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Show THE RICH COUNTS REAPER. JUST LIKE A WOMAN NOTICE TO CREDITORS iOMM CLAIMS WENDELWEALTN Based on Ancient Document Proving Secret Marriage of Grandmother. New York. While the machinery of the law is going ahead with the task of dividing up among many charities the vast Wendel fortune, a far-flun- g woman in Whfeford, R. I whose adult life has been spent washing dishes and cleaning house for others is hop'ng (hat lawyers will he al.le to get a slice of several millions for her. She is Mrs. Oh arles E. L. Hayward and site is i nning those hopes on a ecrtifrate y How with age that site says proes her grandmother was the secret bridp of John Gottlieb Wen-de- l, .fr. It was John. Incidentally, who that his s'sters never hearken to the voice of Onpid, then if Mrs. middle-age- Estate of Annie Silencer Norris, Deceased. Creditors will present claims wbb vouchers to the undersigned at the office of Wm. E. Davis, Attorney, First National Rank Iildg., Brigham City, Utah on or before the 15 day of 'ck-eye- 1 d A. D. 1031. November, RUTH JACQUES and LOTTIE DAVIES. Executrices of the Estate of Annie Spencer Norris, Deceased. WILLIAM E. DAVIS, Attorney for Executrices, Brigham, Utah. Date of first publication: June 26, 1031. Date of last publication : July . 24, 1931. d Haywards story is correct dole away one day in answer to that same Miioe to become a huslv nd and, eventually, a father. Last of Family Dsad. Mrs. Haywards claim is one of the few that seem to have any basis among the hundreds that have poured in to administrators of the fortune s'nce the last of the rich and aristocratic Wendels pisssd away the other day in the person of a,red M'ss E'la. Here, according to Mrs. Hayward and her friends, is the "tory of John Gottiieb Wcnd'Ts secret romance: He was still a young man, and John Gottlieb. Sr., still was living whpn, it Hanis said, he met pretty, hi nah Holt, from Alton, N. H. was ,iust out of CoYoung Wend lumbia unhersity. His father was strict as strict as he himself was to become in later years, but he and Hannah found ways and means of avoding the parental eye. On July 10, 1835, it is claimed, John Gottlieb Wendel, Jr., and Hannah Ilolt eloped and were married in East Greenwich, N. Y., by a justice of the peace named Stewart. At that time, young Wendel was In business in Albany. Daughter Is Born, itemher 1836. it is claimed, a RANDOLPH. - Horehound Candy Horehound candy is flavored with an extract from the leaves of the plant known as horehound. This plant belongs to the mint family and was called horehound or hoarhound because of the white, downy appearancd of the stem and leaves, suggesting hoar frost. The r.nthflnder. Up HIS TOOTHACHE WINS BRIDE IN QUEER ROMANCE BUSINESS PITFALLS Travels Far to Get Molar Yanked; Takes Girl He Had Never Seen. Bankers Point Out Hazards of Unsound Practices and Help Farmers to Avoid Them. Montreal. It isnt every day that travels 2,500 miles to have tooth pulled, and when at the end of his journey he wins a bride sigbf unseen in a romance linking thre continents together, its probabl discourWAYS in which bankers may are defarm unsound practices age scribed by President F. D. Farrell of man 1 daughter, Bertha, was born. UTAH How about that five dollars you were short on my allowance last news. bant former Hugo Reitmeier, clerk of Langeburg, Germany, did a)' that however, and is now on his wed ding trip, back to his tiny domain of Pau, in the Polynesian Island of the Pacific, where he rules as an almost absolute monarch. Reitmeier has lived a life of travel and adventure seldom encountered are always trying to start outside the pages of fiction, for mor ment. than half of his forty years of lift After his experiences in the World Aint It So? he found himself unable to setwar, Dad, Johnny said, Whats this big town stuff? tle back into the dull routine of a Son," dad replied, bank clerks existence and, accordingIts bull and bluff!" ly, shipped before the mast. Cash Royalties Many Parts of World. He Im known as the King of the The ensuing years saw him in many Jazz Song Writers, and my partner is parts of the world, as coalheaver, the Crown Prince. deckhand or engine room worker, in I How Im Lady Young thrilling ships of five different nations; and very much interested in royalties. week? Now, there you go again! to that time John Gottlieb Wendel, Sr., had not learned of his sons marriage, but shortly thereafter, it is stated, he did hear of it. Young Wendel, so the story goes, was given his choice between the Wen del fortune and his wife and child and chose the fortune. Bertha Wendel, it Is stated, when she grew to womanhood, was married to Edward Davis, a sailor. That was In 1884. The following year, their daughter said to be the present Mrs. Hayward was horn. Whether John Gottlieb Wendel, Jr.s sisters ever knew of tills supposed branch of the family is not known. If they d d, they did not recognize it Berfha Davis, it is stad, died in the Home for the Poor at Rhode Cranston in 1912. Women an argu- Feminine Comment Wonder what kind of a wife that judge has. Y'ou think she is remiss in looking after him? I dont like the hang of his gown. "Bad ness, Good Roads, Maybe weather, bad crops, bad sighed Senator Whoozis. busi- Eh? Whats a fellow gonna claim credit Youth Blinds Shark When It Attacks Him for? Brisbane. Sharks arent so much, according to Stanley Roser, eighteen, who recently staged a quiet bout with fish. While one of the swimming the shark attacked him, sweeping up from beneath with a furious rush. Just as the shark closed on him, Roser extended one of his fingers and pushed it directly into the sharks eye. ending the struggle. man-eatin- g Louisville Courier Journal. Fair for All What is this game? Pitching horseshoes. Any luck in it? If there is, it is evenly divided. They all have horseshoes. , Few Left for Export Of all the peaches that are commercially canned in this country, people in the United States cat up four-fifth- To This Newspaper . . . THE FAMOUS LUNDSAY ItnEAD KNIFE (PATENTED) Cuts bread, yes even fresh warm bread in Slices slices of any desired thickness. cakes with or without icings. Can be like any knife. cleaned or Made of highest grade carbon steel ' a lifetime of useful service Retails At $1.00 Free To You i IN FARM DISTRICTS the