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                    <text>Loading Up the Freight Wagons

Indians

on

Second Street, Casper, Coming to Town for Supplies—1892

�Wtiomincj S^ate
(By Charles E. Winter)
In the far and mighty west,
Where the crimson sun seeks rest,
There’s a growing, splendid state that lies above
On the breast of this great land.
Where the massive Rockies stand.
There’s Wyoming, young and strong
The state I love.
CHORUS:
Wyoming,
Wyoming,
Wyoming,
Wyoming,

Wyoming,
Wyoming,
Wyoming,
Wyoming,

land of the sunlight clear.
land that we hold so dear.
precious art thou and thine
beloved state of mine.
«*^.2

oless Gmeiica
While the storm clouds gather
Far across the sea
Let us swear allegiance
To a land that’s free.
Let us all be grateful
For a land so fair,
" 'T'
As we raise our voices
.
'
In a solemn prayer—

CHORUS:
God bless America,
Land that I love.
Stand beside her and guide her
Thru the night with a light from above;
From the mountains, to the prairies.
To the oceans white with foam,
God bless America
My home sweet home.

�How to Pronounce
Names of Places on
the Battle Front

Gerald L. Schcyler
General agency
1068 Gas g. Electric Elec.
Denver, Colorado

�COMPLIMENTS OF

Ah-sy
Acy .
Ain-yee
Aigny
Ain
Aisne
Agincourt
........ Ahl-bair
Albert ..
Alincourt
...............................................................
Ah-lan-ko
............................................. Om-bon-nay
Ambonnay
Om-bree
Ambrief ... ..................................
Ah-me-ang
Amiens ... .....................................
............................................................. On-se-on«veel
Ancienville
..................................................................................... Ank'r
Ancre
Antilly ..................................................................................... Ahn-tee
.....................
Ar-see
Arcy
Ar-mon-te-air
Armentieres
Arras
Ar-rass, or Ar-rah
Artois
............................................................... Ar-twah
Arvillers
Ar-vil-lair
Assainvillers
As-sain-vil-lair
Atbis
Ah-tee
Aure
Ore
Auteuil
0-tur-yee
AvaQon
...............................................................Ah-vah-song
Avesnes
Ah-vain
Avize
Ah-veez
Ay
I
Azy
Ah-zee
Basel
Baume
Beaune
Bellot
Besangon
Bethune
Billy
Blanzy
.
Blerancourdelle
Bligny
Bouchoir
BoufFioulx ....
Bouillon
Boulogne ....
Bourgoin
Bourgogne ....
Bourre
Bray
Brenne

.................................... Bai-zy (Flemish)
Borne
Bone
Bel-lo
.......................................................... Bay-zahn-song
..................................................................... Bay-tune
............................................................................... Bee
..................................................................Blahn-zee
Blay-ran-koor-del
................................................................. Bleen-yee
............................................................... Boo-shwah
................................................................ Boof-fee-oo
.....................................................................Boo-yong
..................................................................... Boo-lone
. ................................................................. Boor-gwon
Boor-gone
...............................
...................
Boor
............................................................................. Bray
Brenn
..........................................................

This Company Paid San Francisco

�CALIFORNIA INSURANC]

HOME OFFICE, 550 SACRAMENTO STREE^

Srie ....
.....................................................Bree
Brienne
.................................................Bree-enn
Bruyeres ................................................................................. Bru-yair
Bruz ... ... 1...................................
Bruze
Bucquoy ..................................................................................Bu’kwah
......................................................... Buse-song
Bussang
Buzancy
.
........................................... Bu-zahn-see

Caix
............ ............
C&amp;7
Cambrai
. .................................
Cahm-bray
Chantelle ... 1., .................................................................... Shan-tell
....................................... Shan-tay-nay
Chantenay ....
Chantilly
............................................................... Shan-tee-yee
Charleville .... ....................................
Shar-luh-veel
Chateau-Thieiry
Sha-to-tee-air-ree
Chateauroux ... .................................................................. Sha-to-roo
....................................................................... Shah-tel
Chatel
Chaudefontaine ........
Shoad-fon-tain
Chaulnes
. .......................................................................... Shone
Chipilly
....................................................................... Shee-pee
Coligny
.................................................................Ko-leen-yee
Combles
...........................................................................Combi
Commercy .... ............................................................ Kom-mehr-see
.............................................................. Eom-pee-ain
Compiegne
Conde
....................................................................... Kon-day
Congy
.................................................................... Kon-zhee
Consenvoye .... ............................................................. Kon-son-vwah
Corbie ...............
;............................................ Cor-bee
Cornet-Malo
Cor-nay-mah-lo
Craonne ...... ...................................................................... Krah-on
Crecy
................................................................... Kray-see
Dijon
................................................................................. Dee-zhon
Dompierre
Dom-pee-air
Dompremy
Dom-pray-mee
Douai ...
.................................. Doo-ay
Doullens
Dool-long
Epernay
Epinal

Ay-pair-nay
Ay-pee-nal

Fere-en-Tardenoi» .. .................................... Fair-on-tar-den-nwah
Fismette .................
:.......................................... Fee-met
Fontenoy .............
:.................................. Fon-ten-nwah
Fresnes ..........., ............................... Frayne
Fresnoy-en-Chanu^e .... .................
Fray-nwah-on-show-say

mflagration Net Losses, $1,845,000.00-

�: COMPANY OF SAN FRANCISCO
Fresnoy-le-Grand
Fray-nwa-luh-grahn
Gironville ......... .......................................................
...
Givet
.......
.
......................................................
Zhee-vay
Givry
..............
.
................................................
Zhee-vree
Grammont .....
..................................Gram-mon
Guise ...................
• • ................
Geez
Ham
.............
Hahm
Haramont ............
... Ar-rah-mon
Harbonnieres ....
Ar-bon-nee-air
Hartennes-et-Tanx
.. Ar-ten-eh-to
Hautevesnes
..........
Ote-vain
Herpont
.........
Ehr-pon
Hurlus ...................
................ Ur-lu
lale-sur-Suippea
Y-leh-sur-s weep
Ivors .................
................. Y-vore
Jalons
.............................. Zyah-lon
Janvry
......................... Zyahn-vree
Jaulgonne ................
................................
Zho-gon
J onchery-sur-Suippes
Zhon-shay-ree-sur-sweep

Langi ?s ...
.......................................
Lon-gr
Laon
Lah-ou
Lassigny .., ...............................
....................................................................
...
Le Catelet .
Luh-kat-lay
Le Fretoy .. ........................................
Luh Fret-twah
Le Quesnel . .............................................................
Le Tronquoy ...................................................................... Luh Kes-ne
Luh
Tron-Kwah
Lens ............
Longwy .... ................................................................................... Lons
Louvain .... ...........................................................................Long-vee
..................................
Loo-vane
Louveignd
Loo-veen-yay
Louers ........
...............................................................................
Loo-ay
Luce
................................
Luce
Lucon
..............
.................................................................
Lu-son
Lys
................................................................................. Leese
Mailly
........................................................................May-ye
Malines
.........................................................
Mah-leeu
Marie-auz-Mines
... -ree-o-meen
Marseilles
Maubeuge ......... ............................................................. Mar-say-yuh
Meaux ............... ................................................................... Mo-burge
.................................. Mo
Merville ........... .....'.
........................Mair-veel

)ne Hundred Cents on the Dollar

�Meuse
................................................................................... Murze
Mezieres
................... May«ze-air
Mons
.................................................................................... Mons
Montdidier
Mong-dee-de-ay
Montmirail
............................ Mon-mee-ri-ee
Montron ...
.......................................................... Mon-tron
Morangis
Mo-ron-zhee
Moreuil
........................................................
Mo-ruh-yee
Morlancourt
Mor-long-koor
Mouilly
. -Moo-yee
Mouron
• ........................................................................... Moo-ron
Muizon ...
...................................... Mwe-zon
Muret
................................................................................ Mu-ray
Mutigny .. ..................................
Mu-teen-yee
Nesle
Nancy
Nanteuil
Neuf chateau ...
Nivelles
Nogent-le-Ketrou
Nomeny
Noyon

Oeuilly
Oigny
Oise ..
Ourcq
Ourthe

TTh-ee
Wahn-yee
.................................................................................. Wahz
........................................... Oork
Oort

Facaut
Pargny
Peronne
Petit-Croix ....
Petit-Morin ..
Pieronne
Plessier
Pont-a-Mousson
Priez
Proyart
Prunay

Quatre-Bras

Hamillies ..
Raon-l’Etape
Remirremont
Revigny ...
Rbeims . ...
Rocroi
Roisel
Romilly ....
Rosiere
Roubaix ....

...................
Nail
...................................................................Nahn-see
...................................................
Nahn-tuh-ee
.............................................................. Nuh-sha-to
. ................................................................... Nee-vell
No-zhahn-luh-ret-troo
............................................................No-may-nee
................................................................ Nwah-yon

........................................................................ Pah-co
...................
Parn-yee
...................................................................... Pay-ron
..........................................................Pet-tee-krwah
.......................................................Pet-tee-mo-ran
.................................................................... Pay-ronn
.............................................................. Pless-see-ay
Pont-ta-moo-son
......................................................................Pree-eh
............................................................... Prwah-yar
...................................................................... Pru-nay

Kat’r-brah
................................................................... Rah-mee-yee
Rah-own-lay-tap
.................... Rem-meer-mon
................................................................... Rev-veen-yee
.............................................................................. Rance
......................................................................... Rokr-wah
........................................................................ Rwah-zel
.................................................................... Ro-mee-yee
Ro-zee-air
.......................................................
........................................................................... Roo-bay

�Roye
Rozieres
Rozoy-Bellevalle
Rozet-St. Albin
Ruasy
Rozainvillers ..

......................................................................... Rwab
.....................................
Ro-zee-air
Ro-zwah-bell-vall
Ro-zay-san-tal-ban
..................
Ru-sy
4............................... Ro-zain-vil-lair

Sacy
. .............Sab-see
Sancy
.............. Son-see
Sault-St. Remy
So-san-ray-mee
Savigrny
...................................................... . .Sab-veen-yee
Sedan
............Seh-don
Sezanne
........... Say-zan
Soissons
.. ............................................. Swab-son
Somme
. ... .............. Som
Sonilly
........ Son-ee-yee
Sonplets
......... Son-play
St. Blaise
.............................................................. ........ San-blaze
Ste. Cecile
...................................................... .. Sant-say-seel
St. Die
..........................................
... .San-dee-ay
St. Mihiel ................................................
... San-mee-yel
St. Pol
...................................................... .......... Sang'pol
St. Quentin
................................. ... San-kon-tan
Tagnon
............Tan-yon
Termes
........................................................ Term
Thionville
........................... .. .Tee-yon-veel
Thory
....................................................... Tore-ee
Tirlemont
.\
....... Teerl-mon
Tongres
................. Tong’r
Tournai ......................................................
. ■........... Toor-nay
Tournant
...........................
........ Toor-nahn
Treves ................................. ;
..................Trayv
Trois-Vierges
Trwab-vee-erzh

Unchair
............
Ung-shair
Ussy ..................................................................................................
Vadenay ...............
Vab-den-neb
Vailly .. .........................................................
Va-yee
Versailles
..........................Vair-si-yee
Verviers
Vair-vee-ay
Vervins . ................................................................................... Vair-van
Vesle ...............................................
Vail
Vise
............................................................Vee-zay
Vitry-le-Frangois ....’.
Vee-tree-luh-fron-swab
Vosges
.............................................................. Vozb
Vraux
Vro
Vregny
Vrayn-yee
Villers-aux-Erables
Vil-lair-zo-ray-rabbi
Villers-Bretonneux
Vil-lair-bray-ton-nub

Witry-les-Rheims

Vee-tree-lay-rance

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*«—32“^

�INVENTORY

(Manusoripts* books and pamphlets.)
October 31, 1936
*
Holy Bible
Ancient Egypt
McCoy’s Egypt
Susana and Sue
*
Calamity Jane
|
Soul of Parts
Monroe Do Balzac
Indian Odyssoy
Cook’s Attainment of the North Polo
More Power to You
Pardners
Goldsmith’s Poems
T.’hittior’s Early Poems
John Halifax
Kate Mulhall
Jaoob Hamblin
Pioneering the West
On the Face of the Waters
Shakespeare’s Works
The Old Timer’s Tale
An Aray Boy of the Sixties
Four Hundred Million Acres
2 @ 2.00
The Challenge to Liberty
Over Land and Under Ground
Frank Gouard Indian Fighter
Eugene Field’s Works
12 © 2.00
Reminiscences of Chicago During the ’40’a.
Inaugaural Addresses of Presidents
Gurdon Saltonstall Hubbard
John Long’s Voyages
Alexander Ross’ The Fur Himters of the Far West
Alexander Ross’ Adventurers on the Oregon
Josiah Gregg’s Comeroe of the Prairies
Zebulon Pike’s Southwesteim Expedition
Win. Louis Manly’s Death Valley in ’49
Memorable American Speeches - Secession, War, Reconstruction
Kendall’s Texan Santa Fe Expedition
Waubun The "Early Day" in the Horth-West
McKenzie’s Voyage to the Pacific Ocean 1793
Narrative of the Adventures of Zenas Leonard
Larpenteur’s Forty Years a Fur Trader
Pattie’s Personal narrative
Bidwell’s Echoes of the Past
Steele’s In Camp and Cabin
Kit Carson’s Autobiography

2.00
3.00
2.50
1.50
3.75
2.50
2.00
2.50
5.00
2.00
2.00
2.50
2.50
2.00
1.50
1.25
2.00
2.00
1.50
1.50
1.50
4.00
3,00
2,00
3,00
24.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5,00

5,00
5,00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5,00
5,00
5,00
5.00
5.00

�Cyclopedia end Diotionary
12 volumes
30.00
Teacher’s and Pupil’s Cyclopedia 4 @ 4.00
16.00
Our Times
4.00
Only Yesterday
4,00
Resouroes and Men of Mwitana---------------------------------------------------------- -------The Cambridge Modem History end Atlas
18*80
TIJyaaBing Compiles Statistics
12.50
The Adams’ Family
4.00
History ef the lMlted Statee (naaK^hewie) 8 velumee
'
— ...lOyOeTrailing Goromimo
2.00
Darwin’s Decent of Man
3.00
Wine, Women and Song
1.00
Ths World of Just You and I (BillBarrow)
5.00
Meeker’s Busy Life of Eighty Years
2.00
Government of Teaming (Hebard)
2.00
Pathbreakers (Hebard)
2.00
Every Man a King (Huey Long)
1.25
Wild Fire (Zane Grey)
2.00
Madam Therese
2.00
The Blockade of Pahlsburg
2.00
Middleimaroh
1,50
That Printer of Udells
1.50
A New Philosophy of Life (Wemner)
,50
Popo’s Poems
2,00
Bancroft’s Works Vol, 25
5,00
Death on the Prairie
2*50
History of Natrona County XS@ 7,50
USr56
Longfellow’s Works
5,00
Gould’s History of Free Masonry Throughout the World 6 © 10,00
60,00
Mackey’s Encyclopedia of FreeMastmry 2 © 7,50
15.00
The Book ef History—18 © 8.00-----------------------------------The-Boek ef Baewledge—80 © 8.00------------------------------------------------*60.00
History Grand Chapter, R, A, M, Illinois (itesenle)
3,00
Grand Lodge of Washington (Masonic)
3.00
Histery ef Free Maeenry la Indiaaa------------------------------------------- 2.00
Mackey’s Principals of Mascaiio Law
3,00
The Maseaie Eeleetle
- '—.. ... .... —......... .......... -....———............... —............ 8.00"
dltstcrieal T.awdmarlfs ef Free Maseasy—8-© 4.60
... . "OrOO’
-------- 2V8O
Hletery ef Maseaie Initiatiea----------------------- -—
1.00
Ancient Craft .’&lt;!as(mry in Vermont
.1.50
Centennial Anniversary of Masons in Maine
2.50
Washington Grand Lodge History
2,50
Grand Lodge of Maine
2,50
Territorial Masonry
3.00
Nebraska Grand Lodge Masonry 2 @ 1*50
2.50
Intermountain Folk
1']^ K.OO
Banditti of the Plains (Mercer) a typewritten copies © 6.00
r Histery ef the Jtesoaie flgand Lodge, of Iowa 8 © 4.00
------- 3MO2,50
Centennial Gi*and Lodge of Masons in Kansas
Centennial Grand Lodge ef Masons ta Delaware.....

�History of Freimsonry In Illinois
History of Frswnasqnry In Ohio—3 S 3,00---------------------------*■ History of King Ilirsm&lt;o Lodge in Cosinootlswt 1783 to 1888
History of grand Lodge of rdaeone Bl atriot ^f-Oelumbia------Viyooilng Masonio Bulletin 1929»1931
-Hletei^ of Freenaaenry-ln Mguyland—8
— ----------------Hi atary ■ of ffreemaaonry. tn PeBnsyleania—3 @ 6,00--------------Poetical Works of Thessas Moore
Soi*apbook8 }C|»000 pages 10 volumes (Indexed)
Robert Stuairfc’s Dleoovery ot the Oregon Trail
Maloom Campbell, Sheriff
Trails Plowed Under (Russell)
The Day of the Cattleman
Nebraska State Historioal Soolei^ Publloatlons
Saoajawea (Hebard)
Washakie (llebard)
fu\
ftlstory of Preeaasonry In wyeislgg—---------------Transition of the West
%
Caspar Collins (Wright-Spring)
American Fur Trade of the Far West (Chittenden) 3 vols.
Story of the Early Days in Wyoning
Coutant’s History of ’'doming (with special index)
Forty Years Among the Indians
Our National Government (Mrs John A, Logan)
Dictionary of Thoughts
Mareus Wilson*s Aa^ioan History 1847______________________
The Crime of Cuba
Porflrio Diaz
Inumorable pamphlets (estimated @)
War on the Rebellion - official records 8 @ 6*00
When Day is Done
From Friend to Friend
The Book of Mormon
Deliveranoe
The Weird Orient
The Werld*B One Hundred Best Otesdee 10"e"w80'.... —.... -..
Menusorlpts of the Westwm Frtmtier
Manuscripts of Bibliography of Alfred J. Mokler
Western Historical Collections
Half-tone outs for "Guardtena. of the Weatei^-FroHt3ber"
Half-tone outs for "Transition of the West"
Half-tone outs for History of Natrona flounty"
Brass stamping die for "History of Natrona County"
Brass Stamping die for "History of Freemasonry"
Ealf-tcmes and die for "History of Freemasonry"
Desk Standard dlotionary

Total

1.50
-------------- 9*00
- ------------ 8^
-------------- 4&lt;00
5.00
--------------- -g^iggr

------------ ifitoe
3,00
7*60
3.50
&gt;
4.00
fl. 00
3*75
6*50
6*50
----- a4»00

3.50
25*00
2*50
17*50
4*00
7*50
5*00
------------ 12*50
4*00
5*00
20*00
10*00
1*00
1*00
1*00
1*00
1*50

300.00
150*00
50*00
66*00
87*00
353*00
26*50
18*50
659.00
2.50

�IHVaiTORY

(Pumlture - November 1, 1936)

88888888088080808883s

Section bookcases 9 © 2.50
22,
One new- Royal- typewriter
---------------- ——------ lOOi
Six chairs
20.
Five desks
25.
One filing and book cabinet
5,
One gxm cabinet
7,
One loose«*leaf ledger
10«
Two Filing oabinets
12.
One radio • Airline
20«
Two brief eases
6«
One gas heater
15«
One desk set •&gt; Shaeffer
14,
One Shaeffer life tiaie pen
8,
Fourteen pictures and frames © 2.50
35.
Ono W-^wSnith typewriter (~pld.)1?oj a I
One chandelier and lamps
10,
One 8 X 12 rug
10,
Ten letter files © ,50
5,
Shades and curtains
6,
Office supplies
15,
Miscellanoous
25,

Total

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                  <text>The Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are a series of the larger archival collection that are his papers. Both his Letterboxes and his Notebooks available in this digital repository include holograph manuscripts, which is to say, manuscripts written in the author's hand. Much of the material in Mokler's Letterboxes dates to the 1920s and 1930s.</text>
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                <text>Alfred J. Mokler Papers, NCA 01.v.1992.01 WyCaC US. Casper College Archives and Special Collections.</text>
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                <text>This Letterbox contains some odds-and-ends which include a print of a couple of photographs,  a copy of the Wyoming State Song, a pamplet on how to pronounce places on the battlefront,  and some notes of Mokler's.</text>
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                <text>The reformatted text and images in the Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are for personal, not-for profit use of students, researchers, and the public. Any use must provide attribution to the Casper College Archives and Special Collections (Western History Center). While being the property of Casper College, all text, images and other materials are subject to applicable copyright laws.  Commercial use, electronic reproduction, or print publication ot text, images, or other materials is strictly prohibited without written permission. All permissions to publish must be obtained from the rights holder and are not the repository's responsibility for securing. The rights holder may or may not be the repository.  Users also agree to hold the repository harmless from legal claims arising from use of material held by the institution and made accessible in this digital repository.</text>
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                    <text>�STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Indiana)
Board of Directors
R. W. Stewart, Chairman
W. M. Burton, President
Allan Jackson, Pice-President
W. E. Warwick, Pice-Pres., Genl. Mgr., Mfg.
R. H. McElroy, Traffic Manager
B. Parks, Pice-President, Asst. Genl. Mgr., Mjg.
E. J. Bullock, Director of Purchases
E. G. Seubert, Pice-President, Secretary-Treasurer
T. J. Thompson, General Manager, Sales
John D. Clark, Pice-President, Assistant to Chairman

Plant Managers and Superintendents
WHITING, IND.

J. E. Evans, Assistant Superintendent
H. F. Glair, Assistant Superintendent

R. E, Humphreys, Manager
G. Cash, Superintendent

SUGAR CREEK, MO.

H. R. Boehmer, Superintendent

G. H. Mofeett, Manager

WOOD RIVER, ILL.

C. B. Manbeck, Manager
W. W. Holland, Superintendent
F. J. Gainer, Assistant Superintendent
ROCKY MOUNTAIN DIVISION

Thomas S. Cooke, Manager

Casper, Plants No. 1 and No. 2

Greybull, Plant No. 1

B. L. Warren, Superintendent
H. M. Lockard, Assistant Superintendent

R. M. Andrus, Manager
A. E. Thompson, Superintendent

Laramie, Plants No. 1 and No. 2

J. F. Cullen, Superintendent

Casper, Plant No. 3

Glenrock Plant

M. G. Paulus, Superintendent
R. E. Wood, Assistant Superintendent
J. E. Rouse, Assistant Superintendent

R. E. Chamberlain, Superintendent
Florence, Colo., Plant

J. C. Park, Superintendent

Industrial Relations Department
J. W. Curry, Director, Chicago, Ill.
F2. H. Fisher, Assistant Director, Chicago, Ill.
C. W. Smith, Director Safety Division, Chicago, Ill.
D. M. Lobdell, Assistant

W. X. Bercaw, Assistant Director, Whiting, Ind.
C. F. Hall, Assistant Director, Wood River, III.
A. S. Hurt, Assistant Director, Sugar Creek, Mo.
Director, Casper, Wyo.

Joint General Committees
WHITING, IND.

