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Show jpiufe bounty News, Junction, Utah njumm PIUTE GPU H TY NEWS Lftteret' as 'second class matter at tire' Jostoiiiee nt Junction, Utah May unJer the Ac., of March,:!, 1S7'J. EVA B; SWANSON, Echtdr' and Publisher V IO 'n SU l7s :f 1K I ! By Grim 23,-1X- Modern Home Aided Byrd Pole Dash; Sugar Cane Fought Cold of North Beeper. . Friend, Eather and Physician lays ddwft knife forevAf. After thirty-- 1 CUNTS THE YEA It CASH eight year of active practise in sout- -' hein Utah, lr. J. J, Steiner sneeu-mhhia fifeht with grim teeth death which he so often w arded from other ,LA It A N I I Swaved by the 6q6l of Sweden Galii-Cur- ci , Dr, J, J, Steiner Taken - ,t , . ' 4e - $ P 'Vr VS.& . fr,Wv V. V- - r ,A- I I '. w. , I ' i i j 5 . Jk - f:? homes is findlly triumphant- in mow-lo- g W down dne' riford Useful and well loved man; s Me was not only-leader in his X profession hut rr a citisbn he was!?;: :5 t'onsidered. tu htf nioSt honorable. ti the Someliiinjt Of Over two yeais of hi.-- resilience In 1lute Cdunty made for hl.ii friendships that have never deed fUrgnten, While hi? moved to & rangnfltch, Kirrtbtfrly and Richfield after lOabirg heiej nonfc Of his ear-ie- r fi ietids were satisfied with the r vice of any other physician when ;i e , r ne was accesSatile. A man of positive character he made fast frie- - i;;: nis and weather as physician, ..en or Jlidgi; he was always frank K; rv-fhonest and absolutely fearless. We! after to him as judge for tin reason : 1 To prove that air that while acting a3 physician for in the Arctic is feas; ible and that freight and mes, the Annie Lailrie Minining Company of Senger travel over the top he was also Justice of at Kimlk-rithe world Is certain to come. Reace for that jirecinct in Piute ji; 2 To hunt for new land & Iti the Unexplored areas of and rldt handledhis work county omy Arctic. the Abctlc MorE71 line In lluinc built in a fearless manner A clip along that 3 To conquer the North U' deatlMleuling cold tif tiic1 ferment Bole from the air US a sportJg Iobir " ah Regions and ter.dt-hcing adventure and as a demhahely found in men Valuable aid to Lieutenant ComnmnfT onstration of what a plane Richard E. Ryrtl in Ills successful flight to holding that office. can donot a geographical tliroo iU'U' hn It was tvliile starting into his act- - i. times in a record study, as the Pole was bagged breaking flight Of 1,500 for all time Pj Admiral Peary, ive practice in Piute county in J8S2i miles. iA. 33 hours ftpd.30 raimifgs'at an Probably po one' knows more about hh lidnr. and .I Lliat he met, courted and marr-- , 'average intxnl.iof A retie flying thrtri Commander Byrd. From! ' l'1 Ah,v Spltzbergcri fchsc, Kings ied Miss Georgia ItTanchett of Mary-- 1 base Of the MacMillan exike tvlere this lirst tnoderti hoiise was 'ff A pedition V'Etilh last year he flew 3,000 svale. To this union a PoM; Chaoncy const ntciml nmid Uimnoz ami ice df tlh niffs' oVei1' fhe Arctic, studying the was f or wh'Uhjto'them was, like as kr,'tlc b imidiatelyf1 dpon the arrival i,t of oil, motors, compasses, and as at great usual in such lnstrtiftietit the ppeit of all other frhpanions, UnVIgatltifl pei ii.oncht liriiie and ovefe the Polar sea. altitudes Litile Chaunc.V was wor-j,tfor ihe explorers. The house, which fuel With him this time Commander Byrd took a p.Ortd shiped hy I)r, and MrS: Steiner and rVS(1 ut 0,1 tlie boriz.on of the frigid north fn nmrKod con- C. Noble, pa It G. Is Cpmmander Flying vl;o ' 'VaS waa the idol of the houseloild but, J'mil f. "uh com- - expert, pains to prevent the freezip.st tau.o Oiuu that those wlio remained at tho base requires great skill apd action or the motors, if stiffened and oil of lubricating when about tlireeychrS old the grim Vhib-- Lb utcaant I.yrd made bis thrilling dash to the forced, to' work on the plane In thg open at great sPM,nS Fokker might keep in touch with hitfluilbs reap.