chase farm became th mall homo Egyptians were not close observers trio tor or apartment the mill lions four burrs two K(nown throughout the valley as a The ibis does not administer an ene of chisels live shafts a smii er resort and were the setting ma but alter washing his beak in vator pipe a fan a roll of bolting fot L many distinguished parties of the water oils it from his preen gland sifting purposes some wheat and dav The home included a Urge Dutch which is situated just above the ex grains a sack of black locust eedoven capabe Gf handling 16 loave3 tei nal orifice of the bowel Theie-arhave it nowon terms you of bread at a baking can afford — a small down important uses for colon irrigation Twill be you who can laugh after ul of More Springs in the treatment Acquires paiticulailv payment with monthly When you see vour nom de plume in Meanwhile Mr Chase acquired furterms letters gold ther springs and took additional wa- And when by being cynical Best of all it’s included You has e reached your dizzv' pin- (’r f°r uis mill pond and for lrrigain the Singer “Make-i- t mill pond was the tion use When VLS CREAM ICE nacje Yourself” Plan which At All Colville Dealers' And vou realize you’re growing full he could run the mill for four hours each day The lake now serves includes a free course in kmda old to attract thousands to the paik CAKE a La mode ROLL And that when it is rainv home sewing and all tha his famIsaac Chase with wife and Even though you might be brainy help you’ll ever need to at home the mill lived happily Your thorax will develop a bad cold make jour own smart and ran the mill for eight years You can always find your solace clothes Come in today or Bngham Young acquired full inter In a good hot ipustard poultice the And the kindred thoughts of critics — est in the property in 1860 let our Bonded RepreChase family acquired a so divme sentative furnish the detract at Centerville Whose judgments never falter tails when he calls When to your name they halter Vh PRIZES The terms of ‘‘brilliant man” and BARREL MAKERS ” SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO PARIS (UP) — There is reward and literary mind for French wine bariel With carton ot chocolate makers Prize winning diplomas have or caramel sauce And though you sometimes Wond-ebeen awarded to 11 rpembers for If you did not make a blunder BLLK—Coffee Ice Cream In the choosing of a literary field Was 1898 exceptional aptitude in barrel mak (Board of Health Permit No 1) exer commencement at recent You will find an explanation ing In the sweet re iteration cises The barrel situation is a seri Of the kindred thoughts pf critics — ous one ml view of the 9000 000 000 liter wine pr°P which exceeds bv so divine r2 000 000 0001 liters the 1933 harvest When to your name thev plaster ICE CREAM Old French barrels were in great de The tern of literan master -And thev say you have a literary mand m America immediately aflet mam Instant Satiny Smooth the repeal of prohibition mind -- - T HOW TO Plaque on Olden Nauvoo Millstone Scheduled for KEEP WELL Liberty Park Dedication pos-sbt- Daughters of Utah Pioneers Will Unveil toric Relic at Museum L D ers Will Gita Addresses ' - s” pavL-’-SI- -i semi-eoli- pnv-u-- d ' Gilli-ver'- s it' two-wc- h modern-appearin- s e - - SriXI 110-acr- e 43 So Main St “Colville T |