L. 1. Alexander
Henry Behrens
R. N. Brown
Mike Bukvich
Thos. F. Duggan
Dan Foley
D. J. Gallagher
Geo. E. Girard
L. M. Graham
H. H. Grieves

J. A. Hazzard
M. D. Henrikson
G. G. Humphreys
Luke Kelly
H. Koch
Andrew Kompier
Fred T. Lancohr
W. J. Lynch
A. S. Musselman

John Burns
H. O. Eyssell
A. O. Hodges

L. C. Howard

Wm. Bacheldor
Arthur E. Gladden
J. F. Halloran

John A. Hubbard
Wm. E. Kelly
George W. Lang

B. E. Anderson
J. H. Arbuckle
H. E. Cotton
Ray Conkling
Howard Daylis
S. H. Diggs

Wm. Durham
C. P. Fuller
Bert Henderson
Gilbert O. Housely
C. E. Hooper

J. P. Nielsen
G. Fred Orideman
D. J. Paskwietz
C. A. Phelps
John Plath
G. J. Prentice
H. W. Robison
Nick Scholl
Warner Sutherland

Fred Score
U. G. Swartz
R. R. Tilton
P. O. Vandeveer
Carl Walanser
R. G. Walker
Harry Wheeler
D. William Whiting
Harry Whyte
Mike Youkan

SUGAR CREEK, MO.

Joseph E. Morgan
James E. O’Hara
Chas. Spahr

F. G. Lee
Eari. S. Mixire

C. E. Spitser
G. W. Thompson
0. W. White

WOOD RIVER, ILL.

Wash. McDonald
Wm. H. Miller
C. M. Shook

J. W. Stephenson
George H. Wilken
R. C. Wilson

CASPER, WYO.

John Lynch
W. F. Melvin
Clifford A. Miller
Albert H. Morris
Ed Moyle

R. B. Perry
J. W. Phelps
L. G. Smith
Chas. E. Stevenson
Carl Walker
J. C. ZOLNOSKI

GREYBULL, WYO.

R. L. D&lt;x;kery
J. F. Fletcher

W. T. Hughes

E. L. Knight

George Ovens

J. W. Gandsey

C. P. Meyer
G. L. Shepardson

LARAMIE, WYO.

IL M. Stricker

Ed L. Wood

GENERAL OFFICE

C. M. Donigan
E. R. Essery
H. H. Finnegan

A. E. Gorvett
W. J. Hawkins
J. E. Hecht

E. E. Kelley
Harvey W. Kino
A. E. MacMeekin

A. E. Persons
A. R. Smith
Joseph E. Sohurkk

�'Ij eaumont

Quarks

To Beaumont Parks and his associates, the officers and directors of this com­
pany, we of the Rocky Mountain Division, express our appreciation of their kind­
ly criticism, helpful advice and unfailing support.
1

�2

�STANOLIND

RECORD
1

Published for the Employees by the

!

Standard Oil Company
(INDIANA)

C. V. JULIAN, Editor
Publication Office: 910 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago

!

Vol. 6

SEPTEMBER

No. 11

WYOMING A TREASURE CHEST OF AMERICA
Oil, Cattle, Furs, Sheep, Iron, Farming All Play Part in Spectacular History
of the State of the Great Plains; History Resounds With
Deeds of Early Pioneers and Settlers
By Lloyd G. Smith
he

plains and mountain country now included in the confines of the State of Wyo­

were well known to the French and American trappers and fur traders early
Tming
in the nineteenth century when very little was known of the rest of the Rocky Mountain
region. Through the middle of the state ran the Overland or Oregon Trail over which
hundreds of thousands of emigrants travelled to settle the Pacific states. But Wyo­
ming was the highway and not the permanent home for these pioneers. Its rugged
mountains and desolate desert plains presented an inhospitable appearance to these peo­
ple who were looking for lands even richer and more fruitful than those they had left
in the east.
The mineral resources had no attractions miners. In 1753 the de la Verendryes, who
because of the lack of transportation and had grown rich in the fur trade in Canada,
nearness of other mineral supplies closer set out from Montreal on an expedition to
to the markets. So it is that Wyoming is determine the fur possibilities of the Rocky
still an industrial infant, just beginning to Mountain region. They did not reach Wyo­
develop its resources. With the exception ming until 1743. About a year was spent
of the desert state of Nevada, it is today in exploring and trapping in the western
the most sparsely settled state of the Union, part of the state and in 1744 they returned
having only 2.3 persons per square mile. to Montreal. The enterprise was a finan­
It is still a pioneer state and its history is cial failure but it paved the way for the
the deeds of pioneers.
British, French and American trappers who
The territory of Wyoming was under the flourished in this region from 1808 until
control of Spain, France and England be­ 1850.
fore finally becoming a part of the United The Great Divide
States. There are Spanish records in exist­
In the snow clad mountains of western
ence which relate of
Wyoming rise the
several expeditions
great rivers of the
ii
for exploration and P
continent flowing
Qjichno'iAl&amp;d^&amp;m&amp;nt
prospecting made
east, west and
ghc STANOLIND DECOTTD is indebt­
into the territory in
south. The Mis­
ed. to the fbllo'uJing persons and.
the sixteenth and
souri, the Columbia
agencies fir pictures and muterial
seventeenth centu­
and the Colorado
used in this issue. TV.S.Kimball,
ries.
Iron imple­
have their begin­
cd.J.eMohler, Casper tribune, Casper
ments and ruins of
nings here in a
Chamber of Commerce, Stale Highway
stone buildings have
multitude of small
Department, U.S.Bureau of 'Public
been found in the
streams coming
Roads, U.S.Reclamation Service,
Big Horn Moun­
from springs and
U.S. Forest Service, and the eNational
glaciers.
These
tains which are be­
Hark. Service,
lieved to have been
streams and the
forests bordering
used by Spanish

�^wo H&amp;ro&amp;s

In the minds of the younger
generation are two names closely
associated with the rise of the
West. No. 1—One is Buffalo
Bill (Cody). This monument to
that Indian fighter was erected
at Cody, Wyo., a town named
after him. No. 2—Another is
Jim Bridger, trapper, explorer,
Indian fighter and guide. His
fame was recently broadcast it.
the Emerson Hough’s “The Cov­
ered Wagon.”

them abounded in all kinds of fur bear­
ing animals. Great rivalry existed in the
early part of the nineteenth century be­
tween the Hudson Bay Company and the
American fur trading firms and each main­
tained large numbers of trappers in the
mountains and complete organizations for
transportation of supplies and furs to and
from St. Louis. Their route from St. Loui.s
was up the Missouri, the Platte and North
Platte rivers to the Sweetwater River and
up that and over the continental divide at

South Pass and thence into the Green River
valley, which was the rendezvous of all the
trappers.
Trappers from time immemorial have
used canoes for transportation but in going
to this region they had to abandon their
boats in the upper North Platte because of
its swiftness and shallowness and make the
rest of the journey with pack horses. Also
in their work of trapping they used the
horse instead of a canoe, thus departing
from the mode of travel of their eastern
forebears. As the business grew boats were
used only as far as Kansas City and wag­
ons hauled the goods the rest of the way
but still following the former route. It
was thus from small beginnings that the
greatest and longest highway that the world
has ever seen came into existence and was
later known a.s the Overland or Oregon
Trail. The traffic grew from Captain Bon­
neville’s train of 20 wagons and 110 men
in thirty years to trains of hundreds of
wagons, a stage coach line and the famed
Pony Express.

Heroes of the Old West
For fifty years the fur trading business
drew adventurous spirits from all parts of
the country. Men such as Kit Carson, Jim
Baker, Captain Bonneville, Jim Bridger, Jim
Beckwith and a host of others figured prom­
inently in the development of the west. Jim
Bridger, because of services as a scout, his
intimate knowledge of the whole Rocky
Mountain region and his manifold exploits
is considered the dean of all mountaineers
and the greatest hero of early Wyoming.
He started trapping in the Rocky Moun­
tains in 1822 with General Ashley’s trappers
and continued in this business in many ca­
pacities until 1856, when he retired to his
farm near Kansas City. Soon after, how­
ever, the Indian raids on the Overland Trail
caused the government to send several com­
panies of the army to protect the emigrants
and Bridger volunteered his services as an
army scout, where he served with distinc­
tion for twenty years, finally attaining the
rank of major. His name is perpetuated in
the history of the state by giving his name
to Bridger Pass, Bridger National Forest,
Bridger Peak, Bridger Lake and Fort
Bridger.
In 1843 Marcus Whitman took the first
band of emigrants to Oregon over the trail
which had been heretofore used only by
the fur traders. His train of 200 wagons
4

�and 1,000 people with their live stock and
other property was the first of many hun­
dreds of similar trains which braved the
terrors of the Great American Desert to
reach the rich land of the Pacific states.
By the time the Union Pacific Railway was
completed in 1869 the migration over this
trail was tremendous. As the hosts of emi­
grants increased, the trouble with the In­
dians also increased.
Days of Indian Wars
While the trappers in former years had
some difficulties with certain tribes of In­
dians, they were on friendly terms with
most of the tribes and were usually mar­
ried to Indian squaws and were members
of their tribes, but when the Indians saw
the increasing waves of white men advanc­
ing to take their lands away from them,
they united under such chiefs as Red Cloud
and Sitting Bull and waged a bitter war­
fare against the emigrants. For twenty
years the best talent of the U. S. Army was
engaged in subduing the savages, but due
to an inadequate conception of the task, the
officials in Washington refused to take the
advice of the officers in the field and many
lives were unnecessarily sacrificed.
The Overland Trail ran through the pres­
ent site of the Standard Oil Company (In­
diana) refinery in Casper and crossed the
North Platte River just above the plant.
The fort at this point was originally called
the Platte Bridge station, but in July, 1865,
Lt. Caspar W. Collins and eight of his
men were ambushed and killed by the In­
dians and in his honor the name was
changed to Ft. Casper by the War Depart­
ment.
By 1860 the population of the Pacific
States had become so great that better trans­
portation across the continent was demand­
ed. The Union Pacific Company was char­
tered by Congress in 1862 but work was
not started until November, 1865. In spite
of the attacks of the Indians in Nebraska
and Wyoming the construction proceeded
rapidly and on May 10, 1869, the last spike
was driven with much ceremony on the
railroad connecting the Atlantic with the
Pacific. This rapid means of transporta­
tion eliminated necessity for the Overland
Trail and it soon fell into disuse. The rail­
road did not follow the old trail but took
a shorter route even though the grades
were not as easy. It passes through south­
ern Wyoming and crosses the continental
divide over Bridger Pass. The building of

&amp;arly Days

No. .1—While the CasperThermopolis mail stage doesn’t
look like the modern (movie)
conception of early transporta­
tion it was practical. No. 2—
An emigrant camp on the pres­
ent site of Casper.

the Union Pacific is considered the greatest
railroad achievement of all time.
Wyoming Means “Great Plains”
Up to 1868 Wyoming was a part of
Dakota territory but in July of that year
Wyoming Territory was established with
Cheyenne as the capital. The name was
suggested by Congressman J. M. Ashley of
Ohio and comes from the language of the
Delaware Indians and means “great plains.”
Soon after the Union Pacific Railway
S

�was built, Wyoming began to attract atten­
tion as a cattle range. The value of the
sun cured grass of the desert plains for
cattle feed was first noticed by emigrants
who had to turn their cattle loose when
they were forced into winter quarters. They
expected them to starve to death and were
surprised to see them return to camp in
the spring in fine shape, having subsisted
on nothing but the dried grass of the plains.
Texas and Mexican cattle were the first
to be introduced in Wyoming, being driven
up from the south, but later better breeds
of cattle were imported.
Cheyenne and other points on the U. P.
R. R. became the centers of the industry
which increased by leaps and bounds until
by 1885 an immense amount of both domes­
tic and foreign capital was invested in Wyo­
ming cattle. It was the day of the large
unfenced range, the picturesque cowboy, the
rustler and other characters immortalized in
song and story. Owen Wister’s “Virginian”
is typical of this period and the “oldtimers”
of Casper point with pride to the landmarks
in the vicinity mentioned in this story.
The weak point of this method of cat­
tle raising was that no attempt was made
to protect the cattle against unusual weather
conditions. If the rainfall was scanty or
the winter especially severe, a great many
of them could not survive. In the late
eighties several hard winters bankrupted
most of the cattle men but it taught them
a lesson. The industry is now run on a
more scientific basis, supplying feed and
shelter for the cattle when they need it,
more in the manner of the stock farm in
the east.

years before the rush to California, but the
first actual mining operation was not start­
ed until 1861. At this time the miners had to
flee for their lives when attacked by In­
dians. From then until 1867 a little pros­
pecting was done but the Indian attacks
prevented any one staying there very long.
When a rich strike was reported in 1867,
miners came by the hundreds from all parts
of the country and the district was so
thickly populated that there was no more
danger from the Indians. In 1869 placer
mining was in full swing and a great deal
of gold was taken out. The towns of
South Pass and Atlantic City were typical
boom mining towns with all the vices and
excitement. The boom continued for sev­
eral years but the placers gradually played
out, so that now the district is practically
deserted, although there are still many min­
ing men who assert that there is plenty
of gold there if the proper machinery is
installed for handling the dirt in large quan­
tities.
Two Railroads Build
With the increase of population and
industry of the territory, better transpor­
tation was demanded and both the C. &amp;
N. W. Ry., and the C. B. &amp; Q. R. R.
started extending their lines into Wyom­
ing in 1886 and 1887. The C. &amp; N. W.
Ry. reached Casper in 1888. This was
the western terminus of that branch until
1905 when it was extended to Lander.
The railroad started Casper as a cow town,
the cattle and sheep business developed it
into a lively western town and the oil busi­
ness starting in 1913 made it the modern
city of 23,000 population that it is today.
The C. B. &amp; Q. R. R. reached Casper in
War Over Land
1914, connecting it with the east by way of
The increase of population and the poor Omaha and the west by way of Billings,
returns from cattle produced the home­ Montana.
steader and the sheep man. These, indi­
The railroads have done much towards
vidually and collectively, disputed the right developing the agricultural possibilities of
of the cattle men to monopolize the whole the state. The small farmers are becom­
state, which resulted in conditions too com­ ing more numerous, irrigation projects
plicated to discuss here. The friction led are rapidly increasing the land values, and
to bloody battles, the wanton killing of stock, vast areas of non-irrigable land have
the hiring of professional gun men and become productive under scientific dry
other acts disgraceful to the state. Event­ farming. The larger ranches are also
ually law and order were established and more prosperous as their cattle and sheep
equal justice is now meted out to the cat­ raising is conducted in a scientific manner
tle man, the sheep man, and the small and the loss due to unfavorable seasons
farmer.
is low. The production of crude oil, es­
One early industry of Wyoming must pecially in the Salt Creek field, in recent
be mentioned which flourished at the same years has added greatly to the wealth and
time as the cattle business. Gold was dis­ population of the state.
covered near South Pass in 1842, seven
(.iConcluded, Col. 1, Page 7.)

�Qhe, Story of Qfyoming Refineries
By R. M. Andrus

refining of petroleum is one of Wyoming’s largest industries and its startling
growth from a decidedly primitive beginning to its present day magnitude presents
a story of almost Aladdin-like nature. We have grown so accustomed to the conveniences
and facilities as presented by today’s modern machinery, methods, and chemical science
that we scarcely realize that it was not always so.
he

T

Let us take a backward glance at some
of the hardships and hazards that con­
fronted the pioneers of petroleum refining
in Wyoming, of the difficulties and disap­
pointments experienced, and lastly a review
of the realization of the dreams of the most
confirmed dreamer for the oil industry.
After many tedious years of prospecting
and the drilling of numerous dry holes a
producing well was completed on June 30,
1890, at a depth of 1,090 feet.
This well was located in the Shannon
field, which joins the famous Salt Creek
field on the north, and was drilled by the
Pennsylvania Oil &amp; Gas Co. An analysis of
the crude oil from this well showed it to be
24.5 Be. gravity with a paraffine base, low
cold test, and low sulphur content which
made it a desirable product for the manu­
facturing of all grades of lubricants.
Other Producers Followed
Other producing wells followed in this

field and in 1895 the Pennsylvania Oil &amp;
Gas Co. erected Wyoming’s first refinery
under the supervision of F. J. Carman.
This refinery was located in Casper on Wol­
cott street, between Railroad avenue and
the C. &amp; N. W. railway tracks. The re­
finery consisted roughly of one 1,000 barrel
still, four receiving tanks of 75 barrels
each, a 50-barrel agitator, two small settl­
ing tanks, two tanks for finished products
and a 60-H.P. boiler. The crude tank farm,
as we would term it now, was composed of
one underground wooden tank holding
about 300 barrels and one steel tank of
500-barrel capacity.
Dr. Frederick Salathe was superintend­
ent and being a distinguished and able
chemist, proved a capable and efficient head
during the life of the refinery.
Mr. John Duncan, still a resident of Cas­
per and engaged in the dray and transfer
business, and Mr. Ernest Gerber, now acid
works foreman for the Standard Oil Com­
pany (Indiana) at Casper, were the refinery
forces.
Present day working conditions in our
refineries call for an eight hour shift and
conditions were much the same then, except
that the shifts ran end on end and both
Mr. Duncan and Mr. Gerber found their
three eight hour shifts a day well filled with
such duties as firing the steam boiler, charg­
ing and firing the still, running the agita­
tor, finishing up the various grades of en­
gine, valve and car oils, and loading the
refined product for shipment.
Crude Hauled in Wagons
Probably the most picturesque yet at the
same time most hazardous problem for this
pioneer refinery was getting the crude oil
from the Shannon field 50 miles away to
the refinery at Casper.
To accomplish this string teams of from
18 to 22 horses were used drawing 3 or 4
wagons, each wagon carrying a tank hold­
ing about sixteen barrrels. One of these
outfits would make a round trip in about

{Conclttded from Page 6.)

Wyoming was admitted into the Union
on July 10, 1890, with a population of
62,555. It has the distinction of being the
first state to have the woman’s suffrage
clause in the constitution. Its motto, adopted
in 1890, is “Equal Rights.” In 1924 the
people chose Mrs. Nellie T. Ross, widow
of the late Governor Ross, for their gover­
nor, making Wyoming the first state to have
a woman governor.
Wyoming is just emerging from its
pioneer life and is getting well started on
the manifold development of its tremen­
dous resources. It has within its borders
rich lands, immense quantities of valuable
minerals and coal, and magnificent moun­
tain scenery all waiting to be fully de­
veloped. The climate is invigorating and
second to none in the world. The citizens
of the state are energetic, virile and am­
bitious. We have outlined the past history
of this state. Who can predict the future
of a state with these possibilities?
7

�gA String ^e.am o£ Sarly Refinery QJays

Here is a photo of a string team of early refinery days.
A stout heart and seven days
of hardship were required to deliver a small piece of equipment to the field or a few barrels of crude
oil to the factory.

seven days, if in good luck, so that about
four outfits were kept busy supplying
enough crude to keep the refinery in oper­
ation.
What a comparison between then and
now! In those days it required a stout
heart, twenty to twenty-two strong horses
and seven days of hardships to deliver fifty
to sixty-five barrels of crude oil to the re­
finery. Today, with no more physical effort
than the turning of a valve or two, a hun­
dred thousand barrels or more will have
changed location from the Salt Creek Oil
field to the Casper tank farms in one
day.
More producing wells were constantly
being brought in in the Salt Creek field
and in November, 1903, the Societe BelgoAmericain des Petroles du Wyoming bought
all the holdings of the Pennsylvania Oil
&amp; Gas Co., consisting of lands, producing
wells, refinery, etc., and in turn sold out
to the Franco-Wyoming Oil Company in
1910.
This company immediately began further
development of the producing field and in
1911 started laying a pipe line from Salt
Creek to Casper to supply crude oil for
their new refinery being built in the eastern
outskirts of the town.
This refinery was owned and operated by

the Natrona Pipe Line &amp; Refinery Co.
which was a subsidiary of the FrancoWyoming Company and fired up their first
still on June 11, 1912.
In the years 1911 and 1912 develop­
ments came thick and fast and Wyoming’s
infant industry was coming to the front
with the speed of our native jack rabbit.
“Midwest” Organized
Early in the year of 1910 The Midwest
Oil Co. was incorporated with Oliver H.
Shoup, president, and Verner Z. Reed, Karl
Schuyler, H. M. Blackmer, R. D. Brooks,
and Bern Hopkins his associates. This
company acquired considerable land in Salt
Creek and in July, 1911, commenced the
erection of a refinery in the western out­
skirts of Casper. A pipe line was laid to
bring the crude oil from Salt Creek and the
first still of the Midwest Oil Company was
charged and fired on January 15, 1912.
In the spring of 1913 the Franco-Pe­
troleum Company (same being the result of
a merger of the Franco-Wyoming and The
Natrona Pipe Line and Refining Company)
began the erection of a refinery just east of
and adjacent to the Midwest Oil Company
plant, and by October 1 of the same year
their first still was charged and Casper’s
fourth refinery materialized.
(Continued on Page 10.)
8

�Qhrce, Rocky ck^ountain. R^ncrics

Above are views of the Casper, Greybull and Laramie refineries of the
Standard Oil Company (Indiana). No. 1—This shows a section of the
refinery at Casper. No. 2—A portion of the Greybull refinery with its
tank farm in the background is shown here. No. 3—^This is the Laramie
refinery, which is at an elevation of 7,000 feet. It is the highest refinery
in America if not the world.

9

�Casper Refinery’s

Plant Council

I
B
c)________________________ ____________________________

An unique organization was formed by Mr. T. S. Cooke, manager of the Rocky Mountain
division, which handles plant executive matter en bloc. The organization is called the Plant
Council and consists of various officials and heads of departments, who meet regularly to consider
various matters concerned with the management and employees. In the picture are left to right
(front row) M. G. Paulus, superintendent of Plant No. 3; T. S. Cooke, R. M. Andrus, managers
of Plants Nos. 1 and 2; D. J. Smith, chief engineer of Rocky Mountain division; (second row)
Pitt Covert Jr., head of re-running and coke still department. Plant No. 3; L. G. Smith, head of
lubricating and paraffine department; A. V. Forbes, office manager; (third row) H. E. Cotton, head of
pressure still department; A. E. Thompson, superintendent of Plants Nos. 1 and 2; S. H. Diggs,
director of research. Rocky Mountain division; R. V. Heinze, head of acid and steam refined treating
department; J. E. Rouse, assistant superintendent of Plant No. 3; (top row) R. E. Wood, assistant
superintendent of Plant No. 3, and W. H. Tolhurst, master mechanic. Photo is by Deluxe, Casper.

valuable and necessary products (for which
the world’s markets were ready and in
need of) from the heavy crude bottoms
by the cracking process of the Burton pres­
sure still, and in the summer of 1913 the
building of a refinery for this purpose was
started under the supervision of Mr. C. B.
Manbeck and a corps of assistants brought
from the Whiting, Indiana, refinery.

(^Continued from Page 8.)