-- reached into their home and .the thermometer at 00 to' to below zero. iMilr Ut't ut 11m outride', wiwbk which the., VMfch ihe of kept favored thd mohth of May were fhtft desires The of his keep regaroltks points a a j,o tflsf YiiiH siitVess of the flight. hail not tiegunWMse and heavy snows still tiie Arctic fig inexh'ausUVe work :' It was to this Soifle hoive that he returned after his paients and the covered the land and afforded many good landing plucesl of his phyM 'ian father, snatched him .hazardous trip und from which some of the first mes-- ' A factor of safety pointed out by Commander Byrd iri sages were sent to the waiting public, telliDg them connection with the use of the Fokker machine Is that ft from their. pi escuc.e their gribf vi as through the lane's Of the olr that Byrd had circled the carries a reserve englL(o. It has three engines. With a incdnsolahle. pole three times and had returned to tits Spilzbergeit light load one is expected to be Sufficient to maintain the home in safety, adding one bf the most merilbrable Not after Uje di'.ith of Ciiau-ncpages plane In flight. With a normal load, two engines will da to the history nf Arctic exploration. i,the work. If two engines break down at one time, when Thomas Sevy lost his wifelcav-ihia- n 'the plane ls.not Sjigar Caao Fight Polar North; heavily loaded, it may fly with the infant daughter, Dean, mo- ' Whi-- td" tuoflant Vise flf blit; engine. The Fdkkr machine has a Brook, jn Navy Yard ori of sliglitly more than 6i feet It la said to ft) ther Irks. In. and Mis. Steiner beg. the ship ,Qfl?:tier hdeehied' liA hhd the best and most " Hi a marvel of airship construction. sclent feqti ipped expettIUosi that ever l;ad started y gvd the piivclege 'of taking this Mu to was Oriole the CUrtls other The Bble. the the for airplane Special iiluiS wpe hJile fur mritherlUss yhlld to replace the loss erection of his Arctic home-- Boartki ftfetffi listd chiefly in finding landing fields so thni if tfasuliiting Jlie fliers fouhd their main landing place covered wi, A Ain't after all of their own child, to this Mr. Sevy Juinlutr made from bagasse (sugar , augur Juices .hove been extracted) were Carried along fog they night go elsewhere. Consented w liich tnadea tie between The Chantter Was equipped with a powerful radio tr. iv:ith the. .latest inventions to aid in jiolar exploration. libs: twti jin'miinentfatrilies that f'jt'Jiis building. material is very light and is filled wirii inltter to semi back the news of the expedition. ; tniliibns of air cells, which give it great. insulation value , Fckker also is equipped with a receiving and fm .v death drtly could' sever. . set..: Commander Byrd bot only kept the world INTu more ' children' bleksed their 'siyd lx'sist'yjica .to change in temperature, especially ti.e milting of the progress of the expedition, but received 'hfivvk coltj. informed circumstance in coimecton with flrtfon hr t. their .ya'sAuffi di:e Chttntier weather warnings to guide hliu lii bve and tiie use of tills hmfei-ihIs thut the sugar enw Of .the 'iiia fllfit. affection ' for children caused, them smith was. utilized to tight the cold of the north. How Expbdition Wa Equipped. was instead selected of lumber (Vlotcx because tesa to take ili (td their' home and give the Inade hundred pounds Of Whole beef were included Forty-flvby,; the .United States Bureau of Standards and fliers, patent iVVe and educatidii :to three its universal, use In building cttastruction all over thb in the rations of the Byrd creW , of teamen' and technicians. Also four hundred pounds of world, had demonstrated ihat.