Show 0 - L 1 1 icgri W61:: Rágirige' 100 4 t 2 1 t 't i 2 ' 4 t 0 It 4 n ''"4 1 ' ! r ' i : ' 3 oo 1 ' ' t ' of 0 40 4 1 7 14 - 41 "0' so' '''' 4::'''' 's4 04 s A ' f r ' i ''' ''''''-- Are i g !' i 01' i 4 : i) t' 3 ' 1i 1t i ---- -- dit 0 1 ' ' ' ' t ' ' t i ' e f itz V1$110 r: e t 1 k '1'"' : r ro' i k r ! ' N 4: :1 47gto - - - 'si V$ r: ‘ 4' r - r w ' ' :i- I " 4O7A i 1 4 y iv- - r) - - J - — 1 1 11 1846 Mexico had protested ea early as March 6 184:5 and had warned that annexation of Texas by the United States would ap McE full-blow- lial Of F 114 1144 i i C011eCtai Shate 1641 1 z i i 1 i I i : 1 i! d 1 k t 3 z' - ti' i 1 - 0 1001010- - - I P 40 i it - i 1: V 1' 1 ' 1 : ' 111 e iff '''''''' 4 1 7 i - - 1 t 4 f r - s- ' ) r A - : NPORTAT ' ' IA " 1' 1 : ' ' C ' ' - 4'i -- — : 4 Li71 4" OP ' - 1 - -‘ day-dreami- f - ' t i - - 4 '' - - - '‘ - - - ' ' ' 1 ty! i i --- I - 4 t ' L ''- A' "'leak ' ik - i 64t!ofteSe t til i I i t ' ' k k- ' ' ) t 0 ' ' - f ' titt!' 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I ts J 4:7 4Cf1N Pi roolitiP - - F i ' In the country s ° III' ( 4111MOIMI 3 4 4' -- 7 10001 0 0 0 MMMMMM J - - - el - ' ''"---i e? e - ts - ik w-- t J P 1 !ot- satvel : C s 1 f - IN OGDEN AT C PENNEY'S Dial t - ! bank and make arrangeTIMEWAY LOAN to cover - ii" r"' -- ' - la mod "'Awn llas taaFtes lawaaatatell t Or 0 Mama Domeastealiaa Ow torinefittitiv be la yew comnivalty la Ital eat tow& 14000einoMemalpOintwoo töt eel : SIIITICI 11044 First Nat'l !tank Dieu halt Lake City Utah F REEfol I ''- i --- 1 0 Return to your dealer and pay cash for your car You save money by arranging your financing through this bank 1 7"7---- ) Coupon Todayl BELIONE i t -' ' 4" '''''''' 2 ' 7 t 3 Lobes knetios md bAuophfl itions la give ontooth conaortoblo NVNIP0 end endetstending we tameless ia this OM with $seN tomiteelike avelet seethed dombmoommrmo This HEARING corphtely ' 1 the balance needed ti 4--- ' 1 on owitotaPtv "'AWN 1 -- te Mattr----tediss - - i 4-1 I '' ' j i v-li- ' in front - 411 Go' '' 00 I 64 '- - ‘'' ALL'vau - - r-- t IrII: tri n' iti 34 x a -- rroe c4 't4i - Ai SATTFIY PPCK - ' v)"t'fF'':::Istealklii"" to' 111e' G ''"'44r i tt TIMEWAY too Is' relationship quick convenient and free from red-t- pet ' iit's as streamlined as the new car you have been waiting for- - Boy - the bank 44i4r l tr i601rr477100' 1t r ma I4 T stPa"All MO ill 1 WA? 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" 40 e0 r model but you will wont TIMEWAY low - 1 yourself doing some fancy about being behind the wheel and driving again through scenic wonders tin the spending vacations and week-end- s country Yes and it won't be long until those dream cars will be on your dealer's t ' )41 ' k and doubtless you've been tion line ' -- P 1i1 It 4 AO" ' Everybody knows those"sleek new cars ore lust around the bend on the produc- - L V ts''--- rl ' - '7 41 z - 4'4'''iZzl I 0 a 0 p ' - 11 ' 4 fr--4 4- ti'::)y Ccrry An r::tra 'Dottery PrlcsII t? ' ' - - On ed ' - g sr v ' : - 11 OX :( le 4 1 i' - r 1 ' - Ihit 1 1 — ''": - beet-preserv- i - 4 r 04 dal boll 6-- Among the noteworthy sons of Utah is John Hutchings of Lehi His collection of Indian artifacts fossils and minerals is representative of many years' exploration in the canyons deserts and mountains of Utah He has done much toward preserving the history of primitive Indian tribes through his research and collecting and also has exerted his influence to teach others a proper respect for rather than wanton despoiling of ancient ruins lila purpose farm to wor kin the mines where has also been directed toward he gained his fundamental the preservation of our present-da- y wild life Ilislnterests range knowledge of minerals At 19 he left Utah to do missionary work from paleontology to archeology and upon his return found that rninerology and ornithology his wonderful collection with John Hutchings was born in the exception of