A consolidation of the Midwest Oil Com­
pany and the Franco-Petroleum Company
was effected on the first day of March,
1914, and through this the present Mid­
west Refining Company came into exist­
ence.
In the operation of these refineries there
was of necessity a considerable quantity of
the heavier products for which there was
very little outlet. This condition interested
the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) who
saw the possibilities of manufacturing more

“Casper Ships More OU”
A location was selected immediately east
of and adjoining the Midwest Refining
10

�Company’s plant and the work progressed Company (Indiana) commenced the erec­
rapidly so that by March of the following tion of four batteries of pressure stills at
year (1914) the first battery was put into Greybull and in May, 1917, began operation
operation.
under Mr. H. M. Lockard as superintend­
Both the Midwest Refining Company ent.
and the Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
Oil having been discovered in the Rock
continued to enlarge their plants and ex­ River field in the Southern part of the
tend their operations until by 1921 Casper State, the Midwest Refining Company start­
claimed to possess one of the largest re­ ed building a refinery at Laramie in the fall
fineries in the United States and the Cham­ of 1919, and the Standard Oil Company
ber of Commerce adopted as its slogan: (Indiana) erected a battery of pressure
“Casper Ships More Oil by Rail than any stills at the same location, both refin­
Other city in the
eries starting up in
World.”
the following sum­
Casper con­
mer, which was the
tinued to attract
occasion for a huge
the oil men and in
celebration by the
July of 1922 the
citizens of Laramie
Texas Company,
in which there was
after a careful sur­
some feasting, more
vey of conditions,
oratory and still
began the erection
more dancing.
of a refinery on a
In the spring of
location three miles
1918 the Mutual
east of Casper and
Producing and Re­
by February of the
fining Co., now a
following year fires
part of the Conti­
were started under
nental Oil Company,
their stills.
began the construc­
Following the
tion of a refinery at
completion of this
Glenrock, 25 miles
refinery the White
east of Casper, and
Eagle Oil &amp; Refin­
in January, 1919,
ing Co. began con­
started operation on
struction
work
crude oil from the
July of 1923 on a
Big Muddy field,
location about half
and in October,
a mile east of the
1921, the Standard
T e x a s Company,
Oil Company (Indi­
and in February,
ana) started con­
1924, their refinery
struction of a bat­
was completed and
tery of pressure
stills which fired up
placed in operation.
on May, 1922, under
In the foregoing
we have simply recited the history of re­ the supervision of L. E. Chamberlain.
fineries in and near Casper but other
The year 1922 saw the Producers and
refineries were being built in various Refiners Corporation begin the erection of
parts of the State.
a refinery at Grenville, Wyo., located on
Some time in the year 1914 a group of the Union Pacific Railroad seven miles east
capitalists from West Virginia decided to of Rawlins. Grenville, being a typical Wyo­
construct a refinery at Greybull, Wyo., sit­ ming station of very few if any houses, soon
uated in the Big Horn Basin, at the junc­ became a bustling community and took the
tion of the Greybull and Big Horn rivers. name of Parco, this being a contraction of
This refinery was completed and placed in the company initials. This refinery was
operation. In the following year, 1915, the completed and began the shipment of gaso­
Midwest Refining Company became inter­ line in March of 1923.
ested and in 1917 finally absorbed this re­
The Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
finery into the Midwest organization.
having secured control of the Midwest ReIn September, 1916, the Standard Oil
(Concluded in Col. 1, Page 21.)
11

�SxecuiiVes of

Some. Tiani

Above are some of the executives who have made the Rocky Mountain Division
one of the greatest refining organizations of the world. The photo of Mr. Thomas
S. Cooke, manager, is on another page. No. 1—M. G Paulus is superintendent of
Plant No. 3, Casper. No 2—R. M. Andrus is manager of Plants Nos. 1 and 2,
Casper. No’. 3—A. E. Thompson is superintendent of Plants Nos. 1 and 2. Casper.

12

�Tlocky

cMouniain

Division

most majestic. No. 1—This is Lincoln highway in Telephone Canyon,
43 miles west of Cheyenne. The photo is by the State Highway depart_ment. No. 2—Shooting up fifteen to thirty-five feet every twenty to
fifty-five seconds is the Constant Geyser in the Yellowstone Park. The
■photo is by National Park Service. No. 3—This is the Great Fall, 309
„ . ., .feet high. The photo is also by National Park Service. No. 4—Superintendent Albright of the Park is shown waylaid by A. Bear, alias Holdup
H. M. Loclpgfg^ Qjj jj highway. No. 5—In Shoshone National forest is Cody road
assistant suand the Palisades. A good road and a majestic view. Photo is by U. S.
tendent of Forest Service,
;
_____________
No. 2, Greybull. Photos Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6 are by Deluxe Studio, Casper.

13

�14

�e&gt;

Qhe. fhre, of the Open foad

Good highways that unfold amid everchanging landscape beckon the
stranger to go further and further into the mysteries of nature at its
most majestic. No. 1—This is Lincoln highway in Telephone Canyon,
43 miles west of Cheyenne. The photo is by the State Highway depart­
ment. No. 2—Shooting up fifteen to thirty-five feet every twenty to
fifty-five seconds is the Constant Geyser in the Yellowstone Park. The
photo is by National Park Service. No. 3—This is the Great Fall, 309
feet high. The photo is also by National Park Service. No. 4—Super­
intendent Albright of the Park is shown waylaid by A. Bear, alias Holdup
Pete, on a highway. No. 5—In Shoshone National forest is Cody road
and the Palisades. A good road and a majestic view. Photo is by U. S.
Forest Service

15

�16

�17

�18

�19

�QAe Grandeur thai is ’TUyomin^

Where each morning you look forward to your evening s camp site—
the air is so clear. No. 1—This is Lake Marie at the timber line. No. 2—
Top o’ the World is a section of the Great Glacier beds where earth and
sky meet. No. 3—Lake Geneva reflects the glory of the Big Hom
Mountains. The lake is fed from the mighty peaks and glacier streams.
Photo is by J. E. Stimson. No 4—Natural Bridge over LaPrele creek of
Douglas is a much patronized picnic spot.

20

�Qhe. State, of Opportunity
By Charles E. Winter
Congressman from JCyoming

N 1848, Daniel Webster, in a speech in the Senate, declared that the western part of
the United States, specifically New Mexico and California, was not worth a dollar. At
the same period Henry Clay, visiting the West, said that he could hear the tramp of the
oncoming millions. Clay had the true vision. The million have come. Many more millions
will come.
The West is in the formative period of a transition of the wilderness to civilization,
history at which the people of the nation constitutes a theme of surpassing great­
and of the world will stand and gaze in ness.
The State of Wyoming is typical of all
amazement. The wonderful strength, the
superb resources, the unlimited possibilities the states comprised in the Unopened Em­
of youth are its inheritance. With its gold, pire. The vitality for centuries of progress
silver and copper, its coal and iron and oil; lies in her mountains and plains. Wyom­
its phosphates, nitrates and potash; its ing is now stretching herself, even as a
forests and rivers and millions of square young giant rises from slumber, reaches
miles of undeveloped, productive area, the forth his mighty limbs, throws back his
West and its heroic people stand facing a shaggy locks from rugged brow, and takes
future which even today, no man can his position for the race. This young,
sparsely populated state is rising in her
measure.
The passing of the old western day of might. The glory of the morning of life
“space eternal” to the new day of diversi­ shining in her countenance, her veins puls­
fied industry; the birth of a new era of dis­ ing with prinstine vigor, her heart throbbing
covery, reclamation and development; the with vital power, her sinews vibrant with
unwasted strength, she is prepared to take
{Concluded from Page 11.)
her place in the forefront of the great
fining Company’s interest during the sum­ states of this great Union.
mer of 1921, took over on October 1, 1921,
Source of Three Rivers
the operating end of the combined refin­
The mountains of Wyoming, forming a
eries of the two companies at Casper, Grey­
bull and Laramie. Mr. T. S. Cooke, for­ 275 mile section of the Continental Di­
merly general superintendent of the Whit­ vide, give rise within its borders to the
ing Refinery, was appointed as manager of three great primary river systems of the
the combined refineries and the name United States west of the Ohio; the Miss­
issippi by the Missouri, the Colorado by
“Rocky Mountain Division” was adopted.
The Midwest organization continued in the Green, and the Columbia by the
field operation of exploration and produc­ Snake.
The state is 356 miles east and west, by
tion and this has proven a very satisfactory
275 miles north and south and has an area
combination.
While it has been thirty years since Cas­ of almost 100,000 square miles, sixty-two
per boasted its first refinery, yet the past million acres, made up of plains, valleys and
six or seven years have witnessed the big mountains, the latter containing seven mil­
substantial progress. From a single one lion acres of forests and much of the finest
hundred barrel still refinery to eight active river, lake and mountain scenery in the
refineries located in six different cities in world.
The first and greatest of all national
Wyoming with a combined charging ca­
pacity of 90,000 barrels daily is the story of parks, the Yellowstone, 54 by 72 miles in
progress for the refining industry, with ag­ size, visited last season by 145,000 people,
gregate storage capacity of 35,000,000 bar­ lies in the northwest corner of Wyoming.
It and a similar area south of it, including
rels.
To such proportions has grown that un­ Jackson Lake and the Teton Mountains,
pretentious, little underground wooden tank 13,500 feet in altitude, unsurpassed in the
world for beauty and grandeur, are the
that was the first “tank farm.”

I

21

�fowl. All mountain streams and lake
abound with native brook and rainbow
trout.
Stated conservatively, Wyoming contains
numerous minerals: gypsum, sodium, lime,
salts, mica, graphite, alum ; stated enthusias­
tically she is seamed with gold, silver and
platinum, lined with coal and iron, she has a
copper bottom and she’s two-thirds full of
oil. If ignited, these would produce a young
hades below, but Providence, taking care of
her favored people, has distributed much
asbestos on the surface. The state has vast
deposits of phosphate and nitrate rocks.
In the Leucite Hills are volcanic deposits
containing 200,000,000 tons of potash and
200,000,000 tons of aluminum. The phos­
phates, nitrates, and potash, the three great
essentials of soil fertilizer, will preserve the
fertility of American soil; the aluminum
will build 10,000 airplanes annually, which
will serve the nation in time of peace and
save the nation in time of war. At Ther­
mopolis a medicinal hot spring flows 18,000,000 gallons every twenty-four hours.
A Leader in Wool

Wyoming alternates between first and
second in the Union in its production of
sheep and wool, with 3,000,000 sheep grow­
ing annually 24,000,000 pounds of wool.
It produces annually 7,000,000 tons of
coal. Some of its coal veins are from 40 to
100 feet thick. It can supply the United
States with coal for 300 years. Last year
400,000 tons of ore were taken from its
iron mines. In 1924 it produced 40,000,000
barrels of oil and refined and shipped by
rail more gasoline from Casper, Wyo., than
was refined and shipped by rail from any
city in the United States. A train load of
gasoline to Baton Rouge, La., for export
has left Casper, Wyoming, every three
days for the last two years. During the
fiscal year 23-24, Wyoming paid in Royal­
ties on U. S. oil leases over $12,000,000
and has paid to the government a total
amount in oil royalties of $30,000,000.
Wyoming’s per capita wealth is $4,663.00.
It produced in 1924 a total of $300,000,000
of wealth.
There are 2,500,000 acres of irrigated
land. Three great government reclamation
projects, the North Platte, the Riverton,
and the Shoshone, are assisting in advanc­
ing agriculture to the greatest industry.
The Riverton project presented President
Coolidge with the royal bronze 40 pound
turkey which graced the president’s last

home of the last and greatest herds of
buffalo, elk, moose, as well as the last great
refuge of the deer, antelope, mountain
sheep, bear, mountain lion, wolf, coyote,
lynx, beaver and every variety of wild
22

�Christmas dinner table. This project ad­
joins the Wind River Indian reservation
occupied by the Araphoes and the Sho­
shones. The Arapahoes are the largest
statured race on the Western continent, and
in all the world excepting one race in a
section of Russia.
Chief Washakie of the Shoshones was a
great warrior and a statesman and a true
and faithful friend of the whites. In the
Shoshone burial grounds in the foothills of
the mighty Wind River Mountain range,
part of the Rocky mountain system, rests
the body of the Indian woman, Sacajawea,
who accompanied by her husband Charboneau, guided Lewis and Clark on their
epochal expedition to the Columbia and
the Pacific in 1805. She is the greatest
woman character in all our history and
should have a government-built monument
to commemorate her invaluable services to
the nation. High above her burial place
rises Fremont’s Peak, 13,500 feet in alti­
tude, discovered, climbed, and named by
General John C. Freemont, in 1842. In
this range lie the greatest glaciers in the
United States proper. East of this range,
flowing north, is the stream whose name
was a World War battle cry, “Powder
River”.

Irrigation, Ilarning

Brone Gives Way to Honk

The most famous and original Wild West
Show—Frontier Days—is held annually at
the state’s capital, Cheyenne, located on the
transcontinental Union Pacific and the air
mail routes (from which ran the celebrated
Deadwood stage in ’76). This great spec­
tacle is visited by people from all over the
world. But the bronc has given way to
the honk; the state has an automobile for
every five persons.
Her churches are many; her educational
system and buildings the most modern. In
the election of 1924 Wyoming attained the
first record among all the states for the
highest percentage of increase, 37.7 per
cent in her presidential vote, casting 70.8
per cent of her total qualified vote. Its pop­
ulation of 225,000—2.3 persons to the square
mile—sent the greatest percentage of phy­
sically fit men, out of the total number
examined, and more soldiers in proportion
to her population into the World War, of
any of the 48 states; 97.8 per cent of her
population is white; 87 per cent native born.
According to statistics recently issued
by the government a section of Wyoming
ranks first in the United States in its birth

'

No. 1—A flume on the Inter­
state Canal. No. 2—Diversion
dam for turning water into one
of the great irrigation ditches.
Photo by U. S. Reclamation
Service. No. 3—The State Uni­
versity at Laramie. It’s called
“Cowboy College.”

)-------------- 1

rate. Thus, these two records prove her
first in quality and quanitity rate of pro­
duction.
Wyoming is the greatest undeveloped
(Concluded Col. 1, Page 24.)
23

�finding

Oil in OVyoming

By Edward L. Estabrook
Petroleum Production Engineer
The Midwest Refining Company

first use of petroleum in Wyoming began about the middle of the last century
when the fortyniners or some of the other pioneers, toiling their weary way along the
Oregon Trail, ran out of axle grease, and replenished their supply with oil from oil seep­
age in what are now Natrona, Fremont and Lincoln counties. Wyoming oil mixed with
flour is said to have been quite as efficient as are the present day refinery products.
he

T

The first oil wells in Wyoming were
drilled in the Dallas oil field near Lander
in 1884, near the seepages which had been
discovered by Bonneville in 1833. There is
no record of the date when the seepages of
oil and gas at Salt Creek were first dis­
covered or when the oil was first utilized
for any purpose but we find that in the
early eighties the land was being staked out
as oil claims.
The first big oil well in Salt Creek was
drilled in 1908. On October 21st, of that
year the well now known as No. 15 on the
SE% of Section 23-40-79, reached the First
Wall Creek sand and began to flow, shoot­
ing a column of oil 100 feet into the air.
About 1,500 wells have been drilled in
Salt Creek and 1,400 of them are produc­
ing oil. Many hundreds are yet to be
drilled, and development work will con­
tinue for many years. We may even look
forward to the time when the Casper re­
fineries will be supplied with oil from the
“Salt Creek Mines”. Shafts will be sunk
and tunnels driven into the oil sands to
recover some part of the oil which will re­
main after our wells cease to produce.
First Big Horn Well in 1906
The Big Horn Basin was the scene of the
{Concluded from Page 23.)

state in the Union. The nation now needs
all that she can furnish. The feet of many
thousands are turning to her. She has an
imperial domain and she welcomes them.
She has brilliant sunshine and vitalizing
atmosphere and she bestows vigorous health
and virile strength; she has mountains and
valleys and plains and she bestows fortunes
and homes and acres; she has unlimited
opportunities and bestows limitless ambi­
tion; she has unmeasurable potentialities,
and she will bestow on all who seek her,
with faith and with work, hope, power,
mastery and success.

third important oil discovery in Wyoming.
The presence of oil seepages in the eastern
part of the Big Horn Basin, in the vicinity
of Bonanza, has been known for many
years and drilling was first undertaken in
1888. The first oil well in the district was
located in the Byron field—Well No. 1 on
Lot 52—completed in 1906. The following
year gas was discovered at Greybull and in
October, 1908, the first oil well in the Grey­
bull field was completed. The Torchlight
oil field was discovered in 1913.
Boom days for the oil industry of Wyom­
ing began with the discovery of Grass
Creek in June, 1914, and of Big Muddy and
Elk Basin in 1915. Lost Soldier was drilled
in the summer of 1916 and late that fall
the first well reached the deep sand at Big
Muddy. Wyoming “looked good” and oil
men flocked to the state. Casper was a
wild town in 1917. The oil stock exchanges
worked overtime and many a man had to
spend the night in a chair because every
bed in town was occupied. But the pace
was too swift—no new discoveries came
to stimulate the excitement, and the World
War began to absorb more and more of
the country’s thought and energy. The
speculators moved on. Many, with Dr.
Cook, went to Texas. Casper and Wyom­
ing relaxed a bit and then turned again to
the serious work of developing the abund­
ant natural resources of the state.
Showings of oil or gas have been en­
countered in wells at ninety different lo­
calities in Wyoming, but only about fifty of
them were important enough to warrant
further development. There are now
twenty-one oil and twelve gas fields in
Wyoming, which are actually producing.
During 1924, there were marketed from
these fields, 39,298,130 barrels of oil and
about fifty billion cubic feet of gas, to24

�gether with about thirty-five million gal­
lons of natural or casinghead gasoline.

Drilling to Go On
It is probable that all of the large and
reasonably shallow oil fields of Wyoming
have been found, but there are still many op­
portunities for the discovery of small accu­
mulations at greater depths and it is antici­
pated that discoveries will continue to be
made for many years. The state contains
a great many anticlinal folds which have
not been tested to the lowest possible oil
sand and prospecting will continue until
deep wells have definitely shown the value
of every area where there is a possibility
of oil or gas accumulation.
The discovery of oil pools is popularly
supposed to be almost entirely a question
of chance with the rewards going to the
luckiest man. Luck certainly plays a part
in the game, but conservative organizations
aim to have considerably more than a
“hunch” when they authorize an expen­
diture of $5O,OCK) or $100,000 for a wild­
cat well. A brief description of the con­
ditions under which oil occurs and the sur­
face indications of its presence may be of
interest.
Petroleum originates in and is found in
the sedimentary or bedded rocks. These
sedimentary rocks are spread out like a
great blanket over a large part of the earth’s
surface. Probably they can better be com­
pared to a great sheaf of paper for they are
built up of a multitude of different sheets
or beds of rock. Some of the beds are as
thin as paper, while others are hundreds of
feet thick, and the total thickness of the
sheaf may be many thousands of feet. Most
of the beds are composed of shale, but
some are limestone and others are sand­
stone. The shale is made up of very minute
particles—it is only a hardened and com­
pacted mud—and has so little pore space
that water has difficulty in penetrating it.
The sandstones are coarser grained and
water or oil can circulate quite readily
through the pores or spaces between the
grains. Limestone usually contains crevices
or cavities through which water can pass.
Petroleum was probably formed in the orig­
inal mud of the shales and as they
compacted was squeezed out into the more
porous sandstones and limestones, where it
has been moved to and fro by the circu­
lating waters. Oil is lighter than water and
in a mixture of the two fluids, the oil will

tend to rise to the top. This tendency acts
on a mixture of oil and water in the pores
of a sandstone or the cavities of a lime­
stone just as it does in a bucket of oil and
water, and to it we owe the accumulation of
25

�A beautiful and modern structure is the state
Capitol at Cheyenne. Photo by J. E. Stimson.

arched up somewhere—like a big parlor rug
with a golf ball or some other small object
under it. The oil in the sand in the vicinity
of that arch would tend to rise and fill the
elevated part of the sand while the water
would tend to run down to the level part.
Presently the entire 100 feet of sand on
the top of this arch or dome would be
filled with oil—an oil “pool” would have
been formed. Let your well drill into this
oil filled sand and it will be a “gusher.”
The geologist is the man who finds the
domes, or the places where the sedimen­
tary rock beds have been so arched up
that it is possible for an oil pool to form.
But all domes do not contain oil. If they
did, every geologist would be rich or every­
body would be a geologist. Wyoming con­
tains hundreds of domes, many of them
very highly marked by the rock outcrops,
but neither radio nor spiritualism will tell
whether there is oil in the sands that lie
maybe 3,000 feet below. The only answer
to that important question is given by the
drill which makes a hole down to that
sand and permits you to sample its con­
tents. The Midwest Refining Company has
spent millions of dollars in Wyoming drill­
ing holes—“wildcat wells” we call them—to
test the domes that our geologists have
found. Most of the time we get water—
and water that isn’t even fit to drink—but
once in a “blue moon” luck is with us and
a new oil or gas field is added to our list.

3--------------------------------------------- ij
S 6 r x) i c e
Twin gushers in a dead heat for production
records. A good idea of what a producing well
looks like is given here.

Quincy Division—Siney McCarty, coun­
try driver, was instrumental in preventing
a disastrous fire recently. Siney was mak­
ing a delivery of Perfection to R. J. Hamil­
ton, a farmer, when one of the Hamilton
children struck a match over the gas tank
of the Hamilton car to see if they needed
any Red Crown. Immediately the car burst
into flames which no doubt would have
spread quickly to the house, since the car
was parked right beside it, had not Mac
dashed for the ever ready extinguisher on
his truck and used it so effectively that the
blaze was soon extinguished. Mr. Hamil­
ton was very generous in his praise of
Siney’s work, since but a few weeks pre­
viously several large barns on the place had
burned to the ground. As it was, the only
damage done consisted of painful though
not serious burns about the face of the child
and a little damage to Mr. Hamilton’s
car.

our most valuable oil pools. Imagine that
there is deep in the ground below you a
perfectly flat bed of sand 100 feet thick
with its pores containing 1 per cent of oil
and 99 per cent of water, and that a well
in which you own 10,000 shares of stock at
one cent per share (“going to two cents in
ten days”) is just drilling into it. One
foot of sand at the top will contain oil and
the other 99 feet will be all water. The
driller will report a “show of oil”, the hole
will be abandoned, and your stock will cease
to be of value, except for wall paper.
The Happy Ending
But everyone likes a story with a happy
ending so we will fix up the geology a little
and try again. Suppose that this bed of
sand, instead of being perfectly flat, is
26

�THE COVER
The cover design for this issue is
the work of W. C. Vandegrift of the
main office, Casper Works. Here Mr.
Vandegrift has depicted Wyoming—
her past, her present realization of the
dreams of the early settlers and a faint
suggestion of her hopes for the future.
The realistic part of the scene is
Wyoming as the white man found it—
the Indian on his scrawny cayouse, the
buffalo, the sage brush, and little else
but vast spaces. In the dim mirage
above we see the works of civilization.
The covered wagon, even now only a
memory, is rumbling its way out of
the picture over the Oregon Trail,
soon to be forgotten entirely. The
cowpuncher and sheepherder watch
their charges and with the coming of
irrigation the farm begins to develop.
The oil fields come into prominence
and general idustry, still in its infancy,
is suggested. What it will finally bring
to Wyoming is only in the mind of the
prophet. And over it all the eagle still
soars and guards his lordly domain.

This is the bridge across the Platte at Tor­
rington. The state is doing much to beautify the
highways. Photo by State Highway Department.