-J.hiothier motlnn less 'ehiidreh all of insulating lumber pemmlcan (meat fats and raisins), huge quantities of would keep the quarters of the. explorers wanner ami ivhotn survive their parents! as Mrs. mUkuerbswurst (pea soup) and other supbacon, , protect their. Uving conditions nAr? securely than ordiplies. ia proportion Vvere carried along; Cod liver oil was ; Steihef'preceeded The doctor li) the nary building tniit..r,ali .It Was ,oiitj' feiter Careful investigation scioEtific 'Included for its healthful properties. Herbert Griggs, great hcyiird by sev'eraPmonths. who hivd charge of provisioning Pearys expedition In hiS Jneii ill the expedition (hat celotex whs selected. These Fiiricrai Services were held at the authorities pointed out that the protection afforded by famous dash to the Pole,' worked out the rations for the Byrd oxpMrers. ' Two pounds per man per day was tho s.'cbnd vvai J chapel Thiirsday at 3:00 its ii'.Sulat ion efficiency was three times as great as ailowAUe tO lake care of all emergencies. times-alumber hud .twelve as that nearly great oclock P. it'. Hiram lodgV No. 12, No amount of clothing Is really sufficient when flying of brick ntid other ihasonfy niiteHal. The chip Cliantlor F. & A. M. in charge'of the arrange 1,000 or more feet in the ait In' the Polar regions, but also was,. lined with 'clotv's a, an added to ' - v every possible precaution was taken by Commander Byrd mints' keep the ,slrp wa.m. wAite the eXph'rsrs itsed it in the against exposure. The men were equipped with the uf igus 0 i.dte expVdlti'-'n.prelLuIscry, To't.hC beredved children" Ce 'exwaimOht ahd lightest of reindeer suits and with fur her way thLi Xiec,ivnn was to tend our sincere sympathy and conparkas, a garment that reaches to the knees and has a mot Us proces prepared tliaa .any hood covering the head. Plenty of goggles were found ThVr.r included inveatiou4 .of '(aWrriha'K'jt'r Brd sors. dolence' in the 'irVep-urt- ! hie loss' they to be an absolute necessity to protect them against the himself. A timpte sun coinpaes cduceived by have suffered.' To 'his other relatives " of the snow. Bum.Mead.-ofr.thMr.glare National by developed all the in spite'-othe undertaking was and friends ive als6 extend 'ollr sinprecautions SocH'ty, s.uperboded the complicated German device, de MU of unseen danger. None of this equipment would be ymarafor Amundsen. The ago tibuc drift cere condolence.' n,reo ' cf the slightest avail against Borne unexpected and unpyr'aa ItyVds iarefttfoa. The bubble sextant recedented-situation which might nMse.- There is always by which Gv? navigator- obtains Lis bearings while in Praise Utah Of snowbiindnesS, exhaustion, freezing, some the danger Ms one c? was Inventions. another Still flight another i i mishap to .the engine. Lieutenant Byrd and his coms, iei; tie di'VeLitqu'eot ,vis. quick ffieth-iof telling wheo panions, however, were particularly fortunate In escaping ihe.Nth11 one has is been at worked out Boafe--1"- " with practically 1V0 ill effects except the exhaustion due tilebuils-sthe ilhvy's :hydiigraj;hic engineer. y . fl such a perROUs trip. to ' hte ole. Device Locate So ne tourist Jfjoip Jersey City, Pick Ice Pilot. " Up ByriF ftftd others eontributed to i cliaW cf the The ship Chantiers first stop Was at Tromso, Norway, New Jersey, stopped in Junction lines .flowing, toward the megaetic North Bole, where an Ice skipper was taken on to pilot the Chnntier which is ia Lo.thla Laad, 1.200 miles south "Of tdie t'ole. Friday morning 'find paid high com-- , n waters around and its crew through the .itoiihlA Land-iuthe Pole the campass points i.etween to King? Bay, where preparations for the first of'CJtah's to the condition p'inunt over much of the Arctic Jnsteaiif..p??