one metate the original house on the land which his father began home(grinding stone) had been stolen Mr Ilutchings has visited steading in 1857 It lay along a museums in every part of this creek which had been the site of an Indian camping ground for country but has never recognized an article from his origiyears The slopes' were covered nal collection the quality of with rabbit brush but tepee been not which has were marked still duplicated ringa plainly because it consisted of the by clay that had been baked for articles of Indian the floors Arrowheads and othwhich were available er relies were lying on the Nu'lenge rface of the ground in the loose only before white men had comdirt and were especially easy to pletely taken over this area find after a rain storm which Wife Shares Intermit would wash away a little topsoil Mr llutchinge was fortunate Encouraged by Mother in marrying a girl who shared Mrs Hutchings recalls that he his interest in Indian lore and tn inerolog y Together they kept his collection in ahoeboxes under the davenport in the livstarted another collection in 1913 which was mostly mineral ing rooms Ills mother who had come from a long but this too Was stolen from of collectors in Scotland their Lehi home in 1918 while and England encouraged him they were living temporarily When Mr Hutchings was 13 near a mine at which Mr Hutchhe was offered $1300 for his colings was employed lection by a Mr Noble of ChiAn army ambulance fitted for their expeditions has taken cago who was touring the counMr and Mre Hutchings on try in search of specimens and relics to be used as a nucleus many week-en- d trips Until'1940 for establishing a museum in most of their exploration was directed toward uncovering the Chicago lie declined the proposal because to him his colstory of ancient Indian inhabilection meant more than money tants of this locality and they Mr Hutchings' parents died excavated a number of ancient when he vvax 15 and he left his mounds i 4 ' By CARMA LEE SMITHSON ! ' - weodpwrwb—ewrww-mwevitrevolor10ref4'"''"":7”'7- 3 ids 7g:ossils '' - 4 S ci 1 - the firm conviction of Cuttles who describes himself es "an itinerant barber from Palm Beach and points north" vleiting Baltimore on his way to the northern summer resort circuit "So many men are affecting hair stylea these days that are n only one wave away from a female hairdo that bar Willis Taylor's - John Hutchings holds an Indian metate or grinding stone It is the only item remaining from his original boyhood collection i hair-dos- " That it ''1400k— r''''''''''':''':--r-:::'i- g inine was Anna's army of 20000 men Taylor had only some 5000 men as he had rent several regiment1 to join Gen Winfield Scott at Vera Cruz Taylor's skill the discipline of hia officers and men and the superiority of American equipment turned potential dimeter into an overwhelming victory that cost Santa Anna nearly half of his army The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was concluded on Feb 2 1818 Mexleo surrendered all cialma to Texas and accepted the nio Grande as the international boundary California and New Mexico went to the United States and Mexico was paid $15000000 for its lost ter bers are being forced to seek more money for the added work Involved" says Cuttles "Walking through the railroad ears and getting a hind view of the Nocalled maim sitting in them I picked out dozens of replicas of Frank Sinatra as many of Van Johnson and as many more of Veronica Lake— Male version" Cuttles snaps Where will it all end? "I suppose the day is not far off when hair nets bandannas and Spanish combs will be worn by the dear boys" many communities—it's "tem- In Vista great battle of the war how ever and it was fought on Feb'ruary 23 1817 against Santa 1 4 h BALTIMORE—It's not infla- ritory The United Statee absorbed all claims of United Staten citizens againat Mexico estimated at about 113250000 