THANK YOU MR. BREWSTER
To Mr. O. C. Brewster, chairman of
the special committee formed to han­
dle the Casper edition of the Stanolind
Record, goes much of the credit for
this issue.
Mr. Brewster’s connection with the
Standard Oil Company {Indiana)
contains much that might be of inter­
est to other ambitious young men. He
started with the company as a com­
mon laborer in 1920 after graduating
as a graduate engineer from Cornell.
Shortly after he became centrifuge
operator in the lubricating plant, later
becoming special engineer in charge
of maintenance in the same plant. In
this position he attracted so much at­
tention by his ingenuity, ability and
excellent personality that he was se­
lected to take charge of the experi­
mental laboratory when it was built
in 1922. In this position again his
ability was so outstanding that about
1923 he was appointed research physi­
cist and became a member of the Re­
search Laboratory organization, which
position he now holds.
The above information concerning
Mr. Brewster was furnished by Mr.
T. S. Cooke.—Editor.

‘ Powder River—Let 'er buck!” The Wyoming
war cry that resounded in the World War
typified the manhood of the state—virile, ag­
gressive with the never-say-die spirit. Frank
Carter is shown riding Edstone. Photo is copy­
righted by J. E, Stimson.
27

�‘T^olarine.

tractors Best Blriend

Joliet Division—Polarine lubricated all the tractors in a three day tractor demonstration on
the farm of Dexter Stocking, near Rochelle, Ill. Thousands of farmers attended the demonstration
and saw the good work of Polarine—the tractor’s best friend. Leaning against the drive wheel of
the right tractor is D. H. Wells, Joliet’s tractor expert. C. R. Hinton, Rochelle salesman, is the
man in the dark coat near the cans,'

“Coed Oil Johnny " Beed Honored
(The following article, dealing with the retirement of “Coal Oil Johnny” Reed,
•veteran service station attendant and Standard Oil Company {Indiana^ employee, was
taken from the July 7, 1925, issue of the Kansas City Post. Mr. Reed had many friends
as this article will testify.—Editor)
F YOU were 67 years old and had worked long enough for a concern so that you had
received a pension for life, wouldn’t you just love to find a nice, cool shady spot
and rest and rest?

I

there a while, then I’ll get an easy job
somewhere.”
“I just have to have something to do, I
can’t sit around.”
Mr. Reed ten years ago built the modest
home in which he lives with a daughter,
Mrs. Clarence Smith, from his earnings and
he acquired his Ozark farm the same way.
So faithful, so industrious has he been that
it was not until three weeks ago he broke
a record of twenty-five years and was late
to work. His watch was slow, he explained,
or he wouldn’t have permitted it to happen.
“How many vacations have you had?”
somebody asked Mr. Reed the other day.
“Had three days off once,” he replied.
The records of the Standard Oil company
show that Mr. Reed took his first vacation
three years ago and that after three days
of idleness he had to go back to his filling
station at the southwest corner of Thir­
teenth street and Baltimore avenue.
Mr. Reed’s one big regret is that his

But John Reed, 2537 Spruce avenue, isn’t
like the rest of the world.
Tomorrow night, Mr. Reed, familiarly
known as “Dad” or “Coal Oil Johnny,” will
work his last for the Standard Oil Com­
pany at its filling station at Thirteenth and
Baltimore avenue, having served twentyfive years and having passed his sixty­
fifth birthday anniversary by two years.
He will be retired on a pension sufficient
to care for all his needs the remainder of
his life.
“What do I intend to do now ?”
“Well,” Mr. Reed answered after repeat­
ing the question he had been considering
ever since he learned a week ago he was
to be retired. “I guess I’ve done my work
for this world, but I wouldn’t mind doing
some more.”
“First thing, I’m going out in Kansas for
about two months and see some folks of
mine. Then, I’m going down in the Ozarks,
where I’ve got a 40-acre farm. I’ll stay
28

�JJjLy Corne^rstone. at Sa^inaW

Saginaw Division—Simple ceremonies marked the laying of the cornerstone of the new Saginaw
division office building. In the above photo, a picture of the ceremonies, are (left to right) H. H.
Herbert, general office inspector; Eddie Johnson, contractor; H. H. Keating, manager; Charley
Lawyer, oldest man in point of service in division, serving company forty-five years; H. E.
Anker, advertising department, and Herb Allen, contractor.

wife—his companion for forty years—died
last January and will not be with him to
enjoy the life she always yearned for.
“If she were here,” said Mr. Reed, “we’d
go down to the Ozark farm to live. She
always wanted to do that.”
The veteran oil man is a native of Wales.
The life of Mr, Reed is a history of the
oil business in Kansas City. For twelve
years before he became associated with the
Standard Oil company, he had been em­
ployed by the National Oil company.
In those early days, of the oil business,
Mr. Reed drove a team to an oil wagon and
“peddled” gasoline and kerosene to grocery
stores, to be used more for illumination than
for power.
Drivers then were in competition, the
man selling the most of his product being
the most valuable employe. Mr. Reed
worked up a large business in the North

side and in the downtown district. About
that time the Standard Oil company took
notice of Mr. Reed’s big business and in­
duced him to sell Standard Oil company
products.
He accepted and in 1900 took over a
Standard Oil wagon.
Then came the rapid development of the
motor car. Ed Moriarty obtained an agency
for selling cars. Mr. Reed obtained Mo­
riarty’s business. Then Robert Greenlease
began selling Cadillacs and again Mr. Reed
got the business. A Buick agency started,
then Ford began selling his product until
one day—his record day—Mr. Reed de­
livered 2,350 gallons of gasoline, or 16,450
pounds, which equals 8 H2 tons.
There weren’t any tank wagons, either.
The gasoline was delivered in 5-gallon con­
tainers and had to be lifted on the wagon
and off by hand.

�line and oil from “Dad,” as he has been
known since he took over the filling station.
There are still earlier friends who know
him still as “Coal Oil Johnny.” They drive
up to his station now and purchase gaso­
line for their motor cars. It used to be re­
verse—“Coal Oil Johnny” used to drive up
to their grocery stores and deliver kerosene
for their lamps.

n^.no'W

S&amp;ehs

Qrlusband

a_______________ _ ____________ s
Aid of Standard Oilers is sought by Mrs.
Emory Adamson of Wabash, Ind., in the
search for her husband, a former employee
of the company at Wabash.
Mrs. Adamson, on a report that her
husband was working at the Casper re­
finery, drove to that city in search of him.
The report was unfounded and Casper
has undertaken to search for Mr. Adamson.
The photos of Mr. Adamson and de­
scription of him are in an adjoining column.
Anyone knowing such a person will please
inform Mrs. Adamson.
Some years ago, Mr. Adamson was
kicked by a mule and suffered injuries
to his spine. This is thought to have
brought on an attack of amnesia which will
be cured at a meeting with his wife and
children.

Above are two photos of Emory
A.damson, who disappeared from
his home following an accident
which is believed to have brought
on an attack of amnesia.
Mr.
Adamson was a former employee
of the Standard Oil Company (In­
diana) at Wabash, Ind. He is
now 35 years old. The pictures
were taken (No. 1) when he was
26, and (No. 2) when he was 28.
His hair is brown, his weight is
160 and he is 5 feet 8 inches tall.

Quincy Division—The following news
story was printed in the La Belle (Mo.)
Star under the heading, “Mrs. Culpen
Given Check”:
“T. P. Jones, assistant manager of the
Standard Oil Company, at Quincy, accom­
panied by his wife, arrived in LaBelle yes­
terday, the latter to pay a visit to Mrs. R.
H. Seaman and the former to deliver check
for $1,400 to Mrs. Riley Culpen, widow of
the late manager of the Standard Oil filling
station at this place. The check, is an evi­
dence of the manner in which this company
looks after the interests of its employees
and disproves the oft repeated expression,
‘Corporations have no souls.’ This neat sum
of money came to Mrs. Culpen without the
outlay of one cent on the part of Mr. Cul­
pen, the protection being given absolutely
free by his employer as a token of appre­
ciation for faithful service.”

Mr. Reed continued on his wagon until
1920. Horses were obsolete in the business
and the company offered Mr. Reed a truck.
“No, sir,” said the man who had sold
gasoline throughout the city, “I won’t drive
one of those things.”
He then was given a filling station at
St. John and Brighton avenues, where he
remained a year. Then he was transferred
to the station at Thirteenth street and Balti­
more avenue, from which he will retire to­
morrow.
Mr. Reed is credited with knowing more
business and professional men in the city
than any other resident. For the last four
years the majority of the members of the
Kansas City club have purchased their gaso­
30

�Qh&amp;y’re Standard Oil 'lit-mSif'S

General Office, Chicago—Recently a big bathing beauty contest was
held in Chicago. The niece of A. R. Smith, employees’ chairman of the
General Office Joint General Committee, won first prize, and Miss Ethel
M. Allen, manufacturing department, won fourth prize, a grand piano.
No. 1—A pose of Miss Allen. No. 2—Miss Chicago—Miss Margarita
Gonzales—who won a trip to Atlantic City for the national contest, a
movie contract and a job in the Rose Marie musical company. No. 3—
The pose of Miss Allen that won for her fourth place and a Wurlitzer
piano. No. 4—Another pose of Miss Allen taken at one of the Chicago
bathing beaches.

��oreman’s Club Qiolds Picnic
By U. G. Swartz

HE Fourth Annual Picnic of the Foreman’s Fellowship Club of the Whiting Refinery
was held Sunday, July 26, at Spring Hill Grove, St. Johns, Ind.
The call for cars to meet at the Com­
munity Memorial House at 9:30 A. M. was
responded to generously. Banners were
passed out for decorating cars and horns
to warn all to keep out of the way of the
“peerade.”
Shortly, under the leadership
of William Haman, president of the club,
all whirled away for the scene of the day’s
activities.
About eleven o’clock the cars began
pouring in and at eleven thirty, sixty-two
cars had discharged their loads of bappy
people. Others kept arriving later in the
day until there were over one hundred
cars.
The fun began at once. A giant push­
ball, secured through the courtesy of Capt.
John Prendergast, private secretary to
Chief Collins; Major John Bander and Mr.
Elmer Doonan, civil service department,
Chicago police, became immediately the
property of the small boys who kept it
going constantly.
The Standard Oil band was also much
in evidence, and provided music from time
to time; made unusually delightful by the
slight re-echoing under the trees.
Harry Rolph with his force of assistants
soon became the most popular man on the
grounds by inflating and distributing to all
the youngsters toy balloons, the gas used
causing the balloons to float. Some of these
youngsters had gray hair, but all who
wished had balloons. However, he was
robbed of his popularity when Frank Spors
opened up his free ice cream cone booth,
and Frank became the idol of the day. He
did a rushing trade. The prize for eating
the most cones was won by one urchin, who
topped the test at fifteen cones.
Tables were spread from well filled
baskets, and all enjoyed a noon-time feast
while the Standard Oil band furnished
music.
- Followed the first surprise of the day—
that the Standard Oil band had a genuine
rival in the fiield, and an active one at that.
This was seen when Billy Eggers led out his
clown Standard Oil “Band-Its”, who really
were “its.” Bedecked in fantastic garb with

the inimitable Bill as drum major they
paraded through the grove to the hearty
enjoyment of all and for once the dignified
Standard Oil band was forgotten. With
drums made of pitch barrels, with har­
monicas and horns they showed how music
could make the welkin ring, and even howl.
When Bill and his band had returned from
their tour, Harry Huggins mounted the
band wagon and awarded the lottery drawn
prizes. Blindfolded Janet Patton drew the
lucky numbers, in each case the fifth num­
ber drawn.
As each prize was awarded the lucky
winner was appropriately serenaded by Bill
Egger’s Band-Its. The first prize, ladies
special, was awarded to Mrs. Smith—a two
pound box of candy. Billy Eggers, the
peerless leader of the Standard Band-Its,
was the lucky winner of the prize for men
—a beautiful traveling bag, about four by
four by six inches, artistically wrought at
the Tin Shop out of sheet steel—very dur­
able. The third prize went to D. J. Paskwietz, the golfish, a set of golf clubs and
golf bag—Woolworth’s best.
For the next hour the dance pavilion
commanded general attention, the Standard
Oil band furnishing the music. The day
was cool and delightful for this activity.
Athletic events were called at threethirty on the ball grounds. The following
contests were made: Shoe Race—Girls
under 12—won by Josephine Parker.
Horse Shoes—won by Bercaw and Prentice.
Ball Throwing (Distance) — Girls and
Women—won by Eleanor Beaubien. Fungo
Hitting—Men—won by H. F. Glair. Tug
of War—16 men on each side—won by
Bransky’s Process team. Three Legged
Race—Boys under 18—won by Nichilson
and Sanders. Married Couples Race—won
by the Bercaws. Push Ball Contest—won
by Girard’s Process Team.
The base ball game followed immediately
after the athletic events, and was much en­
joyed by the large crowd watching it.
Lunches were then spread in the grove
and dancing followed till nine o’clock.

�closing a day of happy events and a very
successful effort on the part of the Fore­
man’s Club.
Messrs. Hatmaker and Wilson of the
Sales Department were much interested in
the success of the event, especially of the
balloon ascension. The balloons carried a
letter of authority for the finder to call at
any service station of the Company and re­
ceive, without cost, one “combination” offer
consisting of $5.50 worth of the Company’s
products at the usual single sale price. Their
activities in different event was enjoyed by
all.
The Management took a decided interest
in the success of the picnic, and was rep­
resented by Mr. Warwick, and all the local
management, except Dr. Cash, who was
away on a vacation.

Cas 0 er S.
cA.
a_______ £— ___ _ __________ 0
By J. E. Frisby
Secretary-Treasurer

Casper Refinery — On July 7th, 100
shares of Standard Oil Company (Indi­
ana) stock was purchased, thereby com­
plying with the resolution passed at our an­
nual meeting on June 3rd. The stock cost
$6,580, which was about the same price we
would have been compelled to pay if it had
been bought immediately after the annual
meeting. But in the meantime we collected
$131.50 in interest by not withdrawing this
amount from our savings account until after
July 1. The increased value of the stock
each year should net the association a nice
profit.
During the month of May there were 9
lost time accidents and 10 during June.
Of the 19 cases only 1 belonged to this as­
sociation. From July 1st to 28th there were
11 lost time accidents and only 1 belonged
to the Shiftmen’s Benefit Association. The
next man to be hurt may be the man who
works by your side. Does he belong to
the Shiftmen’s so his family will be pro­
tected? Or is he like the 28 who probably
thought they didn’t need this protection?
It is much better to be able to say “Yonder
he goes”, than to say with regrets “How
natural he looks”. A word from you may
cause him to become a member and thereby
assure that our weekly check will keep the
wolf from the door in case of sickness or
accident.
I recall going out of my way about 3
years ago just to persuade a fellow work­
man to send his application to the Shift­
men’s. Later he went “Over the River”
and the money this association paid the
widow was thankfully received. For the
payment of $1.50 his widow received $400
from the Shiftmen’s and the “Over The
River Club”.

Base Ball By Our Special Reporter
Living up to their reputation, and play­
ing as only “World’s Champions” can play,
the Renowns, pride of the process gang of
Whiting refinery, neatly trimmed their
noted rivals the Polarine Speedsters, after
one of the liveliest tilts seen in many a day,
thereby retaining their championship lau­
rels at the Fourth Annual Foreman’s pic­
nic held at St. John, Sunday, July 26th.
“Bullet” Jimmie Burton, ace of the Re­
nown pitching staff, was selected by
Muggsy Walker for mound duty. Slim
Nielson was hurler for the Speedsters. The
first inning with the Renowns at bat was
a replica of the bombardment of the Marne,
and when the noise, excitement, and what
not had died down and the smoke cleared
away the champions were on the big end of
a 6 to 1 score.
In the second, third, and fourth innings
for a total of 8 runs, which gave them an
8 to 6 lead. By this time the “Bullet”
had found himself and held them to 4 runs
in the last five innings, three of which came
in the ninth after the game had been sewed
up by the champions.
After a lull for the Renowns, which
lasted through the second and third in­
nings, Pete Gorman opened up in the fourth
with a single, which was followed in rapid
succession with safeties by Ehlert and Bercaw, and before the side, was retired, three
runs were scored. The final score was 16
to 12. Burton and Langhor did battery
duty for the Renowns, Nielson and Naef
for the Polarines.

3------------- -------------------------------------------------- G

QiacZio Songbirds
a__________________________ G
Chicago Sales Division—If crosswords
don’t get you, radio must. So saying, the
Harbor Trio, this division’s songsters, rent
the ether with half a dozen selections at the
Oak Park Arms hotel, station WGES, on
July 22. Webb LaVette, Carlson and Olson
were the singers. Mr. Scherer was accom­
panist.
35

�36

�J ^e^catur 0{re,rs “oMost He^auHful Hanher''
c)_______________________ —---------------------------------------

Decatur Division—With an idea, perhaps, that nothing more is to be said about beautiful service
stations. Manager George F. Phillips of Decatur division offers the above as the “most beautiful
truck.” This, to quote Mr. Phillips, “is a photograph of a strictly Polarine tank wagon designed
by the management of the Decatur field, to be used at East St. Louis, Ill. The color of this truck
is gray, tank, cab, hood, bucket box, all following out the color scheme of our Polarine barrels.
Chassis of the truck is red. The railing top of tank, dome covers, railing along running board,
headlights, rod guard are all bronze gold. Lettering on side of tank, the word Polarine, also in
gold, making a very pretty contrast.” Does Mr.Phillips win the prize without a murmur ?

EXECUTIVE ORDER
The following changes have been made, to take effect August 1st, 1925:
Mr. T. V. Warren from position of Assistant Manager at Davenport, Iowa, to
position of Manager at Davenport, Iowa, succeeding Mr. R. G. Stewart, assigned
to other duties.
Mr. J. J. Leu, Jr., from position of Sales Manager at Mason City, Iowa, to posi­
tion of Assistant Manager at Davenport, Iowa.

DECLARE DIVIDEND
Chicago, Ill., Aug. 3, 1925—The Directors of the Standard Oil Company (In­
diana) today declared a cash dividend of 62 L2 cents on each share of its capital
stock, to be paid September 15, 1925, to stockholders of record at the close of
business August 15, 1925. The transfer books of the Company will remain open
during the entire period.
37

�Sugar Creek Refinery—The above pictures the personnel o£ three departments at the Sugar Creek
refinery that have gone three years without a lost time accident. The departments are the carpenters,
the laggers and the painters. The last lost time occurring in any of these three departments was on
June 9th, 1922, when a carpenter stepped on a nail protruding through a timber, necessitating a
lay-off of a few days. The last lost time accident occurring among the laggers was in June, 1921;
and none of the painters has suffered a lost time accident since Safety Records have been com­
piled, and as far as the Safety Department could learn there has never been a lost time accident in the
paint department. All of these departments are under the supervision of F. G. Lee. Mr. Lee took
charge of the three departments in August, 1921, two months after the last lost time accident
occurred; therefore Mr. Lee has a perfect record. It is probably unnecessary to add that Mr. Lee
is one of the strongest advocates of safety at the Sugar Creek refinery. By the way—Mr. Lee is the
handsome “dressed-up” man in the lower row.

UGAR Creek Refinery—Pointing with pride to a record of three continuous years
without a lost time accident in the carpenters, painters and laggers department,
Foreman F. G. Smith wrote the following congratulatory letter in which he pointed out
that not only had the department gone without a lost time accident for three years but
through no fault of its work had any other department suffered a lost time accident:

S

“On June 9, 1925, we passed our third
year without a lost time accident. This is
a remarkable record and every man in our
department is entitled to a word of praise
for this perfect score. There has been no
accident in the plant caused by defective
workmanship of this department, which
would be just as serious as an accident in

our own department, for we must con­
sider safety for our fellow workmen as well
as ourselves.
“Do your work the safe way and it will
be well done. Be careful of the new man
and insist that he work the safe way and
all work 100 per cent efficiently, or as
{Concluded on Page 39.)
38

�I
^De,ath
e,rte,fiis
a_________ _ _______________ 0

rjhree 100 ^Percenters

A total of $4,6CX) was paid out in accord­
ance with the provisions of the Death Bene­
fits Plan in July, according to the report of
Mr. E. G. Seubert. The payments follow:
Riley Culpen, died June 19 and his
widow, Mrs. Senia Culpen, was paid $1,400.
L. C. Rooney, Quincy, died June 26 and
his widow, Mrs. Nellie L. Rooney, was paid
$500.
DeLon J. Burke, Indianapolis, died June
25 and his widow, Mrs. Beulah H. Burke,
was paid $500.
Frank Kompon, Sugar Creek, died July
10 and Fred W. Klaber, public administra­
tor of his estate, was paid $200.
Harry J. Savage, Whiting, died June 26
and his widow, Mrs. Lydia R. Savage, was
paid $2,000.

Mankato Division—The Fairmont Senti­
nel says: “Tourists and travelling men who
visit Fairmont regularly have often been
heard to remark that Fairmont’s two
Standard Oil filling stations surpass all
others for beauty. This credit goes to the
gentlemanly attendants who are constantly
at work on the grounds in spare moments.
Fairmont can well feel proud of its beauty
spots.” Whitney and Heller, attendants,
are all puflfed up over this splendid tribute
in their home town paper. Nice work,
boys!
(Concluded from Page 38.)

nearly so as possible. With 100 per cent
safety, with 100 per cent stockholders.
“Let’s make our stock pay dividends.
“Yours for another year.”
Manager G. H. Moffett, hearing of the
record made by the painters, laggers and
carpenters department, wrote the following
letter of congratulation to Mr. A. S. Hurt
in which he praised the" work of the
department:
“It has come to my attention that the
department in which our carpenters, paint­
ers and laggers work, has completed three
successive years without a lost time injury
case and I wish to convey to this depart­
ment through the Safety Division of the
Joint General Committee the congratula­
tions of the plant management on such a
splendid record.
“It is very gratifying to feel that our

Chicago Sales Division—Here are
three of the youngsters who keep
their dads hustling to bring in the
where-with-all to make them happy.
No. 1—LaVerne Jane Seibt, daugh—Children of S. S. Attendant Wal­
ter of George Seibt. Nos. 2 and 3
ter Reetzke, No. 75 station.

employees are so imbued with the spirit
of safety and I trust other departments
will be able to go through similar periods of
freedom from accidents.”
39

�REB CROWN
L005t5

TEt^PLR---- RND

40

�WHITING. IND.