Kansas State Agricultural College in the American Bankers Association Journal. He says : In Kansas in connection with the Importation of dairy cattle, a large shipment of very inferior animals came into a county to be sold at auction to local farmers. The county agricultural agent informed the bankers that the cattle would bo a detriment to the community. The bankers refused to finance the purchase of the cattle and the sale was abandoned. The cattle were shipped to another county. The county agent and the hankers there did as was done in the first Instance and the second county escaped. "A year ago creamery promoters began trying to capitalize the Kansas farmers desire to improve his markets by inducing communities of farmers to purchase creamery plants before production and local conditions justified them. Informed of this by the State Agricultural College, the bankers association sent warnings to every bank In the state, leading many to refuse to support the creamery promoters until the college approved the plant for the community concerned. Thi3 saved many communities loss from the premature establishment of plants. A third way bankers can discourage unsound practices is to refuse to finance farmers who wish to pyramid their enterprises, a temptation difficult to resist. This is illustrated among farmers who buy cattle for feeding purposes. A farmer feeds two or three cars of cattle one year and makes a good profit. This induces him to buy twice or three times as many the second year, still more the third and so on until he finally loses more by having too many cattle on feed in a year of bad prices than he made in several previous years with smaller numbers and better prices. When hankers discourage bad practices their action is a positive benefit to the farmers concerned. once brought him a prison term in Australia for stowing away on a steamer from Buenos Aires. Chance finally brought to his attention tlie fact that a tiny island in the Polynesian group was for sale, and, with his savings, he purchased it, and set himself up there as a trader the only white man within hundreds of miles. ' ne named his island Pau, the native term for journeys end, and was contented there until he developed a toothache. There was not a dentist to be found anywhere on the Polynesian Isles and finally, after enduring the pain for nearly a year, Reit- meier struck out for the steamer lanes and worked his way to Vancouver, where he had his teeth thoroughly overhauled. Birth of Romance. Before returning to his island home, Reitmeier visited some German friends in Waldeck. Manitoba, and there was induced by his hostess to enter into , correspomitme with her sister, in Regensporgen, on the Rhine. Franziska was alone in Germany since the death of her mother, and Reitmeiers stories of adventure in all corners of the globe and of his island home neath the tropic skies, fired her imagination and won her admiration. Their correspondence ripened into love, and finally Franziska agreed to become the uncrowned queen of the island of Pau. She migrated from Germany and was married to Reitmeier on the immigration docks here, and the couple are now enroute to Polynesia where they hope to establish a white colony. Fran-ziska- 1 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF UTAH IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF RICH. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate of MYRON HANSEN, also known as 0. M. HANSEN, deceased. ORLANDO Oivditors will present claims with vouchers to tihe undersigned administrator at his residence at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah, on or before the 15th day of August, 1931. LLOYD H. HANSEN, Administrator. NEWEL G. DAINES, Administrator's Attorney. Date of first publication, June 19th. Date of last publication July 17,1931. 1 Faith in Vinegar During the Thirteenth and Fourteenth centuries vinegar was believed to be effective In the treatment and nrevention of plague. The farmers of one county in Tennessee are receiving $400,000 additional annual income from new farm enterprises started since 1926 through the efforts of a key banker and the county agent, according to estimates from the Tennessee College of Agriculture. A key banker is a part of the state bankers association voluntary field force cooperating with the American Bankers Association in its nationwide plan for bringing about better agricultural conditiops through comeffort. New pro- bined banker-farme- r ects started in this particular county are tobacco, Irish potato and cabbage production for cash crops, and dairying and poultry raising for livestock. The key banker, looking for something to do to better his community, first attempted to procure a county agent but was unable to get the county to make the necessary appropriation, so he and other leading citizens made up the requisite funds through private subscription among farmers and business men and an agent was employed. Up until 1926 grain was the principal farm production in the county. The banker recognized the disadvantages of this. It afforded a low cash income, and the land was too hilly and rough for profitable grain raising. His Idea was to introduce cash ops that offered more return per acre and were better fitted to the county. It was decided that the county should standardize on the Green Mountain potato and to market it in carload lots. Through his hank he sponsored the biding of a ear of certified seed potatoes. He likewise bought some high quality tobacco seed and several hundred settings of purebred eggs. These supplies were distributed at cost through the hanks to the farmers. After considerable effort a market for dairy products was assured the farmers when in 1928 a national cheese company located a factory there. A county appropriation was secured for county agent work in 1928. In 1929 the cash crop program resulted in farmers selling $45,000 worth of ruiiv, $150,000 worth of tobacco and e carleads of potatoes and cabbage, mostly through cooperative sales. This was some step from the $25,000 worth of sash crops in 1926, the county agent says, and indications are that this amount will be doubled. . fifty-fiv- Frogs Select Puddles All things are relative, and being an Important citizen is merely a matter of finding a town small enough. Richmond News Leader. |