Show ih 4 1 U H ze H hlll ii s a I 1 I 1 I 1 t I 1 I 1 dads I 1 T I 1 I 1 Z 1 column i 1 e t e 4 i 1 I 1 9 I 1 14 1 va 1 MM 44 MM 4 WE READ that eugene field posed of a would be poet who had submitted a verse entitled aby why do I 1 live by 17 writing on the rejection slip blip because you sent rent your poem by mall mail a h a 6 a F YES SILVER Is still being talked about and investigated and studied in special committee sessions etc etc abel the same as for many years past but continues a common commodity and apparently getting commoner every day w S q ff S SAYS A senator borah likes to ride alone says his associates not only of his political actions which to many of them often seem sheer perversity ver sity but of his dally daily horseback horse back riding president coolidge according to the story was puzzled that he rode at all 1 I always understood said coolidge that in horseback horse home back riding the rider had to go in the same direction as the horse I 1 a R s F a A HERE IS 13 another friends ends often asked marte corelli why she never married there Is no need she would rep reply ly for I 1 have three pets at home which together answer the same purpose as a husband I 1 have a dog which growls all morning a parrot which swears all the afternoon find and a eat cat which comes homo home late at night n a A s T AND NOW we have so something methin g else to worry over oven scientists not members ot of the brain trust tells us that this old world of ours will only last another billion seven hundred million years and here us iia silver advocates were confidently figuring on of the metal about that time ime its one damn thing after another every day of our existence S E S F a 5 IT a fact that the careless pedestrian Is a menace just as Is the careless driver but he receives less attention crossing against signals playing hide and seek with parked cars walking along rural roads with back to oncoming traffic these are some of 0 the surest means of courting death think over your walking habits and correct them 5 fi ji Is SAYS ONE of our exchanges A rural editor went home to supper very tired but with an unusual smile lighting his poor old face have you had s some ome good luck at last his wife inquired luckl luck I 1 should say so responded the editor old squire skinner who paid anything on his subscription for ten years came in and stopped his paper 19 5 LF I 1 KIDNAPERS OF children are again lri in action the latest case being the stealing of june robles the six year old granddaughter of bernable robles a prominent millionaire ot of tucson arizona thousands are now engaged in the search tor for the kidnaper and the earnest prayer is the wretch will be quickly apprehended and summary punished and the little child returned to its parents unharmed c W q fi LR WE READ in the papers that one of those supposed wise and big brained cusses who are being given so much front page publicity these days declares that john dillinger the daring gun glan and extensive murderer lacks andu endurance rance ls Is a poor thinker and considerably of a I 1 dub in general notwithstanding this master criminal Is proving himself quicker keener and clever than the thousands of high paid federal and state peace officials who have been close on his trail tor for weeks past dillinger so tar far has oui out guessed and outwitted out witted his pursuers at every turn and continues his killings V T S N S F WE READ that for the first time in the history of the post postoffice offIce department a stamp Is to be issued that will sell tor for 1 but will not be good goad tor for letter postage the migratory bird conservation act will go into effect on june and among other provisions the law requires every liuni r seeking becking such game birds to purchase the special stamp costing 1 to be attached to his license this stamp will raise a a large sum to administer the new act but under no circumstances can a hunters stamp be used to send a letter or package through the malls the new stamp will bo be the same fiame size alz as a special delivery stomp stamp now in use but its it color and other details have not yet been de term termed bd it will be b on sale gala at t au all county seo best poet offices and at all offices of the country where receipts are 2500 or more each year J C PENNEY he who started in buyl at kemmerer wyoming in ft a R email 11 shack with ft email stool of small email mer chind lw naming his store etore the golden rule bule and who today Is ig the head bead ot of more than fifteen hundred live progressive mercantile buBl houses the wes nales from vach chach amounted to nearly a billion dollars JU in 1633 1933 la in an n honored guest of salt ball lake today celebrating the thirty second anniversary of the founding of his arat golden rule store in our als ter fhate mr penney in a rather remote way la is connected with park city his deceased deo eased wire was the talented daughter rf ol rd ed kimball at one time a prominent and popular bUBl busi nena neme man ot of this city the golden rule system of merthan daeing as aa inaugurated by mr penney thirty two years ago eo made thousands ol of young men who were not afraid ot of work independently rich and given lucrative employment to many tens ot of thoua thousands rids ot of young men and women the J C