Ratifications of the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo were exchanged by the United States arid Mexicah governments oil May 30 1818 and the war was officially over Pres Polka Democratic administration was in an embarrassing position in that election year of 1848 because the victorious generals Taylor and Scott both were Whigs Scott previouly had been a candidate for president After Taylor's great battle of Buena Vista the NVhigs named him as their candidate for the presidency In the election that November Taylor was elected president Buchanan's role as secretary of state during the Mexican war brought him into the public limelight and a few years later in 1853 he was elected president Ulysses S Grant was a young second lieutenant when the war started and Palo Alto was Grant's first battle Other young officers in the Mexican war who were destined to play prominent roles in the wail between the states less than a decade and a half later were Robert E Lee William T Sherman Thomas J "Stonewall" Jackson and Jefferson Davis siege Buena Barbers Raise Prices When Men Want Curls tion that's responsible for the rise in haircut prices to a dollar Ago president sent a meeting° to congress asserting that Mexico had committed a warlike act on American 'loll Congrema held a stormy seoision finally accepting Polk's statement Mexican troops attacked Gen Taylor's army early in May 1818 at Palo Alto and thin wa the find battle of the war The battle then moved immediately to itesaca de la Palma where Taylor's men defeated the Mexicana Congreen declared war on May 13 In September Taylor captured Monterey after a four-da- y : '" - t 4modiit''' '? t 4‘ f11- i -- 1 4 A A) "001 ( ' s:i : I '- ' t ' k‘ ' ' i i':' A'S ‘ ) ' i ' :- A-- 7 $ ks ' 0 i A ti t e403VA4' "'"' - ) a — ( 4 4 It ' !z 4 1 1 ' ' e ':'4 :41" ': ' 4 - 4 : ' ' " t ' 1 1 4 '5 war as a means of mettling the troubleaome boundary problem Texan claimed that the Rio Grande wail its weiltern boundary rreaident Polk an enthualaatie advocate of Texas annexation readily accepted this claim and early in 1816 ordered General Zachary Taylor to march his army to the Rio Grande as the western boundary of the United States Mexico claimed that Taylor's army WEIS invading Mexican soil and first blood was shed during a skirmish which occurred in the early spring General Taylor reported this to Polk The a declaration of war proximate Mexico MOO had 'severed diplomatic relations with the United States and withdrawn its minister Border Incidents had increased for months prior to the outbreak of war American property had been molested Americans had been arrested by Mexican raid-er- a Mexico had made some settlements but had delayed action on many °theta These incident'' combined with Mexico's refusal to recognize the annexation of Texas bad annoyed the American people to the point where they were ready to accept fly H DONALD cnAwronp This month which marks the 100th anniversary of the bp ginning of the war with Mex ico one of the seven major conflicts in which the United States has engaged finds relalions between the two countries cordial in the good neighbor tradition and regarded as an out standing example of solidarityamong the republic of the weldern hemisphere Out of thin war which many then and since have felt wax the ieamt justifiable of any in U history came at least two pres idents Taylor and Pierce any number of leading military men including Scott Grant Lee Sherman and Jackson vast territorial accessions and in addition a residue of which has remained for the present generation on both sides of the Rio Grande succensfully to allay In striking 'contrast to the cooperation which has prevailed between the two countries in recent years' and which reached a record peak during World War II are the events which first culminated in and then climaxed the declaration of war 721ears '"'T 1- I - -- - :' '' '':l'' 0 |