Pressure Stills.—Fred Bosnick, fireman on the
4th Battery has gone into the glove business.
Anyone who has any old gloves bring them to
Fred; he has them washed and mended for 2
cents a pair. If he is not on duty leave same in
wash room, 4th Battery, in front of his locker.
No. 48.
Fred Bosnick, fireman on north end of 4th
Battery Pressure Stills, came out to work Sat­
urday, July 18, wearing crepe on his arm. When
asked who had died, Fred began to weep and
said he slept in yesterday and lost a day’s pay.
Buchanan, our famous sunshine roller was seen
in the Whiting Park Sunday night with all of the
Chicago Sunday Tribune under his arm. We
wonder why all the paper. More speed the next
time Buck.
Cleanup Department.—Baseball fans who saw
Johnnie Mostil do his stuff July 10 were Jack
Prentice, George Fortener, Irwen Dearbon and
Carl Moore. Incidentally we took Bill Rose,
the other half of the fire department along.
George Fortener chevro-layed to Ohio for a
vacation the last two weeks in July. Shortly
before leaving George was heard singing that
old song, “There’ll be somebody waiting for
me.” We hope Indianapolis Boulevard will be in
good shape when he gets back.
John Savage has, purchased a new Dodge
sedan, complete with balloon tires and a tow
rope.
John Kish and Mike Kristoff have returned
from their two weeks’ annual outing at Sharp
Shooters Park.
Steve Ignats has been off sick since June 18.
We hope Steve is recovering and will soon be
back to work.
Tower Stills.—Phil Smith and Charles Casper
backed out on their fishing trip to Dayton Lake.
If they only knew how many fish you could
catch up there they surely would have gone
as the fish are so thick up there you have to
knock them away from the boat with the oars
in order to get the boat to move.
Roy Welsby returned last month from a trip
to the Wisconsin woods and several large fish
were caught, including a muskie 42 inches long
weighing 35% pounds. Not so bad. What?
Engineering Department.—Would you believe it.
C. L. Erickson has a home-made ice box on
the running-board of his Ford. We wonder
what he keeps cold?
Do you remember way back when the car­
load of beer was dumped in the lake and all
the boys in the main office were weeping
crocodile tears? We understand that that was
the only evening this Summer that Dick Powell
went in bathing.
Still Cleaning Department.—William (“Horse­
shoe”) Stoll is off burning up the roads with the
Oakland he won on July 4.
After spending many months taking a va­
cation in his mind only, Herman Vater at last
took a week off for some real fishing.
George Flint has returned from an extended
2-day vacation in Michigan.
John Hahn spent his vacation cutting grass in
Calumet Park, east side. “Anything to help out
on those taxes,” says John.
Lee Matthews drove to Maplewood, Mo., in

16 hours, while on his vacation. He says he
had no trouble passing Buicks with his flivver,
but he could not overtake one Hup.
B. S. Voight, the efficiency man at the Still
Cleaner’s office, is about ready to leave on his
vacation for “back home.” He will knock the
natives dead when he tells them how he kept
the Standard Oil Company from going into
the hands of the receiver.
After John Barry took in the Elks picnic at
Thornton he should have had a steam roller to
drive home instead of a Hup.
Jim Lewis has been assisting the foreman for
the last few weeks. He has been doing good
work, and we hope he gets a chance to show
what he really can do when the right time
comes.
Sandor Szucs, a cousin of the time keeper
was on the sick list for a few days.
Lee Matthews, still cleaning foreman, drove
his Baby Lincoln to St. Louis, Mo., on his va­
cation. He left Chicago at 4:30 a. m., driving
on a pre-arranged schedule which he maintained
throughout the trip. He purchased nothing but
Red Crown and Polarine on the trip. No engine
or tire trouble on the way there or back and Mr.
Matthews says that Red Crown, Polarine and a
Ford made a wonderful cooperative combination.
Harold Dunning says he got close on winning
the new auto given away on the 4th of July at
the Whiting Park as his Brother Foreman Wil­
liam Stoll won it and Harold says that as long
as one of the foremen won it he could say he
got close. Better luck on the next one, Harold.
James Ambros Lewis (Alias 97J) but better
known to all who know him as Windy Jim from
Lawrenceville is going to purchase a new 4-door
Ford sedan, wire wheels and balloon tires, and
drive home on his vacation to give the old home
guards the surprise of their life.
In a Record published a few months ago it
was stated that Charlie Woods, the new as­
sistant swing foreman in the still cleaning de­
partment, was going to broadcast his million
dollar laugh. Now all you radio fans listen in
on Station SCWR (better known as still clean­
ers wash room) on September 15, 1925.
Bill says the new one dollar Oakland he won
on the 4th of July is sure a good car, and that
he will run the wheels hot on his vacation.
Lee Matthews says he recalls seeing eleven
Buicks and 12 Hups along the road on his trip
to St. Louis but he said the little old reliable
got him there just the same. Hold your tem­
pers you Buick and Hupmobile owners.
We all hope Mr. Porter on his vacation and
trip east has as good luck with his Buick as
Mr. Matthews did with his Ford to St. Louis.
When Mr. Vater came back from his trip to
Wisconsin all he brought back was a couple of
good fish stories as nobody saw any fish. But
he says there were some big ones up there.
Mr. Voight is looking forward to a fine
vacation this summer as he has a good partner
to accompany him (his wife).
Steam Department.—John Hahn of No. 7 boiler
house was asked how he spent his vacation this
year and after a few moments hesitation and
with a guilty countenance he finally confessed
that he was working for one of his $1.00 a day
friends over in Glencoe “cutting grass.”
41

�SUGAR CREEK. MO.

Richard Jett, office boy, has been reporting that
ht had been taking long drives alone after dusk.
His story blew up when a neighboring girl slipped
over to his garage early one morning and
searched the car for her hat.
B F. Gore, welder in the pipe department,
wishes to express his appreciation for the flowers
and sympathy from the employees of the pipe
department in the recent death of his sister.
Jack Logsdon, pipe welders helper, proudly
announces the birth of a ten-pound daughter,
July 26.
John Kroll said it was bad enough to be sick
without being kidded about it.
Mike Hakala, blacksmith, has just returned
irotn a pleasant vacation of two weeks, given
employees of twenty years service.
John Pallo announces the birth of a fine baby
boy July 26.
Warren (“Sally”) Stark probably never will
be the same after the recent arrival of a son. He
says he has decided to stay at home at nights and
probably will start to Sunday School.
. Curtis Wright, foreman of the filling racks, has
just returned from a vacation. It may be a
coincident that his car was wrecked before he
decided to take it.
Johnny O’Hara, youngest of the clan, recently
a job as helper at the main pump house,
which so elated him that he took unto himself a
bride.
Speaking of the O’Hara family, the mail boy
wore out two perfectly good new golf soles,
walking around the plant trying to deliver a
letter addressed to a Mr. O’Hara, Jr. Finally
he took It back where he got it and found that
the party was a new key-knocker and intended
the epistle for Jim O’Hara, Jr.
B. F. Lee, amateur gardener on the side, re­
cently was proudly displaying some tomatoes
weighing nearly two pounds each. This one is
vouched for by A. S. Hurt.
J. A. Hininger, of the shipping department,
recently was explaining to the other employees
that It was his wife’s driving, not his that caused
his recent visit to the police court in Kansas City.
It was ever thus.
The question is: “What did Clarence E. Spitzer
have in the little brown jug on the recent party
of the Limberger Club.”
Thomas R. Chandler, Independence councilman
and assistant foreman of the pipe department,
recently was congratulated by the sales department because of his influence in securing contract
from the city of Independence, Mo., for the
exclusive use of Red Crown for one year.
A. J. Creviston, fireman on the pressure stills
became the proud father of an eight and one-half
pound girl, June 30.
Tom Hart, stillman at the tower stills, has
a new Gardner 6.
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Carr announce the birth
of a son, June 28, whom they have given the
name of John Newman Carr.
Jester Paschal, the Standard Oil Athletic Asso­
ciation’s king of swat and pressure still helper,
was passing around the cigars, July 19, and smil­
ingly announcing the birth of a nine-pound
daughter.
John Olinsky Jr., and Ray Simms, testers in the
inspection department, both enjoyed a week’s
vacation during the hot weather in July. Alvin
42

Duncan, switchboard operator, also took a week
off and visited the boys down in South Missouri.
He reports the fishing rotten.
WOOD RIVER, ILL.

General News.—The: old stills from No. 1 Crude
have been carted from their old settings. Some
were hump backed and some had developed a
waist line but all were found to be good for a
few years more service.
The band concerts have been going good and
are mighty fine these Summer evenings when the
Red Crown tooters fill the air with music. Our
band exchanged with the celebrated Edwardsville
band recently and we enjoyed a concert by the
Edwardsville organization.
A duet entitled, ‘ California Here I Come,” was
sung by Messrs. Tuley and Lang during the vaca­
tion season. Earthquakes, glass bottom boats,
deep sea fishing and oranges! Oh, Boy!
“Doc” Council and his helper, Mr. Taylor
were forced out at first (Aid) recently by the
Old Summer Flu bug.
Athletks.—The men’s handicap tournament has
been finished with Jake Forter winning. Twentyfour entered the tournament and all played ex­
cept one or two who left on vacations. The
finals were played July 19 between L. D. Palmer
and Jake Forter, with Forter winning, 6—4, 4—6,

The elimination tournament has started and the
winner of that tournament will be refinery cham­
pion and will represent us in contests with the
Western Cartridge Company.
The ladies have not finished the handicap tour­
nament. The best excuse we have received from
itiem for not finishing yet, is that the weather
has been too warm. Many are using the courts
this year and all are agreed that the game has
no equal in promoting health and good times.
Horseshoes.—The tournament is being held
throughout the plant and the indications at this
time are that several new men will be seen at
the top of the list before the season ends. An
account of the final standings will be published
in the next issue of the Stanolind Record.
Club.—The members of the gun club have
gone in with the other clubs of Madison and
St." Claire Counties and formed an association
which holds monthly shoots. In July the shoot
was held in East St. Louis with the home club
team winning the honors. John McClintock of
No. 4 Pressure got high score with 49 out of 50.
Howard Gibson also got in the money with 45 out
of 50. Gibson has made the best score on the
Standard Oil shooting grounds with 96 broke out
of 100. The next shoot for the Madison-St.
Claire County Association will be held here on
the Standard grounds at the river in September.
A large number of sportsmen attend these shoots
and anyone is invited to come out who enjoys
seeing Blue Rocks destroyed.
Baseball.—Our team is certainly going in fine
form this year with a clean sweep of all games
in the first half of the Industrial League season
The second half was slated to start the 25th with
a game with Box Board but a fire the night
previous at the Box Board, in which the ball
players took part trying to extinguish the fire,
was responsible for the game being called off.

�The Red Crowns got a little local competition
recently with the Wood River Business Men s
team. The first game was played in June and the
Red Crowns were defeated, 7-1. July 11, the
second game was played and the Red Crowns
won, 3-2, in a 13-inning game. The next game
will decide the little series. In the second game
Tony Federle pitched the thirteen innings and in
that time gave only four hits.
Association picnic will be reported in the next
issue of the Stanolind Record.
Masons.—The Mason Department went picnick­
ing recently on Indian Creek. The activities can
be summed up by saying they ate and drank, not
much eating and no fishing. The main dish was
Italian, prepared by members of the crowd. The
department had Messrs. C. F. Hall, Shorty Henry
and Joe Lamm as guests and a merry time was
enjoyed by this fine crowd. This form of diver­
sion is recommended to other departments.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Trotter are proud over the
arrival of a baby boy and they have our best
wishes for the new member of the family.
Wes Koenneker has returned to work after
being sick a week. This illness occurred the
week following the big picnic but it is too much
to assume that rampage had anything to do with
the illness.
Jim Tardino is reported doing fine and is
around on his feet again. Jim has been gone a
long time and we expect him back soon.
Same old stuff about Harkey’s not being able
to come to the picnic and we know he would have
enjoyed it so much.
Acid Works.—Jack Hubbard has gone to the
Ozarks for his vacation, where the air is sweet
and the nights always cool.
We have at last found out how Joe Evans gets
so much speed from his new car. He says he
has ‘Cadillac Cdands’ grafted on it.
A baby boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Tony
Pavelek, July 16, and the lad is doing fine.
Congratulations to the parents.
Pipe Department—Steve Kladar is doubly
blessed now with the arrival of two fine baby
boys. “Smoke up,” says Steve. “Smoke twice.”
We congratulate Mr. and Mrs. Kladar and wish
the boys a happy life.
Filling Racks.—Bill Cook, Jr., has been away
on account of illness for some time which is
reported to be serious. We certainly hope it is
not and he can return soon.
Mr. Schmeidler has quit filling cars and will
now inspect them for the C. &amp; E. I. Best wishes.
Stand by, say Mr. Shook, when they take the
top off a car of hot asphalt.
Blacksmiths and ITfiWers.—Mr. Bacheldor spent
his vacation up in Canada where it’s cool and
you can quench a thirst.
Mr. Hamer came back from his vacation, and
that is about all we can report. “Red” was about
Alton all the time but no one saw him during the
two weeks. He very likely worked two shifts in
bed and one at the table.
Mike Cummings is a new joiner in the welding
department.
We must report that Mr. Britton, Texas
welder, is ably representing the department on the
tennis courts.
Boiler Department. —W. Yenny, A. Fosha and
friends were fishing in Otter Creek recently
where they catch fish by logging and diving for

them. The water is about twenty-five feet deep
in that creek. They were not able to get any
fish but located a good supply of sweet corn.
Harry Meador, old timer, has returned. The
last time Harry left he was headed for the Pacific
Coast. Harry was in the department when the
refinery was built.
“Skinny” Westbrook has tomatoes which, we
understand, are worth 27 cents a pound. These
must be from those valuable seeds which sell
for $1.50 an ounce.
J. Bennett is another Old Timer returned. Mr.
Bennett was here last, about five years ago.
William (“Big Bill”) Meisner is reported mak­
ing plans to go to a real dry place for a rest and
will head for Kansas. A friend later said they
had been mistaken because he didn’t say Kansas,
he said Canada.
Machine Shop.—]oe Schenk has proven himself
a real fisherman. Recently some of his neighbors
missed chickens and geese and a large turtle was
seen while grabbing a chicken near the edge of
the water so Joe caught this enormous turtle and
tied it to his back porch, near his favorite hound.
Going out a few minutes later, he found his dog
gone and Joe decided to take no further chances
with the rest of his livestock and killed the turtle.
(Now altogether.)
William Shampine has taken unto himself a
wife and like most newly-weds, says married life
is the only life. Good luck and more power to
you Billy.
Those wishing to ride back and forth with
Frank Meyers, had better speak up since he is
about ready to turn her loose. If the manage­
ment wishes to tear out the south wall of the
machine shop to make it cooler there and give
more light, Frank will guarantee a good job with
his bus.
The official bouncer is the proud papa of a baby
girl. This makes two girls and a boy in the
family. The machine shop wishes to congratulate
Mr. and Mrs. Schenk.
Lubricating Department.—D. Naef has returned
from a visit with old friends at Whiting. Don
reports a fine time and that he made the drive
from Chicago to Wood River in eleven hours in
his Baby Lincoln.
“Toots” Halloran is having his vacation^ at this
time down in the Missouri Mountains. “Toots”
reports the Moonshine is fair tonight down in
the Ozarks.
Harry Wilkening recently returned from a fish­
ing trip to the Ozarks and reports lots of bites.
(Mosquito?)
There is much speculation around the clay plant
about why Art Swope had his hair clipped. While
visiting a nearby institution recently. Art hap­
pened along just as the barber was clipping hair
and Art being next in line, the near-sighted bar­
ber forcibly applied the clippers.
If you hear a loud conversation around the
clay plant, don’t be alarmed. It is only Tom
Point, Charles Locke and Massey Hays explain­
ing the merits of their new Star automobiles
purchased recently.
Harry Mahoney has the record for running
steam stills. He ran two stills so fast the other
night he burned the bearings out of the gauge­
bob wheel, filling up the receiver and pumping
it out again. We might also mention that Lady
Luck has been hovering around Harry. For the

�price of 30 cents he won a tailor made suit
recently at a raffle of a fraternal order,
Massey Hays is the proud father of a baby
girl. Thanks for the cigars, Massey.
Laboratory.—Ed McCredie is sample boy now
while Beaumont Parks is taking his vacation.
Beaumont is spending a month in the C. M. T. C.
camp.
Russell Pinkerton is back on the job after an
absence due to tonsilitis. Pinke says if he did
not care so much about having his tonsils removed
he could feel fine now.
Kathleen Halloran, Ethel Hooper, Hilda Deuer,
Edna Dietz, Genlis Giesleman and Beaumont
Parks have all been on the sick call this past
month.
Not only the laboratory boys are sporting new
cars but the girls are following in line. Miss
Dorothy Bandy in partnership with her brother
is driving a fine new Star coach. Dorothy at
the wheel makes a fine chauffeur even though she
does forget to use the clutch.
The lab girls have been playing some interest­
ing games of tennis. Most of the girls are new
players but they have defeated some of the more
experienced players in the tournament. Miss
Bandy won from Miss Schueler in a very close
game but later lost to Miss Mary Hoefker of
the main office. Miss Hoefker also defeated Miss
Deuer. We were looking to Miss Brown as our
star player but she was defeated by Miss Hallo­
ran. Now, Kathleen, it is up to you.
Hugh Christy spent his vacation in Cuba. Of
course it was Cuba, Ill., but that made no differ­
ence to Hugh, we understand, so far as good
times and refreshments were concerned.
The tennis handicap tournament did not last
long with the lab boys.
C. Van Duesen is now a fully qualified life
saver and has a lovely white badge to prove it.
His examination for this honor included many
difficult water stunts. One requirement was to
dive to the bottom and fully undress, then dive
back and get the clothing from shoes to cap.
Charles can almost live under water now if he
is allowed to come up for meals, and has the
right to save anybody’s life any place.
Mr. Witthofft has a fine new car now and
E. Hartwig has a Ford. Earnest says that part
of the agreement made, was to the effect that he
should be ready at any time to tow Bill back to
town.
Pressure Stills.—Starr Oulsen has become a
hard road booster. He cleaned up a couple of
dollars recently with his wheel of fortune which
will be spent on good roads near Fosterburg.
Arthur Slater is also on his vacation at the
time this is written and has combined his vacation
with a honeymoon trip to the Ozarks. “Art” and
his bride have the congratulations of the pressure
department and we wish them a long and happy
life together.
George Wilkens is moving back to the city. His
future home will be in Upper Alton. This is
another proof of the saying that you can take
the boy out of the city but it’s hard to make him
stay.
Carpenters.—Eddie Lutz has returned from the
Ozarks where the air is refreshing and as exhila­
rating as old wine and the mountains are covered

with the dews of gladness. Eddie spent most of
his time fishing and hunting.
W. Burgan, Wes Mathie and Claude Burris
are promoting a new organization called the
Sowell Hunting and Fishing Club.
Ralph (“Sox”) Parker has a family now, a
baby boy, and “Sox” is very happy, “Sox”
always was a good receiver. Best wishes to the
mother, the baby and friend “Sox.”
“Dad” Burris is taking a vacation now. Driv­
ing around, calling on old friends.
Crude Stills.—Robert Ford, Stillman at No. 6
house, is the owner of a new Ford sedan, but
seems to have very little control over the new
Ford. After having some interesting escapes on
his first trip, he drove home and ran right
through the new garage he had just built.
W. Thurston, still cleaner, is furnishing the
boys with garden truck. He has oversized toma­
toes and expects to get three truck loads of
cucumbers oft of six vines. Even George Buck
could not beat that.
George Gillham, Stillman at No. 6 house, is
making a trip up through Wisconsin. He said
he had read much about that beautiful country
(in the Stanolind Record, we imagine), and
wanted to look over the land of promise.
CASPER, WYO.

On July 26 a goodly number of refinery em­
ployees attended the gathering at Bessemer Bend,
where the Historical Society held a very in­
teresting program. Old settlers were in at­
tendance, and talks made from the site of the
first building in the State of Wyoming. One
attendant arrived in Wyoming in 1864. This re­
union was held near Goose Egg Ranch, famous
in fiction, “The Virginian.” A general basket
lunch followed the program.
It is said the “early bird gets caught,” meaning
that the game wardens made a rough passage for
the poachers on sage chickens, and many a man
paid penalty this year. The observance of the
law tends to bring happiness and saves those
spare shekels the judge might take.
While the Red Crowns are not occupying first
place in the Oil City League, the combustion
department team is rapidly assuming the lead in
the inter-department contest. With the silent
moral support of our department, “Dick” Row­
lands and the active, bombastic, gyrations of
Manager E. Period and Jay Mullenix, the other
teams are being defeated with regularity.
Last week “Oskar Muscovite” Howard’s pipe de­
partment was knocked over, S-4, and this week
“Doc” Jenkin’s crude stills from No. 3 ate the
dust to the tune of 8-6. The team consists of
a few old timers who should be through but
don’t know it, with the balance aspiring to Babe
Ruth’s crown. The line-up at present is as fol­
lows : “Kid” Tobias and “Weather Beaten Bud­
dy” Gleghorn are on the receiving end; “One
Round” Dowler and “Smoke” Jones on the hurl­
ing mound; “Caruso” Dayliss on first; “Silent”
Smith and “’Gimme a Cigarette” Dunn hold
down second; “Youngster” Charley Jabelamn
picks them_ up at short with “Fred, himself,
your Clothier,” Hussion at third. In the out­
field “Blizzard Pete, Himself” Alkire, “Slivers”
Bratager, “Ford Coupe” Allen, “Fusser” Steele
and E. Period cavort in the outfield.

�Then, when the 4th was over and the long
line of cars were slipping about in the mud,
“Penny” Nichols passed ’em up with his bug,
and skipped about like a water spider. He was
determined to reach home, whether or not, and
mud was no barrier.
The Second Annual Picnic of the refinery
electrical department was held July 19 at Lower
Garden Creek, with 72 present and one dog.
Wives, children, and sweethearts of electrical
employees watched with abated breath the feature
of the picnic, or the ball game, in which several
men were crippled on the grounds, and more on
Monday. Innumerable pounds of victuals were
consumed and to say it was all a success would
be mild.
If you drive through the Standard Addition
some evening you will decide that it is the show
residence of the district of Casper.
Standard
employees show they love home and this dis­
trict cannot be outdone by any home section in
the State for beauty and display of thrift.
Vacation tales seem to come from the seven
Seas. Tom went to Nubraska, Jim saw Colorado,
Max relates of the wonders of California. And
one more evidence of the generosity of the com­
pany in allowing employees two weeks on time,
comes forward.
Mack Davis, wife and little daughter spent an
enjoyable vacation in Yellowstone Park and ad­
jacent country to Jackson Hole. The daughter
took keen delight in feeding the bear, and the
thrills of big trout held Mack fast.
Albert H. Morris now speaks of Martha
Loraine who arrived in his household the other
day, and with the twinkle of pride when speak­
ing of her, it is quite easy to guess who holds
the scepter in the household. Mrs. Morris’ pride
is not to be outdone by that of the ‘Secretary.’
John H. Gibbs tells of good fishing and scenic
miles between here and Salt Lake. Also of one
“colored puson” who paid for a damage in­
flicted on John’s car when the dark-man backed
into it. John’s way of making the collection was
sure, but firm. We are glad he collected.
On July 11 at St. Mark’s Church in Casper,
Miss Leia E. Forsling and Frank Matthews of
the accounting department were united in mar­
riage. If good wishes and spoken words count,
they should be showered with happiness for many
a July 11th to come. Tokens of Matt’s hap­
piness were generously passed out and we all
smiled smiles for the happy couple.
Mr. Lobdell of the Industrial Relations De­
partment has a healthy growth of climbing wood­
bine started along the walls of the Industrial
Building, with an idea of further beautifying the
building, one of the many items Don is con­
tinually promoting to make you glad you are an
employee of the Standard Oil Company
(Indiana).
Earl Caldwell gnawed roasting ears back
“where the tall corn grows” (in Iowa) during
vacation time, and watched the snails whizz past.
To spend some of the time in the corner drug
store while home, and hear your favorite phon­
ograph selection “The Storm” is no small treat
and Earl enjoyed it, along with other amuse­
ments.
Henry Bennick with pride and propriety,
piloted his Detroit cousin through Yellowstone

Park, during his vacation and the wonders of
Wyoming made one more convert for our
State.
“Willie White Hawley” spent his two weeks
on the ranch and right away offered his son
three cents per head for gophers, dead or alive.
With forty or fifty a day showing up “Willie”
nearly went bankrupt. He can say at least that
he has a livestock ranch.
GREYBULL, WYO.