penney plan however as promoted by the founder has boa been materially changed tor for ten years or more ore p past the former methods ol of with employed emp loyes being materially modified the J C penney company continues a wonderful organization just juat the same earic KIND WORDS FOR FOB MB CHAS E STREET THE READERS of the record will remember the very interesting article on yellowstone park by chas cha E X street published in dads column last au ummer the article Is republished in the march ibue of the pacific tt a magazine of human progress published bt at berkeley nia the editor ol of which being mrs margaret mown mason whitney whose childhood days daya were spent in park city and ho he has ha never neter forgotten those thom happy 0 days the lady who visited fsr earlc apty pty te Is the daughter ot of the late J W raaon one rf the founders ot of park city and aad whose estate now owns business buel property on our main in street mrs whitney in her preface to the s atory bios the following ll 11 and ind norda for mr street READERS BEAD SItS WHO enjoyed the article ia i a tho the mountain of 0 the sun bun zion national part park and bryce canyon which appeared in the june number ot of the paci ile have hare written to the editor so BO en that it was decided to follow in this issue with a story of the yellowstone the author had bad planned to invade this sanctuary of the gods during the summer in ia company with the same elp explorers orera with whom the trip through southern utah WM was made a year ago last july fate however in the guise ot of a broken ankle and a flat pocket book ruled otherwise but we have a rye eye la the person ot of one charles E who made the coveted trip and wrote about tt it to and otherwise known as the editor of the park record of 0 park city utah where the full report was printed it was waa years yeara and years ago that the writer first met chortle charlie re he was waa then a stripling truth fresh from the wilds ol of wyoming who had bad been washed by the cur plit nt of events eventa together kith hla his parents and other relatives right into a little canyon about thirty two miles from salt lake city whom chwe silver mines were then being developed der eloped nia ilia earliest recollection of the writer Is of seel ng her fixated abed on the front steps of her bol home belh with b bowl c 1 and in de poor eating tome som bigton bated beans her recollection ol of him is that ot of a gangling youth striding along the steep street of a cold and snowy morning with the white mountain side behind him and the sun shining bright over dead bead his hair Is now white as the mountain but he still walks with a a youthful stride alert and ever sensitive to all that goes on in the changing world about him instead of going to the yellowstone and jackson hole country with on oxcart ox cart or on horseback as he would have gone to in the last century we find him making the trip in the summer of 1933 A D in an auto with his family of sons and daughters I 1 a 5 afi 13 a HOW NEW DE DEIL L OPERATES WHAT HAS the red haired barber done has he robbed a customer in his chair olt oh no his crimes a meaner one ile he charged too little for cutting hair the charge against farmer brown brow n has h he a been guilty of deceit oh no hugh johnson Is cr aking down because becaas brown Is growing too much wheat then dow bow about old farmer black who through winters snows and sleets has lived so long in his little shack oh I 1 he grew too many sugar beets why does johnson punish farmer white who through sunshine and through fogs has struggled many a day and many a night why the villain rais raised too many hogs then theres the farmer in the south bouth his name I 1 have forgotten ho he defied hugh johnson big eboodt mouth and rated too many bales of cotton free freedom dorn shrieked when Ko fell and now the statue ot of liberty weeps no longer rings the liberty lA berty bell the code dictator never sleeps bleeps but politicians growing bolder by the thousands day by day thrust their arms vp up to the shoulder into the treasury tor for unearned pay A W in deseret news PARK CHINATOWN AS remembered IN THE LATE 70 s AND EELY 80 8 UNDER THE caption of 0 picturesque america mrs margaret mason whitney 1 editor of 0 the pacific gives her early recollections of park cites chinatown I 1 f tho he following being interesting lne excerpts I 1 MY FIRST lat interest erest in oriental people came when I 1 wat was a mero infant away up in park city in the snow enow crowned was wai atch mountains ot of the rocky range and from that day to this thin I 1 be have been in n restad tc in their homeland china and in the chinese people I 1 i in the mining camp of pork park city which my father laid out a narrow area was set aside across silver creek in which in a long line backed up against tho the mountainside houses or cabins were built tor for the chinese workers employed in the mines these men were not inin tra ers but they did the camps laundry they cooked at the various boarding houses bouses they bad little pocket chandker 1 chief gardens in which they raised greeni green vegetables in season to peddle from froll door to door carrying baskets at the ends cf a wooden yoke home borne on their stalwart shoulders in order to get to chinatown we had to