--anflight to the Boh; were made. The ptanfes, the instruments roads us comrarAJ to our northern it is bidly ..dia.thi'betVtiy .llie tiiartpaacy of position btj-; 'und the various oil mixtures Used in connection with the toert thacifraiiiyM hhfftlr Pole and the; magbttic airship tests, were carefully examined and tested. Lieua)d western sisters', they' Also paid ' ' North IViGi tenant Byrds original plans called for six flights as follows ; high compliment to the maF'ndicient This ehftrt- nf the magnetic lihert' flowing to the 1 A to Peary Land flight from North Pole, although It washer from complete, wa3 to unload oil, provisions and Spltzbergen scenery of Pri ce Cany dn. a place that at equipment kn eh as to enable the V.nvigator to tell iu, what direction looks promising for a landing. vears of,X steady work After six pbint Sroiu ar.y spot in the AfectlC. the compass-shoul. 2 A flight dack to Spltzbergen.' Vith tliis knowMdgO, tlie erratic behavior cf the comwithout one 1'egKiar 'VH'cation, Vv . 3 A second flight from Spltzbergen to Peary pass becomes orderly and it is once again a useful instru-fcffrLand base with further food,- fuel and t!qu!pment. J. Peters and Vife of lc' Garfield " 4 An flight to and around the role and back A third type of compftss. used was a device of Infinite County News declare a olfidaVand to the Teary base. a revolving electrical coil, which Is 5 An refund trip flight to the northwest over spend a week renting .anel visiting Vo a given relation the magneti of the ' areas in search of new lands. unexplored old friends. s cuviY. the sun co:: pas, md the magnetic 6 Aflight from the Peary Land base back td It just seem? that it ,:s impossitile 'vert Vtaxh used to correct tho other. Spltzbergen. Lieureivtvnt Ttrd dn his flight Used a quick method of for Pill ta cuit wmk thcuigh for in It was his plan In his second flight to attempt to disvvhec, be wt..s actually at the Pole. This was the fcllimi cover new land, but when he received the report of the a recent Comm unicafkjn tionihim laveitioa ,'r'2cJ but by Mr. Llttlehales, the U. S. flight of Amundsen In his dirigible. In which it was stated ho told us he intends installing ah Navy hydrographic engineer. It shows the suns posithat the Norge had failed to 'find any trace of new tion from tig; North Bole at every hour of the 'day and land, Lleetesafit Byrd decided to abandon further flights 11,000 cylinder proa's hntl doing colevery day. of he yet.e.. Vhen the flyer is near the Pole and the trip over land on sjeds he had planned In his or work such as calnr.'dgis'cards. he cun. By ascertaining: 'he exact position of the sun, search for neW lahd In unexplored areas. Now he has 110.1- t'he Pole. posters neverythihd." prove fhat. l.e.-idecided to try to accomplish by airship at the South FHePole what he did at Ithe North. As he left the Mr: 3,000 Ki?es Over Arctic. Since going Spits The expefli'itm. bucked hy such men as John D. base be Stated .that he would have Just as well bergen Peters :;as ktehdVty Vnovqd forward Rockefeller, .lm..and Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., had three an equipped expedition for his Southern flight as he had main. ohjct6. andthis instalatio'n of a larger press In his recent adventure in the North. .,..1 1 - ..... . , r is but' andllief'stPgbn the jdjof'bf j ..a ' v . piagice! Which he isbuiding.1 ' "i - I . i s' a - .' v w . I ' , I I : j iENRY FORD'S dealbofn tnde fiemlent publishes a komarknble anil article on Gelii CUrci j Emanuel Stveticnborg, by Clarence tV. Durruti Of the Wall Strefet Journal, jibe world famous financial uutliomy. i Mr. Barron declares that has the most wonderful bre'in ' he has ever met or