Plant No. L—Homer Williams is spending his
vacation in the Big Horns fishing.
Fred Frary is sporting a new Durant touring
car.
Superintendent Lockard is back on the job
again after two weeks’ vacation in Pittsburgh,
Pa.
. .
P. L. Truax has gone on a fishing trip in
Shell Creek basin. The big fish had better look
out because he throws a wicked hook.
D. E. Yandell is wearing a broad smile these
days. His family has returned from Dallas,
Plant No. 2.—Superintendent Warren was in
Casper recently on company business.
The writer recently enjoyed a short visit with
Percy Shorey of the Casper Refineries. Percy,
who was with the Greybull plant for several
years, was transferred two years ago. He was
a hard worker here and is a hard worker there.
His friends will be glad to hear that everything
is lovely with Percy.
Some of the boys strayed “far from the trod­
den paths of man” in quest of undisturbed fish­
ing haunts. They easily found the ideal fishless
stream and did a fifteen mile hike before emerg­
ing into civilization. W. T. Hughes, office
manager, says he likes his unsophisticated ang­
ling but prefers the streams containing at least
a few of the game beauties.
Charley Heckard, formerly of Plant No. 2,
Greybull, returned from his present location at
Casper for a short visit with old friends and
associates.
Bill Robinson, who has alternated between
electric welding and pipe departments, has been
transferred temporarily to the welding force at
Casper.
Claude Derby, in charge of the store room, has
returned from his vacation and reports a most
wonderful time. Claude, with his brother and
their families, spent most of the time seeing the
wonders of Yellowstone National Park.
And now comes Chief Bluejacket, welder, an­
swering the call of his noble ancestors in search­
ing for the thrill of the trout’s nibble from the
pools of unexplored waters. Exultant in the
belief that he had found a new head of “Medicine
Lodge,” famous for its speckled wonders, and
planning to keep the secret for himself and se­
lected friends. Big Jim led his party downward
into what soon proved to be a box canyon with
practically inaccessible walls. Dangling their
tackle unsuccessfully in each promising eddy, they
covered miles and miles. At last, Green Simp­
son, blacksmith, wearied and turned aside. Scal­
ing the walls with the aid of his pocket block and
tackle he returned to the car and met the other
boys in the meadows fifteen miles below. Green
says he’ll never again follow Big Jim down a
creek that drys up every summer.
45

�Frank James of the storeroom and a pioneer of
the saged bad lands attended the old settlers pic­
nic at Hyattville. Frank came in with a sore
arm from the strenuous handshaking attending
such events.
Fred Koschei, who has been with the company
for several years in different capacities, recently
quit to accept a position as chef with the Griffin
Inn. Fred knows his stuff as a disseminator of
ham and.
A generous reward is being offered about the
plant for information leading to the whereabouts
of “Mike,” cat of warehouse fame. Mike with
her only baby has disappeared in a queer way and
in spite of her education and cute tricks seems
unable to find her way back to the store.
Several of the boys from Plant No. 2 attended
a picnic given at Otto, Wyo., in celebration of
Brigham Young’s advent into the Great Salt
Lake Basin seventy-five years ago. The event,
an annual, affair, was well attended and everyone
had an enjoyable afternoon.
LARAMIE, WYO.

H. M. Gray recently underwent an operation at
Cheyenne and we understand he is getting along
very nicely.
Roy Stewart went and did it; he bought that
new Buick Coach and when you see him going
down the street he spreads that grin from ear to
ear. He and family spent a short vacation in
the Encampment country.
E. L. Knight, chief clerk, is a real papa now.
It’s a big baby girl and her name is Lyell Knight.
“V” doesn’t need any sleep any more, he says he
weaned himself, as he now has the job walking
the floor and being the nurse.
Al Musser is changing, he is strolling about
in the state of oblivion.
ATTENTION — T. M. Bingham; Chicken
season is now open and we don’t mean grouse.
Stricker, Miner and Knight, the three “Musty
tears,” have come home. They fought gallantly
for their country which the white streak around
their faces plainly shows. But now they want
to go back and it breaks their hearts. Be brave
boys, be brave.
George Goodman, Stillman, spent a few days in
Denver taking in the sights and buying some new
furniture for his house.
Charles Hofman and relatives from Casper,
spent several days at the Snowy Range, fishing
and taking pictures.
Don Hunton, shipping clerk, bought a new golf
suit, which is to enable him to ship cars a little
better. By the way, Don lost a lot of jewelry in
Denver and we are now informed that the costly
trips have ceased—some jewelry came back. He
recently purchased a new Ford coupe, got himself
a new girl—and—the jewelry disappeared again.
Mr. P. A. Ward surprised himself and family
just recently by showing agility heretofore undis­
covered. However, said “agility” failed to accom­
plish the purpose for which it was displayed,
whether or not the propounder of it, i.e., Mr.
Ward, was overly anxious to accomplish his mis­
sion, is still causing a great deal of discussion.
One night recently, Mr. Ward was awakened in
the wee hours of the morning, by Mrs. Ward
who told him that some one was in the house.
Phil says that he turned on the light immediately,

and saw standing over his bed—a stranger. Now
just what would you have done in a case like
that? Phil’s story is that he sprang from his
bed to catch the man, but by the time said
“agility” had begun to work, said burglar was
clearing the back fence. Even though Mr. Ward
didn’t get results direct, he succeeded in protect­
ing his household, and preventing a loss of any
kind. Nice going, Phil, old man, and you may
be sure that none of us are envious of you and
your experience one little bit.
F. O. Blair is spending his vacation at home,
polishing floors and fixing up the new addition
which he built to his house.
Harry Cotton from Casper spent a few days
with us on company business.
John Hart was married to Lulu Estes on July 2,
in the Christian Church at Fort Collins. 'TTie
happy couple are now home to their friends on
North Pine. Congratulations from the bunch and
may your troubles be “little ones.”
Banty Rouse reports great sorrow on the Little
Laramie River, as Banty brought home a trout
17% inches long. Now that he knows where they
are he will bring in several more.
CARLINVILLE, ILL.
T. W. Starbuck, Correspondent

Miss Alice Loehnberg, one of our genial black­
smith’s lovely daughters, was married recently
to Russell O. Cotter of Indianapolis. Mr. Cotter
is an artist.
Mrs. John Kroeger is on the sick list we are
sorry to hear. We are pleased to know, however,
she is improving nicely.
Dale Jarman, alias “Boojie,” is quite sore
around the shoulders and arms as a result of in­
structing a certain “Fair One” in the art of
rowing. Hot sun, blisters, etc., meant nothing
to our hero so long as “she” was attentive and
eager to learn.
Tod Porter, better known as “Katy,” recently
had a narrow escape from serious injury when
the Ford roadster in which he was riding to work
hit a bad place in the road and catapulted him
into the gutter. He was bruised some and badly
shaken up but nothing serious. Katy closely re­
sembled a turtle on its back when he was helped
to his feet.
Gerald Baker, sheik of the construction gang,
has a job driving a truck for a bridge contractor
in Bluffton, Ind.
John Swanson who was in the hospital quite
a while is improved sufficiently to be back home
again. John is convalescing at his beautiful sum­
mer home at Schoper Lake. From what we had
heard we are surprised that John is still a bache­
lor, especially after being among so many pretty
nurses so long.
Our old friend, Joe Valle, is back with us again
as check weighman. He has a grocery and meat
store in Standard City which required his atten­
tion for awhile but now that he has it on a good
running basis he has returned to his regular job.
Talking about trading machines. Freddie Eng­
land of the Power House swapped his Lizzie that
would always run for a Chewy that refuses to
run most of the time. Puzzle: Who got stung?
Freddie has named it Maud.
Joe Laws is now engineer on the yard engine
succeeding Frank Gibberson who has a pipe fit­
ting job in East St. Louis.
46

�After considering .all the evidence and arguing
the case for a week George (“Monkey Wrench”)
Gosnell and Howard Reynolds have decided that
Scopes can teach other people’s kids that their
grandpas were monkeys if he wants to, but there
are no monkeys swinging in their family trees.
And such may be the case, but we are too polite
to pass any remarks such as the “Monk” might
be as much ashamed as they. Anyhow, George’s
nickname sounds suspicious.
Since Art Hibbard has changed his place of
residence we also are beginning to note a change
in his speech, as for instance he used to say “I ’ad
a ’arcl time of hit yesterday, doncher know.” Now
he says, “Oi had a hard toime of it yistiday be
jabers.” Hib lives in the third ward now.
Jimmie Casson is percolating over the highways
now in a new Star touring car. It is rumored
that Jimmie has to keep the windshield open so
he can throw out his chest.
Joe Crosby, son of our face Itoss, is working in
St. Louis for the Illinois Power Company. Joe
graduated from high school this Spring. Judging
from the appearance of Ethel’s hair she has de­
cided to take her brother’s place at home. This
boyish bob seems to be becoming quite popular,
too.
As we drive past “Bobby” Burns’ large and well
kept garden we can’t help admiring it. We hear
that “Bobby” is taking contracts for potatoes and
tomatoes in carload lots.
Ernest Hutchens must have been stepping on
the gas lately. He came in with a broken spring,
and two blowouts. Did you outrun the speed
cops, Ernest ?
Speaking of speed we hear that Jesse Gempp
(Andy Gump) pulls his gas lever down three
notches instead of two now, but then Jesse is a
careful driver and can control his flivver even
under this increased acceleration.
Anyone getting hurt now will travel in style
and comfort as our ambulance is now equipped
with large balloon tires which will add much to
its easy riding qualities.
It is rumored that several of the members of
our official family are not so green on the
“greens” as they once were. In fact they were
on the Hillside Country Club team which played
Alton here and almost won. Just to show the
Altonites that they were game they went to Alton
last Sunday and almost won again. Earl
(“Dizzy”) Anderson says he stood eighth but we
counted up and found out that there were only
eight on the team which kind of weakens his case
somewhat. Those on the Carlinville team were:
Harry Daley, Lionel Moise, C. W. Clark, Dr. R.
H. Bell, A. L. Hibbard, Earl Anderson, E. A.
Ibbetson and F. P. Nims. After looking that
line-up over we don’t see how they could have
lost both games.
Referring to the “evolution” trial we figure that
Jake Werner instead of having monkeys for
ancestors must have had fish as Jake says he
used to be some swimmer and diver when he
lived back in Cincinnati. He could do a fancy
dive and stay under water fifteen minutes which
we claim is a world’s record. Boy, page Major
Hoople.
Mrs. Lowell Adair, formerly Grace Loehnberg,
is here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Loehnberg.

GENERAL OFFICE, CHICAGO

Fifth Floor.—We extend our deepest sympathy
to Miss Foote, whose father passed away very
suddenly.
Our deepest sympathy goes out to Miss
Morrison, who recently lost her sister.
At last Tillie Lyman had her hair bobbed.
There are now just about six horse and buggies
left on the fifth floor. They are gradually falling
one by one.
Equipment Department.—From all reports, the
weekly meeting at Joe Didesch’s house was a
success. What say, Bahr ?
Sandquist bought some chewing tobacco?
As a coffee maker Evelyn Swenson cannot be
beat. Looks as though Ann Rommell is going
to lose her job.
It has been rumored that Gert Moran has a
regular sweetie now. She hasn’t admitted it but
that new ring looks suspicious.
Manufacturing Department.—Agnes Brandt is
wearing a beautiful new diamond ring. We’ve
been expecting this, Fred.
Bessie Schneider and Carrie Zimmerman have
joined the ranks of the bobbed heads. You sure
look fine, girls.
Joe Sohurek has about decided to cast his
vote for the selection of our old friend, George
Varcoe, for censor on Boul Mich, although
Joe Skorcz and Jack Crothers are furnishing
plenty competition.
Doc Coulter has not lost his fascinating charm.
He is still as popular with the sixth floor beauties
as ever.
A. R. Smith claims Johnny Wyand is leading
him astray.
Has anybody noticed the speed of Frankie
Martinek of the billing department at 5 P. M ?
Well, it’s a peach from the top floor of the
Seeberger building. That’s the cause of it all.
General Manager’s Office.—Don’t crowd anti
don’t push, girls, but Major Parker is a “widow”
during July and August, and he’s lonesome.
Miss Vivian Woodward, who is the “infant”
of the technical department claims distinction as
the only long-haired girl in these parts, but
if we had pretty golden brown hair like hers,
we’d hesitate, too.
Yes, it’s certainly too bad, but we’re afraid
they’re going to have to send Dr. Kinney to
Kankakee. When last seen he was trying to count
the stitches in a square inch of silk, and when
they get that bad, there isn’t much hope. And
he was such a nice boy, too.
J. G. Lannin and Walter Blodgett proved most
model husbands when “my wife is in the
country. Hurrah.” Every evening they would
console each other by dining together, then
solving cross word puzzles, playing a game of
casino and retiring at 9:00 P. M., then arriving
at their desks the following A. M. with the
rosy blush of morn tinting their cheeks and the
liveliest execution. Ye bachelors of the somnolent
moods try this Franklinite simplicity and note
results.
Cupid’s dart did no grazing but hit Jimmie
Reehoff in a vulnerable spot, with attending
complications of taking circuitous routes to the
doorway, halting en route, soft whispers, and—
who may the fair damsel be? Ask Jimmie, he
knows.
47

�A caret must be placed in article appearing in
August number on changes in G. M.’s department,
a most important item having been omitted, viz:
That of John G. Gutgsell directly succeeding
A. A. Johnston as chief germinator of plots to
increase our interest in the stock purchase plan
by ceaselessly go-getting. The higher the cliff
the steeper and more difficult the ascent, but
Johnnie has qualified for the Alpine Club, his
eligibility having been proved by climbing peaks
10,000 feet and over. The top o’ the earth to
you.
J. M. Moore has no time nor leaning towards
hiking over moors and fens. At present he is
moored to a walking desk which shifts to a new
niche bi-weekly. On a tropical evening he
showed his versatility by ably guiding a half
dozen stenos on a voluminous job after hours,
which under Mr. Essery’s direction, and the
humorous drolleries of both, faded into nothing­
ness ere one was aware.
H. G. Stanley, first as a commuter and second
because he is the post master for the G. M.’s
department, matutinally rises with the birdies and
chickies to maintain his standard of never tardy,
found several mornings that the mail was loaded
with myriads of picture postals showing scenes
along Fox Lake and the Fox River, sent by
Arthur Frederickson vacationing in that region
to the indispensable contingent (hark girls).
Arthur’s thoughtfulness and Mr. Stanley’s
rapidity of delivery were most marked.
“Leona Triem on the ’phone.” Someone is
steadfast in his attention, judging from the calls
going and coming. Ain’t it nice ?
And there was Miss Jackson engaged in
lengthy conversations with a handsome dark-eyed
Arab. Most interesting. We may be envious at
that.
Stoney returned from her yearly outing as
brown as a thrush, bringing with her some in­
triguing photos. Oh boy, are they beau-tiful!
Frankie has such a youthful look that she has
resorted to pincers to change her appearance to
a grown-up. And besides, her playfulness in
going down the avenue to luncheon has resulted
in much jocularity among the most dignified.
She can break the ice at seven o’clock informal
dinners to the queen’s taste. Try her.
Purchasing Department.—Ever since the last
calamity on the ladder, Mark Howard, before
ascending eats a life saver. Food logic, Mark.
We wish Frank Stupec would confirm the
rumors that South Chicago has been annexed
by Roseland.
It was worth the price of admission to see the
expression of R. W. Ringrose, when Miss Leppert
returned from her vacation and calmly an­
nounced that she did not get married.
What did C. A. Levy mean when he said
“monkey business ?” Was he reading the Dayton
trial or did he see the circus tents in Grant Park?
Tear-a-ble, simply pathetic. Honest injun?
Bertha Walker flashed a diamond ring, with the
intention of having it appraised.
Everything
went swell until some one discovered that it
had a peek-a-boo effect, and blooey went the
air castle, ring and all.
Wanted, A brown derby to use as a collection
box. Doc Beamer will furnish the music via the
harmonica and F. H. Bosworth will do the act
with the derby.
48

Found: A brand new kind of Swiss move­
ment. It was discovered through accident while
we watched Harold Syljibeck box.
Quite a
clever lad in moving the opposite direction.
Yes, we have no bananas, can be con­
scientiously said by our Richard Rice. He is
now purveyor of food stuffs for our famous
fleet of lake boats.
July 20, red letter day for Miss Privot! No,
not a man, either.
Our baseball team was hitting on all eight—
until our manager, Ted Johnson, went on his
vacation. Then they dropped two in a row. It
looked as if the entire team helped Ted to en­
joy his vacation in spirits, or such some place as
that.
The purchasing department extends to the
Misses Forthune its deepest sympathy in the
loss of their mother.
CHICAGO SALES
W. G. Steinmeyer, Correspondent
Harry Blix, M. S. Walker and Art Emrath
Associate Correspondents
S. S. Notes.—We regret to report the death of

Mrs. Russell Lyman, wife of Attendant Lyman
of S. S. 6, Madison and Kilpatrick.
In the last issue of the Record we forgot to
mention one of the star ball-players of the
famous construction department nine.
Louis
Radcliffe is the stellar first-baseman for the con­
structions. Louis also swings a wicked bat—oc­
casionally he runs for third base instead of first,
but slight errors of that sort are overlooked by
his fellow-players, as he is such a fast firstbaseman.
Asa Fagan, father of Attendant Paul Fagan
of S. S. 170, Chicago and Oakley, died on August
1, we are extremely sorry to report.
We regret to learn of the death of the
brother of Attendant Emil Dorman of S. S. 519,
47th and Western, on August 1. We extend our
sympathy.
Attendant T. O. Tanner of No. 526, LaSalle
and Illinois, quite boastingly told us of the new
visitor at this home, Theodore Jr. “Teddy” who
made his appearance on July 17, is quite a husky
lad, in spite of his eight and one half pounds.
“Tom” Egan, former S. S. attendant and gar­
ages salesman, has taken over a former Wagner
S. S., 42nd and Lake Park. He is still boost­
ing Red Crown and Polarine.
DAVENPORT, lA.
Myrtle Clark (Field) and Marie Most (Office)
Correspondents

Eddyville.—If any one cares to know the wage
scale around here, ask Dr. Camblin of the con­
struction department. He sets that. Ed. Fritts
talked, thought and slept Polarine so much dur­
ing the Whiz Bang that he unconsciously filled
his pipe with it. You’ll be taking it for wine if
it keeps up much longer, eh ? We think our S. S.
97 looks very nice now. Barney doused it with
paint, Camblin put in a new pump and Don
washed the windows. Course Don is a new man
here and doesn’t know how to get out of it—but
he will learn.
Ralph Jager made a trip to
Minneapolis, Minn., to see the sights and said
they have street lights, water works and pave­
ments down town. Lee Bell says he just can’t
get that Polarine expression on his face. Guess

�it’s because he had Mica Axle Grease on it last
month and it won’t shine through.
Don says
he’d rather flip for the drinks—instead of buy­
ing every time.
De fTitt.—A. C. Smith, attendant at our S. S.
46 has just returned from an eight day trip
through Minnesota, Western Iowa and South
Dakota. Some traveler, Al.
East Moline.—Our newest additions to the fam­
ily over here in East Moline “where the hand
clasp is a wee bit tighter” are Boyd Brewington,
formerly agent at Batavia, and Paul Schroeder
at the bulk station.
Independence.—Mrs. W. E. Wren, who has
been confined to the hospital is now doing nicely.
In the meantime, W. E. made a fine dacidy and
mamma too.
H. W. Boise, agent at Independence, adopted
two children some time ago. Says the Ford road­
ster had to be enlarged and they are now en­
joying rides in a Ford sedan.
Office. The Glorious Fourth passed without
any accidents in the office although some were
rather toned down by the lack of sleep.
Marie Most reports a dandy time in Chicago.
But just what was the attraction, Marie ?
A girl just can’t save her nickels as long as
they have excursions. Gladys Nelson doesn’t
seem to be able to resist any of them. The last
one was to Kansas City and Oh, what a time!
Unless Flora Lawrence takes up golf and
tennis, it looks as though she’s going to lose out
with Rudy. How about it. Flora?
Helen Rathmann has interpreted the Fall
fashions wrong. They are tight sleeves, Helen,
not skirts.
We all agree, Howard Clark has a tootin’ good
car, even if it does disturb all the surrounding
offices.
Just who. Girls, shall we thank for our beauti­
ful Axminister (we mean congoleum) rug in our
rest room ?
Purchasing wardrobe trunks means many
things. Just what is “Bud” Clark planning when
she so interestingly examines all the latest lug­
gage folders?
Everyone has agreed that the annual picnic
of the Davenport Oil Cans at Credit Island,
July 25, was by far the best ever. Our chief
clerk, Mr. Bragg, started off the jolly day by
coming down to the office extremely early, all
knickered up. Oh, what attention that golf
course got. Games of all sorts were enjoyed
and indoor ball caused more than one sore throat.
Dinner was served A la Piggly Wiggly (comeand-get-it style) and all exclaimed some feed.
Tony’s lowans furnished the music for the dance
at which Ray Stackhouse and Gretchen Adams
won honors in the Singles Prize Waltz and
Charley Flanigan and Mrs. Jack Jost carried off
the candy in the Married Folks Prize Waltz. Our
own taxi service took the tired fun makers to
their homes and again they said “perfection is
always with us.”
DES MOINES, lA.
Rebecca Strubel, Correspondent

John Rattenborg, Elkhorn agent, is due to enter
the state of wedded bliss in the near future, so
says Dame Rumor. No wonder John is putting
out Polarine.
Leo Crolley, T. W. salesman at Atlantic, says

it is easier to sell a car load of Polarine than
to unload it.
George Carr, T. W. salesman at Atlantic, claims
it isn’t a question of can or cannot when it comes
to selling Polarine, it’s a case of “got to” when
you add a new member to the family. It’s a boy.
Ask I. W. Steil what a ten-letter word denoting
“feline” is.
Frank Black at Anita the daddy of all T. W.
agents in the Atlantic field is wearing a hat with
two screened windows in the front. He says the
flies can look at paradise but can’t get through
the pearly gates.
Since Nobs Burken returned from Chicago we
note a daily letter address to “Mr. Burken.” Fast
worker. Nobs.
Henry Tough, irrepressible Earlham agent, is
a tough man to turn down when it comes to
selling Semdac. He engineered the sale of a
barrel of Semdac to the Earlham School over
the protest of a board member who had been
getting the order himself for a number of years.
Henry just won’t be denied.
Dad Gossard’s Marshalltown S. S. supplies desk
flowers for all good looking girls in the neigh­
borhood. Incidentally we have been told that it
is one of the most attractive stations on the
Lincoln Highway.
Oli Lindholm, bachelor S. S. salesman at Man­
ning, hasn’t made his Polarine quota since “Sem­
dac,” his blooded brindle bull dog, died.
Oli
how has a new dog, Semdac H, and promises
to make his quota regularly hereafter.
Gus Benning says that if he can sell a couple
of coupon books to a competitor who is on a tour,
every agent ought to be able to sell the com­
petitor’s customers.
Ben Holsebus, agent at Defiance, recently dis­
appeared. On his return we learned the reason.
Congratulations, Ben.
H. E. Meyers, Garwin agent, made a hit with
his truck in the Fourth of July Parade. Semdac
helped.
Recently when Salesman Carlisle was returning
home he was met by a swarm of bees. He says
he never did like honey anyway.
DETROIT, MICH.
J. A. Green, Correspondent