cross crosa a narrow plank bridge devoid of railing suspended between trail pieces of saplings I 1 still feel terrified at the memory of my first crossing of this bridge some ones straw sailor hat blew off and went racing down the boiling ee stream a m I 1 clun clung g to the end of ft sapling amid d stream a and nd was wa powerless to take ka another step the roaring ot of the water beneath us drowned my cries it was years before a gentleman of the party picked me up p and carried me the rest of I 1 i the way as I 1 snut shut my eyes and stuffed a stubby finger into each ear car to keep out I 1 khz tr a and sounds recalling this adventure years after it seemed to me quite appropriate to make ones advent in the street of chinatown in this manner what one shuts out does not exist after a small boy had been blown from this toot foot bridge and drowned in silver creek the town fathers ordered a wide bridge built in approved fashion and there the children used later to congregate the girls jumping rope back and forth on the inclined plane protected by a sturdy wooden railing it was the only place in town where we could jump rope the streets being steeper as were also the wooden sidewalks parallel ing the streets so the chinatown bridge became our mecca wild stories were told us about chinatown the parents wishing to keep us out of the region and as a consequence this the bad little boys were wont to sneak into the forbidden city and purloin radishes and lettuce for this a brick was hurled after them and oriental curses and flying pintails pigtails pig tails rent the air being the superintendents little daughter and never hearing my parents call our chinese colony by reprehensible names I 1 apparently discounted all the tales about them except the pig tails which were obvious and found them interesting people As I 1 grew older ten years old I 1 was even trusted to collect the rents in chinatown on a commission basis tales of at underground tunnels of disappearing people being robbed and nd scalped scalded ped of having to eat rats of opium dens had no terrors tor for me I 1 was after my ten per cent tor for collection but more than that I 1 enjoyed listening to the rising all and d tailing falling inflections of the C chinese language to see the gestures smell the hops the men smoked in long pipes and watch them spray the clothes they were ironing from cheeks so BO puffed out from the water they hold held that they looked like b balloons I 1 did not know anything about bret harts in those days but I 1 did know the heathen chinese there was only one woman in chinatown and she was wag never seen unless one entered the shack where she lived she was waa not a chinese woman but an indians indiana down in the valley she per indian girl in her teens whom the bons boas of chinatown bad purchased from the naps haps was an orphan or belonged to some other tribe and maybe she was feeble minded and perhaps ft a problem to her people no one know knew her history she was a slave girl no doubt but I 1 did not even know that not all the chinese in the camp lived in chinatown some three hundred at a time were employed in the canyons in the null mill boarding houses silver was then on en the up and up and the mines and malli alb of the greatest silver mining region ot of america were being worked it took in an army ot of cooka drawers ol of water and hewers ot of wood to teed feed and care tor for the thousands ot of men but I 1 never did get up into those how regions to see for or so what I 1 heard being hearsay Is irrelevant and immaterial here the bead chinaman at the mines however lived in the town and rented a little house on the main street belonging to us I 1 liked to go there to collect tb rent because he h had ad a wile wife at least she said she was his bis wife she told me that the indian girl across the creek was only a slave and that the tour four or five other chinese women whom I 1 had seen from time to time on oa the main with little three cornered kerchiefs of dark silk alk tied over their heads carrying bundles and baskets full of vegetables were no rood in other my tnt informant wid lold ma ahat th gr m not wives and they were ere n not ot to be associated soc socia ted with in her little house the bed coverings were gorgeous brocaded red or rose colored silk comforters apparently filled with down there were several high cabinets that extended above her head whose ebony doors were inlaid with mother of p pearl ea rl when the beautiful doors were opened they disclosed within many little and larger doors and drawers each with a silver design and little keys were required to unlock them especially the one in which the rent money was kept sometimes when I 1 called company was present and mad madame ame or whatever a lady Is called in chinese would set out on the table glass jars or of preserved foods from across the sea and dainty dishes lined with green she made tea in quaint I 1 kettles with straw handles and it was drunk with tiny bowls sans sugar and sans cream I 1 always I 1 was introduced to the guests an and d invited to partake of the viands but I 1 was hesitant I 1 thought discretion I 1 wo th the t tt P port UI r wl wisdom solom I 1 BS 1 the oriental lady that I 1 was vies not hungry and indeed I 1 really was not tempted to taste the |