heard of m a woman, although she is uiuch moil-"a true, vtpninn with d life and soul Kit affection for all that is ennobling and upliftihg In the fahiily, and m color, form, find music. Mr. Barron is chairman of Ihc Rotch Trustees, who acting under the ' rvill of Lydia S. ltotch ,of New Bedford, Muss., began iri 1872 d Modern translation of the Theological Works Wfiifeh Emanuel Ewedenborg wrote . and published in the Latin tongue, var.i(j deposited in the libraries of the Jg , ( World 150 years ago. This work was completed and, pub-- ' listed by the Houghton Milliin Co. in 22 volumes in 1907. About three years ago thqrg op- , poured in a Cleveland paper a para-gritpthat among lidp other Galli-Curbad read all 'the, Theological Writings of Emanuel 'Swedenborg.' The claim seemed so ,'nbaijrd to Mr. Barron that he thought it .blight be easily,, punctured by a (triple Inquiry ad' t;q tha edition,, realefe 1Ytk Than Evfcr i Th h accom-plishmen- ci Then answer to yourSci? the nurhbet of years that ought to be required td innater these, thivty-tw- i volumes. . L?en More Tlui! Ar.y D.lller Docks Mr. Barron, still, prediilotip, continued. jlis correip'yndence , ,TdH Madabic Galli-Cuiiqy Some months, lie lea riled that Soon pftqr she losl her dear mother sho liad nought the Yriliug.1 of Swedenbopg jn a desire to knew more about the pther vorlil whence her ffiother liad .gone. She spent the fenfire summer vacation studyi lg Swsdifhborgs Works, and declared: They hnvo meant, arjd mean more to me than anything else I have , ever, road. . 'When balifornia Into returned fr.ort f.r. Barron motored up the Cstskills to her beautiful Galli-Cur- Itaiidn palab , and in ah afternoori with her ami her husband, Mr. Homer .Samuel, kq was convinced that Galli-Cure- i had lead and devoured ShVeden-L,Jr2- . 'briefer, period thnh, L; Lad Over done before. He says of this iluCrvicw: Hears' flow like 'minutes. I wasnt Mr. and Mrs. Samuels tlystioner. 'jOefetf'-k- t me with the sharpest and deepeSt. questions. They seemed in jiprfcct harmony mentally and ns in their work in music. ; Wanted, to Learn She wanted to kno about the Grand Man.,. I told- her.it would' be easier to comprehend it if she, .would auy-1-tid- y splv-ituail- To Mr. Barrons direct inquiry promptly ImMadame, Gftjli-Curin the pdif read have I plied: Yes, .year'tM Complete Swedenborgs Works, in fact it U. the Rotch Edition of the Houghton Mifflin Co. .that I have. :.MJ.can say certainly that thte Bible id me is a greater work than It was before. ML Bahrpn says: My astonish-iTnen- t , Was Int'cnsitled. Familiar over many year).. with Swedenborgs general theological writings, I had set idtjt'ia read tho edtire thirty-tw- o ihbiaratory to an advertising Campaign for the Sale of this fedttion. Reading a few pages each day I fintask in fourished my teen years., I shall probably finish a second reading, at my present rate of in perhaps ten years, Wn iiV (jjpaa fhaji; a, women with to knjowledgo ,.oy these 'book had reelly intelligently jread tbom Within a year?" forego the idea' of time and spacp and cortsider, as Swedenborg says in The Apocalypse Explained, thut every in the heavens connects with some organ of the human body and helps to sustain it. The f of q re the heavens have the organization of .the Grand Man, but we need not think of it us a shape or tigure. Yes,1 exclaimed her husband, L see it; it is organization. 