Scotten Plant.—V. H. Lambert, T. W. driver,
reports that V. H. Lambert Jr., joined the S. O.
family on July 20. Mother and son are doing
fine. Congratulation, Verne.
Jimmy Schneider, T. W. driver, also reports
a visit of the stork, an eight pound boy having
arrived at his home on June 29. Congratulations,
Jim.
Jack Baker, cashier, spent his vacation at­
tending the Homecoming of the Sarnia old boys
at Sarnia, the week of July 19. He was ac­
companied by his oldest son. It is rumored that
he had a very fine time and that he sampled 9
per cent beer.
We also have had some sorrow in our organ­
ization.
The force at Scotten extend their
sympathy to Howard Glass whose little boy died
on July 24.
Gordon Huey, 352 clerk, has been transferred
to the main office.
Robert Sculley, warehouseman in the lub
room, has resigned on account of his wife’s
49

�Merlin E. Napier has been to Detroit. Nip
says that he didn’t reach Canada but his partner
found many good 4.4 per cent labels on him.
How about it?
George O’Dell’s boy has been ill with diph­
theria. George is teaching him to turn the crank.
Lansing.—Guy Reed, our new warehouse at­
tendant, got tired of riding in his old Ford coupe
so his wife assisted him in selecting a new Chev­
rolet coupe. It wouldn’t be a bad idea of having
a hat salesman to call on Guy, now.
Say folks, did you see that box with the quaint
old top on the running board of Evert’s Reo?
We wonder what that thing is hauled around
for? We wonder where he got it and all the
cover? If he got it from the S. O. Co., a SOO
gallon tank must have been shipped in it.
We are all smoking R. G. Dun cigars, although
they are a bit stale, being about a month old.
Herman Schray is settling in his new home on
Strathford Road this week. Congratulations, to
his wife and the new member of the S. O. fam­
ily. Joy and best wishes, Herman.
Earl Greusbeck drives carefully and obeys all
the city’s ordinances now. He bought $3.85
worth of them the other day. Since then he
has been walking. I believe it is safer, Earl, until
you get the volume of city ordinances digested.
Joseph Pattison, our veteran horseman, at­
tended the horse races at Kalamazoo the other
day. Must be his horse won by the smile he
carried upon his return.
Kenneth Sperry, our long, lanky stake truck
driver, became very friendly with a dusky Sambo
the other day. Kenneth found out that Sambo
liked the same brand of chewing tobacco that
he did. We always knew Kenneth was good
hearted but we didn’t think he ever suffered
cold feet.
The offices will be clean now. Fred Palmer
got a new broom. It will be all right after it is
broken in, Fred.
New S. S. 21S is going strong now on Polarine
and Red Crown. Gus Semran and Lester McElmurry will meet the public at this station.
Hillsdale.—The L. B. Harringtons have a new
arrival at their home—a daughter born July 11.
Mr. Harrington is rural T. W. driver.
Service Station Department.—John Ramm, at­
tendant at S. S. 78, called at the office to receive
a check for $50, his share of the reward for
the arrest and conviction of a man who attempted
to rob his station.
Thomas McCarl wishes to announce the arrival
of Thomas, Jr.
Charles McLeod, sales manager for the Com­
mercial Milling Company, and one of the first
service station supervisors in Detroit, asked to
be remembered to “ye old timers.”
Dougal McCallum recommends married life
so highly that our old friend, Wm. C. Doney,
has decided to spend his vacation in a similar
manner. We never expected Bill would fall,
but alas, ’tis true.
The Pride Station Plaque awarded to the
S. S. in Detroit that has the best record for
cleanliness, accuracy, service and sales, was
awarded to service station 51, Harper and Field,
for June. Congratulations, Messrs. Ford and
Goodrich.
T. P. Galbreath, manager, gave the Com­
mencement Address to the S. S. School class

health. He is now running the King Bee Con­
fectionery Store. Good luck, Bob.
The Solite Team is now operating under the
able management of James M. Ritchie and has
won all but two of its games during July. The
team has two new players, Ray Eckloff, a pit­
cher, and James Capputo, a catcher. Much of
the team’s success has been due to the very able
pitching of “Doc” Travis.
Scores;
Opponents Solite
Edgars Sugar House ........................ 9
2
Grosse He A. C................................. 9
12
Puritan A. C...................................... 2
30
Cadillac Motor Car Co........... . ......... 4
4
Ecorse .............. ....................... -......... 1
0
Lincoln Park ..........................
25
Main Office ...........................
318
Bond Bread Co............ . .................... 9
8
The team reports that the boys had a very
enjoyable social time on occasion of playing the
Grosse He A. C.
Lycaste Plant.—Alex McDonald, T. W. driver
of Groose Pointe, is at home suffering from a
weak back due to heavy sales of Polarine. Tough
luck, but are you sure it’s your back, Mac?
John McAllister, our lead off man of the
pumping gang, is again on his periodically sick
leave with lumbago, caused from bending his
back over tank car domes looking for a loss in
Red Crown Gasoline.
Clay Plant.—Ed Heier, pick-up driver, passed
the cigars the other day to celebrate the arrival
of another Standard Oiler, a six and one-half
pound girl. Congratulations, Ed.
Strathmoor Plant.—G. A. Bates, our nifty S. S.
driver, is now back on the job after a week of
patient nursing and doing general housework.
We offer our sincere regrets, Glenn, account of
your wife’s illness and we are pleased that she
is up and around again.
Earl Fry, our congenial loader, borrowed
Hank Grimo’s Ford to go to the bank recently
and came out of the bank and drove away a
police officer’s car, not knowing the difference.
Nice work, Earl. Why not go in the business.
They can’t catch you.
E. L. Johnson, T. W. driver of orchestral
fame, has taken unto himself a bride, the date
being July 3. Elmer and his bride motored to
Southern Indiana over the 4th and report a very
enjoyable time. The entire gang at Strathmoor
unite in extending their congratulations.
We
also appreciated the cigars.
Harry Dottee and wife motored to Tawas
City over the 4th and report fishing excellent.
Maybe he’s right.(?)
Jackson.—R. L. Vining from our office force
has been promoted to agent at Pontiac.
Con­
gratulations and success. Bob. We all miss you.
On the last days of the week one of our sales­
men looks longingly towards Detroit. Well, who?
Musser, of course.
E. J. Zimmerman, our garage salesman, has
just recently moved to Jackson. Polarine sales
have jumped accordingly.
L. S. Kelley is a new driver on our force. Look
out, you Fords.
G. M. Carver has been promoted to the place
held by R. L. Vining. Success to you, Mike.
George Comstock of S. S. 188 has been pro­
moted to the office. Good step, George.
We
hope you have many more.
50

�that finished Saturday, July 25. The members
of the class were Stanley Rathbun, Geo. S.
Brown, Will C. Masten, Frank R. Frasier, Vance
Powell, Roy Egloff, Chas. Jones, Norman Kauf­
man, Harold Simms, Wilbur Short, Frederick
Beck, Robert Walker. Roderick Campbell and
Ernest Dayhuff.
Office.—Who said a taxi driver has no heart?
There are six of our girls who know better.
One noon it started to rain very hard while
some of the girls were downtown. As it gave
no sign of stopping, the six hailed a Checker and
on dropping them at the office, the driver refused
to be paid.
Last year Norm Swain took his fiance to his
home near Toronto. This year he took his bride.
Well, it won’t be long before Sadie Curry
changes the Miss to Mrs. They’re building a
house out in Fenton and it’s nearly completed.
It is not far from the home of little Fay
Lewellyn and Fay is watching it with nearly as
much interest as Sadie.
Leona Henderson of the coupon department re­
signed July 25th. Miss Marie Colden succeeds
her.
Hilda Krastof and Mildred Hanna, both have
aristocratic cars and chautfeurs, especially chauf­
feurs, at their disposal every evening.
Hilda
even has an escort to lunch nearly every day.
Some people have all the luck!
We’d have birthdays at least twice a year if
we were assured presents as nice as the threestrand pearls Corrine Jollicoeur received from
“Clifford.”
Bert Smith is leaving us on the 15th of
August on account of ill health.
The S. O. Co. was well represented at a
picnic given at Belle Isle, the evening of July IS.
Everyone seemed to enjoy the outing and look
forward to another one of its kind. Most of
the bunch participated in a ball game which was
very exciting due to the fact that we had a
first-class umpire, Mr. Flitts. Mr. Ralston was
captain of the Bozo Team and Mr. Reed, cap­
tain of the Would-be Team, while Mr. Galbreath
on the sidelines was official ruler on all disputes
and arguments of which many existed through­
out the game. The Bozo Team consisted of:
Captain Ralston, c.; Bert Curwane, p.; Geo. Mur­
ray, 1st.; Al. Bailey, 2nd.; George Stimson, 3rd.;
Ruth Slater, 1. f.; Marie Grandstaff, c. f.; Louise
Schlunt, r. f.; Marie Dillon, s. s. and Edna
Fahndrich, pinch hitter. The Would-be Team
consisted of: Captain Reed, p.; Jim Lindsay, c.;
Fred Brown, 1st.; Wm. Coye, 2nd.; Jim Ritchie,
3rd.; Gertrude Barnes, 1. f.; Mabie Soop, c. f.;
Rose Votrabeck, r. f. and Mrs. Brown, pinch
hitter. The Bozo Team won by a safe margin,
35-18. The game would have been much shorter
if the umpire had used better judgment in calling
balls and strikes which resulted in a near riot
on several occasions.
Nevertheless they all
parted friends.
In one instance Mr. Reed
struck out—his alibi was; he had half of Belle
Isle in his eye.
General.—Vernon Chism, general clerk at
Wichita, Kans., was a welcome visitor to these
parts recently. We understand he sought and
found in Canada relief from Kansas heat.
K. E. (“Cap”) Burleigh, chief clerk at Minot,
N. D., was another visitor at the Detroit office
and Canada—mostly Canada. We like to see

visitors on their way abroad. The latch string
at Detroit is always on the outside.
There are three kinds of golf—what they in­
tend to play; what they actually play; and what
they talk about playing afterwards; the latter the
19th hole variety, or around in 79 which is more
like 9 in 79. All three varieties were found in
Detroit when Ralph Reed, auditor, arrived and
in company with A. E. Ralston, assistant mana­
ger, sojourned to several local Country Clubs
and played a marvelous variety of golf. Not
content with disturbing the peace of the golf
courses, they carried the game to the Elks Tem­
ple where the Detroit gang eats. The tales they
told rivaled the Arabian Nights. Scores were
never over 90 and side bets were 25 cents a
hundred. Observers say it was Civil War va­
riety—out in ’61 and back in ’65. Even nature
conspired to help them out.
It was on the
Hawthorne Course that a woodpecker advanced
the ball 75 yards for a hole in two, according to
both parties.
We were glad to get a letter from Bill O’Mara
who is recuperating in Newberry, Mich.
Bill
says he is coming along fine. Everyone is glad
to hear of his convalescence.
Out at the River Rouge, Henry Ford is building
a lot of new buildings. One of the contractors has
a smokestack about 300 feet in the air. A. II.
McKinnon, lub. salesman, went out to get a con­
tract and he sent word down from the top of the
chimney that if A. H. would come up, he would
willingly sign. Mac negotiated the distance suc­
cessfully and on a little platform, two by twice,
signed him up on Red Crown and Polarine.
EVANSVILLE, ILL.
N. J. Lipking, Correspondent

The annual Fourth of July Standard Oil Picnic
at Murphysboro, Ill., turned out to be a great suc­
cess. It started with a parade of fiftv automo­
biles and trucks and 200 participants. They were
welcomed at the picnic grounds by Percy Wight­
man and his quartet in their “How Do You Do”
Song. Salesman Fisher was the toastmaster—
We have been trying to find out whether all the
grub available made Fisher sick and caused him
to leave the grounds or whether there was some
other attraction. We have an idea but—Chief
Clerk Harold Guthrie gave us a talk. It was
thought for a time that DeTreville would be un­
able to leave the grounds account of the fried
chicken he put away, but later in the evening he
was able to sit up and take liquid nourishment.
Chevrolets are running the Fords a race in the
Evansville Office. Ed. Willis, H. E. Guthrie and
E. H. Bergess are strutting around in their new
Sedans.
“Evolution”, alias “Sheik” Baldwin is still
strutting his onions with the flappers, but we be­
lieve our new man. Jack Hatfield, is edging up
on him now. Hatfield and his Leaping Lena
Ford are familiar figures in this town.
Ione Zimmerman has fallen at last. Her locks
have been shorn and she now is among the
“Bobs”.
We would like for some one to say “Bathtub”
to Gil Heldt, and then stand by and see what hap­
pens.
We are glad to have Alvin Scholz back with
us after an operation for appendicitis.

�We extend our sympathy to Ewald Weber in
the death of his father.
We are told Neel and Espin are making things
hum at Jeffersonville, S. S.
George King, truck driver at New Albany, is
sure heavy with the ladies. Anything serious in
the air, George?
Ed. Howell, former S. S. attendant at New Al­
bany, now is T. T. driver. Ed says the sky’s the
limit and he has started going up.
We hear Walt Bailey turned down an engage­
ment with a good looking Evansville girl while
in New Albany. What’s the matter “Deac”?

H.

the first time), “As you have been so nice and
attentive, my dear, I am putting an extra nickel
in the box for yourself.”
Hank Lerud is now general supply clerk.
An interesting situation came up recently in
the Kitten Ball game between the Standard Oil
Company girls and the girls from the Union
Light. Frederickson, from our office, volunteered
his services as coach for the Union Light girls
and with three or four on bases and none out
told the girls to “run on anything.” This was
very fortunate for us as the next batter hit into
a very neat triple play for which we thank Mr.
Frederickson.
Report comes to the office that Agent Fraser
at Walhalla had a mighty fine float in the Fourth
of July parade at that point.
Among the new car owners is T. G. Guyer,
who is now driving an Overland, and Ole Lea
who traded his Chevrolet in for an Oakland.
We poor pedestrians are sure in the minority
now.
M. B. Collins and H. F. Ellis are the attendants
at the fine new S. S. opened up at Casselton.
Earl Smith is in charge of the station at Wahpe­
ton. We are expecting a lot of competition
between these two stations as they both started
in about the same time.
Rudolph Benner, garage, found a lizard and
thought he would start a new fad by making a
pet of it. He put it out in a puddle of water in
front of the garage and it disappeared. Benner
is all “broken up.”
Martha Lillevold’s friend purchased a Ford
coupe. Too bad! We will certainly miss the
pleasure of Martha riding on the handle bars.
Roscoe Bakke, popular draftsman in the con­
struction department, was quietly (? ?) married
Sunday, July 5 at Detroit, Minn. Some surprise!
Yeah!! Known only to a few (?) friends. The
bride is a splendid young lady employed in Fargo.

FARGO, N. D.
H. Cook, Correspondent

Fargo Social Club members and families en­
joyed their annual picnic this month. Thanks to
our mighty efficient president, Mr. Ewald, there
was not a dull moment of the afternoon. The
mixed kitten ball game between the Red Crown
and Polarine teams resulted in a win for the
Polarines, 17 to 16. This game was featured by
the heavy hitting of Manager Packard, playing
on Ann Zelinsky’s Red Crown team, and the
fielding of the girls on the Polarine team. We
can’t say much as to the playing ability of the
men who helped the girls on the Polarine team,
but still they managed to pull out with a win. An
interesting program of races was held, the chief
interest being in the balloon race. We are send­
ing a couple of pictures of this race, trusting that
they will be printed.
M. E. Gingrey was a visitor from the office in
Minot recently.
A. W. Olson, our agent at Finlay, was a visitor
to Fargo on account of an accident to his little
son, and called at the office.
F. J. Lawrence has joined the list of home
owners in the Fargo office, purchasing a fine new
home on the south side.
Fred Rickert sold his Ford and bought a classy
Hudson speedster. The boys at the garage say
it is a “rattling” good car for the shape it is in.
Gilbert Gronlund, shop foreman, overhauled his
car and it is now reported to work fine (when it
is working).
Jim Farrel (single) spent a 90 day leave of
absence fixing up his home in Hole’s addition.
William Gallipo, agent at Valley City, is cer­
tainly well pleased with his station at that point
since it has been moved to the new location.
R. H. Ellis of the construction department is
back in town for a few days. He has been out
on the territory so long that we hardly knew
him when we saw him.
Mel Paulson of Minot has been spending the
past week in Fargo. He has been kidding the
automobile dealers in the two cities about buying
a car but he really doesn’t intend to at all.
Dave Kennedy of S. S. 33 was sick for a few
days due to too much popcorn at the Fair.
Mrs. L. R. Jones, who a few years ago was
chief stenographer at the Fargo office and is still
connected with the Standard Oil Company, in the
capacity of being the wife of Chief Clerk L. R.
Jones of Kansas City, was a mighty welcome
visitor in the office.
We were mighty sorry that Art Asleson was
sick the day we held our picnic. We had him all
slated in four or five of the athletic events.
Jake Stahl (using the pay station telephone for

GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
E. C. Frey, Correspondent

July Fourth—better known as “Independence”
Day—but perhaps not so to Charles E. Wins­
low, salesman, for we believe on July 4, last, said
party lost his independence when he took unto
himself a wife. We’ve seen her, Charles, and we
don’t blame you any. Congratulations.
Everett Smith, attendant at S. S. 65, Grand
Rapids, has recovered from the chicken pox and
is now out of the “coop” where he was detained,
due to the malignant disease. And we agree with
you, it is dis-ease.
Charles Grose, warehouse cashier, is the proud
father of a daughter born recently. Charles says
he has all kinds there are now.
We have heard of girls having to walk after
they started out riding, but we didn’t expect it of
R. A. Lilly. However, one can never depend on
tires or the engine of a car.
F. Bloomquist, Grand Rapids S. S. attendant,
has a new son, while A. Foster, says a girl is
nicer anyway. Congratulations.
Tracy Burns, attendant at Battle Creek, Michi­
gan, took the fatal step on June 22. Congratu­
lations, Mr. and Mrs. Burns.
We extend our sympathy to A. J. Pooley, ware­
houseman at Battle (Jreek, Mich., whose mother
passed away on July 6.
Don Seeley, salesman, is back on the job again,
having fully recovered from the “mumps”. Don
52

�says there are more pleasant things in this
world.
U
Via the marriage license route of the G. R.
Press, we learned that W. Bryan, attendant, took
unto himself a wife on July 3.
Elsa Frey, payroll clerk, enjoyed the week of
July 10 to 18 on the S. S. South America, “sail­
ing” around the Great Lakes, and receiving that
“huge” spectacle, Niagara Falls. (Niagara Falls,
Elsa? Do we offer congrats?—Ed)
The following week, Minnie Haven, ediphone
operator, and Frieda Frey took the same trip on
the North America and report having a wonder­
ful time.
S. C. Mitchell, accident clerk, is dining out
these days. The other day he said he ate at the
“Rowe”. We think it was in a “row” at Wool­
worth’s, but never mind “Mitch” one does get
one’s money worth there.
W. H. Hubbell, driver at Traverse City, Mich.,
has recovered from a case of the mumps. Mr.
Hubbell says he would rather have a case of—
well use your own judgment.
Our sympathy is extended to Lyle Carrier,
agent at Marcellus, Mich., whose mother passed
away on June 19.
We understand W. Patton of the credit depart­
ment is quite skilled in the Terpischorian Art.
None of the girls around here seem to have
found out definitely yet.
Charles Dalga has had many enjoyable mo­
ments at fishing this Summer. It seems Charles
became disgusted one day waiting for the fish to
come up, so Charles dove for some—apparently.
The water was quite damp, and Charles doesn’t
consider that method worth while.
B. E. Frisbie, drivei' at Grand Rapids, is con­
fined to his home due to illness. We hope for a
speedy recovery.
Where did they get them? Hortense Weber,
bill clerk, and Fred De Young, mail clerk, are
sporting little black aprons.
WTien it comes to baseball the SOCO boys are
right there and we have some team this year.
One of the most exciting and thrilling games was
played on July 17 when the Oilers defeated the
American Seaters to a tune of 5 to 1. The bril­
liant playing of the all star trio, Olsee, Dobbs and
Carpenter, coupled with good support, was the
cause of the score.
Ed White, warehouse superintendent at Mus­
kegon, is back at work again, having recovered
from a recent illness.
Elmer Gaikema says moving isn’t so bad when
it’s other people moving.
Harry Davidson, assistant cashier, is the proud
father of a son, born July 31. (This being the
31st, we have not received further details.)
L. V. Suey is superintendent of construction
but his long suit is all “kerosene.” No, that is
all wrong, it’s his best suit. We understand a
load of barrels came into the warehouse and
L. V. wanted to see if they were empty, one
wasn’t quite empty, the result being his brand
new suit was drenched in kerosene. L. V. tried
to sneak in without wifey detecting the accident,
but nothing escapes wifey and she was right
there to meet him. Mr. Jiggs can’t get by with
it either, L. V., and we hope by this time the
suit is all aired out.
Yes, the lubricating department, in this instance
consisting of Joe Hessman and Mary Brower,

beat the Polarine department, i.e., Howard Dykema and Lee Carpenter, in a fishing contest,
by a score of 15 to 4.
And now Louis Pyman of the checking depart­
ment is trying to find out just who is the most
ticklish in the office. Well—
Frank Hyland, tank car clerk, is not likely to
forget one dark and stormy night in July. It
seems Frank “kinda” forgot his geography and
overlooked the fact that Lafayette avenue has a
rather wicked descent at Fulton street. He ap­
proached the brow of the hill with all cylinders
pulsating and found that he was stepping a little
too lively for safety’s sake. He slammed both
feet to the floor board, but alas! too late. The
curbing wouldn’t give, so both of Frank’s rear
wheels did. Two unfortunate motorists were not
to be spared some part of the festivities. They
got their’s. When Frank climbed out and dusted
off his puttees, he found nothing left of his car,
except the steering wheel and ignition key.
Frank’s a wise guy though. He stepped right
over to the insurance office and tossed his policy
on the desk and collected the whole works. He
claims hereafter when he goes down Lafayette
avenue hill, he’s going to back down in first
speed forward.
HURON, S. D.
George A. Campbell, Correspondent

Mycue is around the office today with a smile
that can’t be rubbed off. A baby girl came to
his house the other day and Mike is preparing
to start on a night shift marathon most any time
now. Mrs. Mycue (formerly Edna Phillips) is
doing nicely.
Bob Gillies, attendant at S. S. 3, took a short
sojourn to Chamberlain, S. D., to get the new
attendant started in properly at our new S. S.
19.
On July 25 the C. &amp; N. W. R. R. put on an
excursion to the Black Hills with Hot Springs
as the immediate objective. This was, in a way,
a Standard Oil Excursion for about fifty or more
employees took the trip. The entire crowd are
more than satisfied. Many of them took a side
line excursion to Wind Cave, National Park and
to the Custer State Park and Gam Lodge. In
the words of one of the party, “I wouldn’t have
passed that trip up for a farm.” Charley Myers
reports a fine mess of mountain trout while on
the excursion. The streams in and around Hot
Springs are all hot so Charlie’s fish were all
cooked when he caught them.
Miss Ella Lutgen of our stenographical force
is leaving us this week to accept a position in
Aberdeen. The best wishes of the entire force
goes with her.
Frank Gannaway now has the territory former­
ly held by Mel Kenner with headquarters in
Chamberlain while Mr. Kenner has taken over
the territory held formerly by Mr. Gannaway.
Mr. Holton of the Huron Ice Company was
kind enough to extend an invitation to the en­
tire Huron force of the Standard Oil Company,
to make a trip at the Kiwanis Bathing Beach.
Needless to say this invitation was accepted and
a good time was had by all. The invitation was
certainly appreciated.
Kittenball has the male part of the force in­
terested. They were successful in defeating the
Kiwanis Kittenball team, defeating the C. &amp; N.
53