1 explained, also, how the Psalms likewise .connected with every society of the heaven,- - and how the world within itnd without was knit together in one grand poem and song of greation, man in. tie image, of his. Maker and knit into Him through the heavens, froiq which he hns life in every organ oi ,Swdenbcrj' WritiDgt. of doubt that Galli-Curhad performed the Stupendous feat oi volumes oi reading the, thirty-tw- o Swedenborg in a 'single summer sea-soShe declared Leaven and Hell q very attractive and popular title and concerns that about Vhieh people ar$ moat eager to know ; but it is not one of Swedenborg's great works; although IT., makes a good popular anj introductory work. A Hcifvin Her Wort falli-Curci- ,, understands the writ-ingof Swedenborg 'qvqp, better than thpologiAns, because she puts them info practice in tha broadest life ol loving helpfulness. ... .she,' said that Scdenbdrg had limped her Jin her work. She had no loVagc? t,o' think of herr-elf but of her aqdien'aerv and let the music flow f through" hter: regard just t medium for life to pour through. She felt with and for her audiences, am singing was no effort for her. All Fet Vaniikct The more you do the more you give forth the .more, life and energy is poured into you, and you. arc stronger irfd. not weaker for the the trkmg a:id the singing, J alkvays feci Stronger; 1 am not ex hausted at all by my singing. Shows the reason and h6v lii comes in as you pout it forth usefully to Others. Yoy dont have to try or worry or fret. You imow it is not you but that.it i just being done through you." Speaking further of the help Swedenborg had beten to her in her work she said: .One. gets so much more Confidence. ; The other world and the one life, that comprehend all lifei becomes reality and all fear an worry vanish '. ci , self-impos- Mru Barron 'continues: "As an economist, .writing state- papers bn wdtghtsi ' measures, coinages and Currencies, Stvedbnborg is easily com-- ' "prehended. As an engineer trar.rport-- ' ,ing ships overland hs is easily visualized. As u government official in the 'great mining Industry of Sweden, Writing practical books on mining and Srfibiting, declared to be ibe founhe is dation of modern metallurgy of interest in the encyclopedia of ScAs the writer of 'volientific history. umes original studies in Search tor the human, soul he is, not witKoi.t ftut ' , to the realm ils neitficr, time nc(r 6pat?p upon which, to rest mental, conceptions, few may enter 'into the fullness of the revelation which has Come into the libraries of he wqrld throtigh' Emanuel Sweden- tv hen, on e corrn;? pf he unseen, where there VorK- - Think of twenty modern-rtizc- Swedenborg 32 Volumes Read in i Sinclo Summer Now understand, she said, and asked me for explanation of othei things.,' Her ' intelligent questions, a well ui her statements, .left no man-nc- r : lumarjiiiterest., his body. ti volqfhes, originally written in the .aitin, tongue, and, unfolding from the JileWrciv of Genesis and Exodus the internal or spiritual. Bent 6 lies beneath the, letter. Annex, a dozen in ore similar volumes that not only ' expound every piclur pet forth in the book of Revelation an conveyor df '4 tremendous truth of universal application 'throughout invisible decrees of creation and life, but also jliumine all the problems of sex as presented throughout the universe from the, union of the love and Wisdom in ithe divine down to sex crystallization in , the mineral kingdom; include the deepest' of all Works entitled,. in' the original, Latin, '''relic Wisdom Concerning the Di-- 1 I .eve and t Ve Divine Wisdom. ever-vrittp- ci , s lici-sel- do-m- Swed-enbor- navi-gatfb- tl 1 d j . t)8.5T5-mije- 4 w-- ;- '. . r .'s ! - y-it- U s , y; t0 n d wing-sprea- , j Nffi-li- i I '1 I l 1 - . e 1 forty-seve- n ili-le- A by-,tl'- Wdi-luir.- v ; - j -, f GengV-tipbl- ' Tourist I'oK'.-'-TM- s L U-- . . Y.-L- ' rr.Ug-netl- . lee-fill- Spltz-ticrge- v-ut- . mag--eti- . 1 400-mil- - 400-mil- . e e 400-mii- e t. . ' 830-mi- ie ( 800-mil- 'is. - -- com-pas- 400-mil- e e : j ' s - i J - .'' , , 1 .. '' ' - -- . |