�W. wasn’t so easy for they let them wallop them
to defeat. Gannaway and Newtie performed on
the mound for the Standard Oil Company and
Mahoney and Carlson held down the place im­
mediately to the rear of home plate. The bad
part of it was that Larson thought there was
only one baserunner instead of two.
Al Geske, of our Aberdeen “A” station, ought
to be able to stand a safety suggestion through
these columns. All containers should be secure­
ly covered or sealed before being placed in a
moving vehicle.
S. S. 1 at Aberdeen is the oldest station in the
Huron field but since it has been remodeled it
looks far from being old.
Pat Ryan’s 029 reports showed him working
with the agent at Milbank on July IS and 16.
Incidentally the American Legion Convention oc­
curred in Milbank on those dates.
Speaking of the Legion Convention, Chub
Robel, agent at Milbank, had a Standard Oil
float in the parade which was more than credit­
able. It was symbolical of the “full line.”
Your correspondent was talking to a tourist
in Rapid City recently and that party made a
remark that is well worth passing in. He said
that he certainly will be a booster for Polarine
and Red Crown henceforth. The treatment he
had received in Standard Oil Company Service
Stations from Illinois to South Dakota was, he
said, all that could be asked. He laid emphasis
on the service given by Standard Oil Company
attendants.
M. W. Plowman, agent at Watertown “A”
Station, is a featured star with the fast Water­
town baseball team. Marshall can clout out a
two bagger about as neatly as Babe Ruth gets a
homer.
Mr. Bode just returned from a week on the
road west of the river. He reports conditions
in that end of the state as being just about
perfect.
W. L. McGovern, formerly the attendant at
S. S. 1, Aberdeen, is now on the road as a
salesman calling on the farm trade.
Schmitz is the new salesman on field formerly
held by J. C. Stoner who has resigned.

in the local Co-Operative League by holding a
tie for first place with three more games to go.
Doubly-distilled Safety First: Leslie Baker of
the advertising bus pulled up to the country rail­
road crossing and stopped. A native rather cur­
ious inquired of Les why all the hesitation and
Les pointed to the little tin attachment hanging
urider the license plate. Spake the native, “Why
mister, them rail are only 20 feet long and there
hasn’t been a train through this town well nigh
onto twenty years.” If anyone would have hap­
pened along with a plugged nickel, he could
have purchased the whole Baker outfit, and we
have Les’s word for that, too.
Ralph Shortridge, also known as Slim before
he began looking like a “white hope.” has ac­
quired a superannuated Hudson over the David
Harem route, and being “some” mechanic is ap­
plying all kinds of “asthma” remedies, such as
socket wrenches, gaskets and what not. We
kinda figure that Slim grew weary of running
rabbits down as per “shank’s mare” and Mr.
Bunny is hereby warned to keep off the high­
ways.
Speaking of the Red Crowns, Walter Knuth
may be the manager, John McCallian may be the
“Judge Landis,” Frank Judd may be the batboy,
but L. W. (“Zeek”) Ehewalter sure is the
rooter when all these other luminaries are
asleep.
Stations GWA and WHR report much static
from WHO (Des Moines) during middle July.
Now this may be due to the fact that our own
broadcaster, Irene Neweff was visiting the “tall
corn” city at that time.
Lo and behold our leading “immune-ist,” one
Sidney Kurtz, appears to be slipping as a lady
called for him the other evening and they drove
away together in a Ford coupe. Later the two
were noticed in a box at English’s Theatre.
So, Lew George has come back to find that
iron pipe he lost during his general supplies
service, the year about 1917.
Hugh McClain, mail clerk, has discarded his
“green derby” in favor of a starterless Ford.
Hugh decided to hold out the towel bar and
soap dish as he might want to go back to his
motorcycle days.
Now fellows what is intended for “prose”:
Two cases the Safety First Court overlooked:
Arthur (“Cupid”) Whitacre fell up the stairs
and Fred Matkin fell down the stairs. One hot
day this summer several of our girls parked their
feet in the waste basket-sans shoes. How’s that
for hot? Some one just back from Windy City
reports Hattie Goldberger really reducing—don’t
believe it. Arnold Gustin, order department,
drove in a local S. S., got out and dusted off
the hub caps, put the fag under the back seat
and drove out with a very satisfied air. Grayson
Howell believes in safety first, after being steered
up against a telephone pole by his wife, he
simply sold the car. Ray Benjamin, who has
visions of winning the next Stanolind Golf Club
tournament, traded the roadster for an oil well,
at least it pumps that product. Frank Judd cele­
brated the Fourth among the hills of Brown
County by mistaking a farmer’s lane for a high­
way. It has leaked out the tourist tore down
and rebuilt plenty of rail fences in getting turned
around. Bill Sursa is batting 1,000 as a back­
scratcher to Curtis Mouncey. The intensive
campaign on gasoline contract sales furnished

INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
W. W. Harshman, Correspondent

Bright’s disease claimed Delou J. Burke, at­
tendant at S. S. 69, Indianapolis, who died on
June 25. Mr. Burke was a veteran of the World
War. The American Legion Post had charge of
the funeral arrangements. Sympathy is ex­
tended to the widow and young daughter over
their loss.
S. S. increases: Marie Elizabeth, daughter of
H. A. Tyner, 47, Indianapolis, July 4; R. E. Jr.,
son of Ralph E. Hooten, S. S. 90, Indianapolis,
July 6.
Carl Paul is rapidly learning to steer his new
Overland—i. e. he has discovered it needs gas­
oline to spin, after being stuck in the middle of
a day in the middle of a street. (The traffic
policeman’s comments have been omitted by
request).
Coupon tearing by Thema Ferrell will now
proceed, she having been interrupted by a severe
case of mumps.
The master team of S. S. men, better known
as the Red Crowns, are flirting with the pennant

54

�plenty of thrills to Messrs. Love, Kortepeter,
Cline and Parrish; working in two details, the
campaigners were “entertained” by the prospect
who happened to be a feather-cleaner; the sales
talks were started in the work shop, which is
equipped with circulating air under pressure.
Yes, boy, the feathers “got them” early in the
fray. What we mean is “Feathers, feathers
everywhere and not a chick or duck in sight.”
This day (July 31), Bob, the janitor is carrying
S pounds of steam in the heating plant and this
by urgent request of shivering humanity. How’s
that for a cold day in July?

The last few days in K. C. have been very
chilly and Tom (“Candy”) Evans is contemplat­
ing getting out the old Benny. He has already
shed his overcoat.
Armourdale Plant.—Warning, boys.
All to­
bacco chewers, beware, keep it hidden at all times.
Bob Reed is back with us again. You all know
Bob.
We have all been wondering what has put the
crick in John Travis’ back. We have at last
found out the secret. John has been sleeping in
a hammock nearly all the time.
Walter Haller until just lately has been under
the impression Muscle Shoals was the name of a
prominent wrestler. Eddie Foley enlightened the
boy on the subject.

KANSAS CITY, MO.
J. J. Wilhelm, Correspondent

The stock department boasts of having the
coolest bunch of clerks in the Indiana field.
Regardless of the temperatures, which have been
in the nineties and over, Mr. Whetmore and
Mr. Dee never remove their coats.
The employees of the K. C. division are going
to have another picnic about August 29 and
every one is expecting to have a wonderful time.
Howard Houston and Dean Butts are in the
same class with some of the rest of the home
owners of the office. They have purchased here
lately.
Well, Howard Houston says that his
moving days are over.
H. Busch, our agent at Parkville, Mo., was
married recently. Congratulations, old top!
It is with deep regret that we have heard of
the death of Miss Gladys Webb, younger sister
of Harold Webb, our agent at Randolph, Kans.,
on July 9. Our sincerest sympathy is extended
to Mr. Webb and his bereaved family.
Miss Eula Taylor, formerly of the check desk
and Walter Knoop, also of the same department,
have left us. Good luck to you; come back to
see us sometime.
Miss Lucile Bulson has returned from her va­
cation, and reports that she had a wonderful
time.
Bill Nordberg of the iron barrel department is
now stepping out in his new Buick roadster. Old
Bill doesn’t want to let the other boys outdo him.
Bill says he can make 7.5 miles per easy. He also
says that no Dodge can pass him now.
John Seward, cashier, can now get up at 5
A. M. to work in the garden. He has bought
a few more tools, hoes, fork, etc.
McGarry of the lubricating department is
practising all the new dance steps, here lately,
as he says that the good dancers are not going
to have a thing on him when he gets on the
floor at the next picnic.
L. Berry of the bookkeeping department has
his new banjo in tune now and says that he is
now about ready to do the dance hall stuff. Well,
maybe another addition to the Dean Butts Melody
Boys Orchestra.
Homer Longsdorf has about decided he wants
to learn to play something besides the victrola.
Well, Homer the bag pipe should not be so
hard.
G. A. Winters of the general office is auditing
the K. C. station.
Wonders will never cease! Charlie Markert
of the cartage desk has a girl. And he talks
to her over the ’phone every afternoon.
Be
careful, now, Charlie.

LA CROSSE, WIS.
Mabel A. Baker, Correspondent

Visitors to the La Crosse office the past two
weeks include Agents H. W. Mann of St. Charles,
Minn., and L. P. Gilbertson of Hillsboro, Wis.,
Salesmen F. L. Kuhns, E. W. Spencer, T. R.
Knight, S. E. Huber and F. H. Thompson.
Said Louis Hartley, to the man in charge of
a Rent-a-Car Station, “How much do you charge
per week for a car?” Said the man, “20 cents
per mile.” Louis scratching his head, “How many
miles in a week?” Can anyone tell him?
John Loecher, city truck salesman at Austin,
Minn., has moved into his new home in Kenwood
Park. Pretty fine home isn’t it, John?
Robert Kettering and Lloyd Bennett at S. S. 33,
Rochester, Minn., must have been out scouting
around together. Mr. Bennett also has a new
Ford car and only paid $15 for it. What did you
fellows do, run into a couple of twins some­
where ?
Wonder why Roy Baldner, warehouseman at
Austin, Minn., is using Polarine “F” in his Star
car?
Yes sir’ee, the La Crosse division of the SOCO
is growing. We wish to welcome baby girls who
have come .to the following families: Mr. and
Mrs. F. H. Wendorf, agent at Wilton, Wis.; Mr.
and Mrs. H. Hoffman, S. S. attendant at La
Crosse, Wis.; Mr. and Mrs. H. Hatch, S. S.
attendant at Winona, Minn., and Mr. and Mrs.
J. Karsina, S. S. attendant, Winona, Minn., and
not forgetting the big boy who arrived at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Hoppe, T. D. driver at
Winona, Minn. Congratulations, mothers and
dads.
Edward H. Frey, T. W. salesman at La Crosse,
Wis., has been transferred at agent instructor.
Fine work, E. H. We all wish you lots of- luck
at your new work.
For sale, rattlin’ good car. Highest bidder can
push it away. For particulars, ask A. J. Wanner.
One of W. H. Roesner’s O29’s showed a delivery
was made on one condition, and that was “cash
only.” Don’t you trust your wife. Bill?
When A. D. Kirk, S. S. superintendent, was
questioned about the “line” he handled, he said,
“You have to have a big line to catch some of
these fish.” How about it. Art?
J. W. Shields, lub. engineer, says, “Whenever
you see the name Standard Oil Company (Indi­
ana) think of Service. We haul the full barrels
to you and haul the empty ones away. No
trouble to you and no trouble for us to give this
Service.”

55

�Our new bulk station at Hager City, Wis., was
would like to ask Mr. Farris for an electric fan,
opened July 13 with H. W. Harrigan, former
new cushion and a siren horn for his truck.
T. W. salesman at Red Wing, Minn., as agent.
Manager H. E. Bruce and Assistant Manager
H. W. is a “go-getter” and already we have J. E. Monegan visited us recently inspecting our
noticed what a whizz of a station this is going
warehouse. Come often.
to be. Keep it up, H. W.
Henry Drysdale says there is not another ware­
The following are new agents for SOCO: R. A.
house in the La Crosse division that can come
Forster, Durand, Wis.; S. Babbitt, Cornell, Wis.;
up to the one in Winona.
H. H. Quell, Kenyon, Minn.; C. W. Rude, Pepin,
The Winona bunch were certainly well supplied
Wis., and C. A. Overby, Wanamingo, Minn. Wel­ with cigars this month. Prosser also won one
come, folks.
from Mr. Bruce. What for E. A. ?
Joe Simon was “top” man selling Polarine this
In one of W. H. Roesner’s letters to this office
he states that Chambers and Spencer have three month. You sure are making the other fellows
step.
cats, sixty horses and mules. Ed Bolden wants
Arthur Hrubetz is the new attendant at S. S.
to know if they have a circus or if they are road
7. Art says he wants to settle down. We don’t
contractors. Bill would like to have some SOCO
know what he means but he’s still single. Good
agent tell Ed what cats, horses and mules are
luck. Art, we wish you lots of luck.
used for by road contractors. Step up, someone,
Ray Seebold and his warriors at S. S. 1 have
and explain this to Ed.
challenged the field this month in the sales of
Miss Lorene Pfaff and Vernon Dovenberg were
S-gallon cans of Polarine.
Ray means every
united in marriage Saturday evening. Miss Erva
word that he says, so you other fellows get busy.
Bishop was bridesmaid and Nyle Twining acted
as best man. The home was prettily decorated
MANKATO, MINN.
with ferns and flowers. The bride wore white
silk and carried a bouquet of Ophelia roses. The
W. P. Scherer, Correspondent
bridesmaid was dressed in tan silk and carried
The Mankato division accident record for the
pink roses. Mr. and Mrs. Dovenberg left on a
month of July was shattered beyond hope when
trip through Minnesota and Northern Wisconsin.
a lonely bee entered the coupe operated by F.
Congratulations, folks. Mr. Dovenberg is agent
McK. Blough, S. S. Superintendent, as he was
for the Standard Oil Company at West Salem,
driving along a wide gravelled highway. Inas­
Wis.
much as he did not have Bert Evans with him to
Doc Hoffman, attendant at S. S. 26, Rochester,
act as interpreter for the bee, Mac immediately
Minn., is now at National Guard encampment at
suspected the bee of having evil designs and took
Lake City, Minn., and known as “Sargeant Hoff­
a swat at the poor bee with the result that the car
man.” He tries to tell Private Gordon Graham
upset and Mac was precipitated into a nearby
a thing or two, but Graham says, “I’ll put it all
ditch. Personal injuries were slight. The car was
over him selling S-gallon cans of Polarine, when
badly damaged. The bee escaped.
we get back.” Can he do it, Ed?
On June 27, 1925, Francis J. Kahl, Polarine
salesman, was married to Miss Elsie Virginia
Miss Erna Gable has left on an eight weeks’
White of Luverne, Minn. After a short trip Mr.
leave of absence. We hope that you will come
and Mrs. Kahl will be at home at Tracy, Minn.
back feeling like a million, Erna.
Felicitations in profusion are extended to the
Emil Kreibich, our popular janitor, recently
happy couple.
motored to Minneapolis, Minn. He said he had
Golfer, bowler, basketball player, billiard shark,
a wonderful time, but, he came back only able
and baseball star, is Art Johnson, Worthington
to look one way. Next time, Emil, start looking
agent. With becoming modesty he denies us the
at the tall buildings a block away.
privilege of exhibiting his picture but we have it
W. P. Unser, former agent at Durand, Wis.,
from hundreds of rabid Worthington fans that
has been transferred to Menomonie, Wis., as
Art is a first baseman par excellence. Get the
agent. Menomonie folks will now be treated to
business? Need it be said?
that special brand of service that only W. P.
Marshall L. Beech, lubricating correspondent,
knows how to give.
and Miss Ruth Estelle Ruenitz of Sleepy Eye
C. B. Bullis, salesman, has been transferred to were married on June 27: They will be at home
the La Crosse office in the marketing cost depart­ at 729 North Second street after July IS. Cigars
ment. We are sure glad to have C. B. with us
and candy announced the event to the office force,
again. Maybe we can have another chicken din­ which unanimously congratulates the newly weds.
ner now.
On July 7 the glad news was forwarded to the
W^inona, Minn.—Charles Beck wants to caution .correspondent that Harry Shelby, hustling Lu­
everybody about putting “Paris green” on let­ verne T. W. salesman, was married on May 8,
1925, to a young lady of Kenneth, Minn. Belated
tuce. What’s the matter Charlie, did they think
congratulations were at once forwarded.
you were a “bug?” We know you are a pest
At various times we have had considerable
when it comes to selling S-gallon cans of Polar­
sport in this column because of the hair bobbing
ine, but not a dangerous one.
of various feminine members of the
R. E. Jones, special salesman, has moved to activities
Red Crown family but from now on we’re abso­
Winona from Viroqua, Wis. We wish to wel­
lutely mum. (The missus had ’em shorn today.)
come Mr. Jones and family and want them to
The wedding of John A. Eiden and Miss Edna
feel at home in our organization.
Mae Klock was announced on Thursday, July 2,
Orrin Brown sure loves Mr. Farris for the
1925. John is attendant at Northfield S. S. 303
beautiful International watch charm he gave him
and has many friends among Standard Oilers
in the way of a truck. It looks and acts like
who extend their congratulations.
a toy when you use it.
In spite of inclement and threatening weather
Hugh McNalley has his new tires and now
coupled with a decided lack of interest on the
56

�part of the membership, the annual Red Crown
Club outdoor party was held at Loon Lake on the
afternoon of July 18. Only about forty people
took advantage of the program prepared by va­
rious committees but those forty certainly im­
proved every moment. A kitten ball game between
the single men and married men was easily won
by the benedicts but at the chicken dinner which
followed the single men came out victorious
mostly because they were led by Wallie Ander­
sen who was discovered under an immense pile
of chicken bones. The Loon Lake hostelry cer­
tainly did itself proud in the serving of this ban­
quet. After dinner a snappy dancing party was
enjoyed in the large dining hall.
Were it not for the weddings there would be a
real dearth of news in this column this month.
On June 18th Walter Hall, attendant at S. S.
Luverne, and Miss Jessie O. Tatge of Brookings,
S. D., were married at the M. E. Church at Lu­
verne, We understand that Mr. and Mrs. Hall
are holding “open house” to the many friends
who call at the cozy bungalow which Walter had
prepared. Good luck!
MASON CITY, IOWA
Bradford L. Patton, Correspondent

July 11 was moving day for the personnel of
the Mason City main office. Our new quarters in
the Woolworth Building, second and third floors,
are expansive, pleasant, well-lighted and centrally
located, being only half a block from the old
location. We are all very much pleased with our
new home and would like to have you come and
see us some time. You can see just as much
from the third floor of our Woolworth Building
as you can from the third floor of the Woolworth
Building in New York City.
The second floor gang and the third floor
gang have started already to argue the proposition
“Our floor is better than yours.” As a matter
of fact, no one is capable of deciding that ques­
tion—unless it’s Jack Dempsey.
Mr. Thomas, manager and Mr. Hanson, as­
sistant manager, occupy offices across the front
of the building on the second floor. Folding
doors separating the offices can be thrown open
to make one large conference room.
Mr. Kern, chief clerk, has his office on the
second floor, so arranged behind a neat little
railing that he can keep an eye on the sales, con­
struction, order, cost, record, tax, legal and
special departments, as well as the transcribing
and mailing departments.
Mr. Nuebel, assistant chief clerk, has his office
on the third floor where he can command the
energies of the credit department and the various
and sundry accounting departments, as well as
the filing and stationery departments.
We have an elevator, but the only way you
can ride on it is to come boarded up in a box
and labeled “stationery.”
The formal opening of the office was held
Friday night, July 10, when the Red Crown
Social Club held a dance on the third floor to
music furnished by Mac’s Serenaders. Sheriff
Jerry Cress of Cerro Gordo County made an
impromptu entrance and speech and, before some
of us could locate the fire escapes, he defined his
presence as peaceful and congratulated us on the
new quarters.

Bob Sharpe is the proud owner of a new Oak­
land sedan. Anyone that’s fortunate should have
something to feel good about, and we know Bob
does.
P. 1. Adcock, special salesman, and H. B.
Myerly, tractor mechanic, got a front page story
on a Red Crown mileage test victory over four
competitive gasolines at Northwood. That’s
doing your stuff. Red Crown—yes sir!
Can anyone explain M. O. Shea’s affinity for
vivid blue shirts. We know why a miller wears
a white hat, but can not solve this riddle on the
lubricating engineer.
No one wants to keep
warm out in this country at the present writing—
but all is fair in love and war.
E. D. Lawrence, who has been agent at Charles
City, has accepted the position of salesman in
charge of the Charles City field. This position
was formerly held by C. M. Stevens, who will
now do special work under the direction of the
manager. C. A. Kinney has accepted the position
of agent which Mr. Lawrence formerly held.
Ed. Ryan, agent at Varina, was married Mon­
day, July 6, and went on a wedding tour to
Denver, Colo. We take this means of congrat­
ulating Ed. on his good fortune.
B. A. Farber is now salesman in charge of the
Sioux Rapids field in the position formerly oc­
cupied by J. M. Stokes.
Mr. Stokes^ is now
head of the stock department in the main office.
Mason City.
T. M. Clarke is now salesman in charge of the
Iowa Falls field, replacing Earl Johns, resigned.
The S. O. Co. soft ball team has turned in
several victories since their achievements were
last chronicled, only last time it wasn’t achieve­
ments, it was hard luck. Victories over the Mil­
waukee, the Post Office, and the Lion Tamers add
a touch of success to the mighty good fun we’re
having anyway.
Cecil Engler, S. S. 2, Mason City, announces
the arrival into his family of a baby boy. Tom­
my Engler promises to be every bit as good as
his dad.
We also extend congratulations to Mr. and
Mrs. L. C. Posz, cashier at the Fort Dodge
plant, upon the arrival of Raymond Carlton at
their home on July 11.
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
C. Henry Austin, Correspondent

The other day Otto Peterson of the record
department came into the office bearing a shining
ball on his shoulders. After putting on the
smoked glasses, we found the said Otto had his
hair clipped short to the scalp. He is now speak­
ing of entering a beauty contest.
We regret to state that William Duncan of the
Milwaukee office will no longer be seen on the
local golf links inasmuch as he had lost the
last of a dozen balls, his season’s supply. Bill
will now take up bowling so that he can follow
the ball.
Assistant General Manager H. A. Lewis visited
the Milwaukee office on July 28.
F. C. Singleton, safety director, paid us a
visit on July 21.
We wonder why L. K. Borden, salesman,
Sheboygan, closes his eyes when he telephones.
He must be looking into the future.
George Aspinwall, attendant at S. S. SS, Lake
Geneva, is the proud father of an eight pound

S7

�boy. George has received complaints from the
neighbors because his boy has been throwing
stones at the dogs in the neighborhood lately.
All the nightingales in the vicinity of Mil­
waukee are turning green with envy. Reason:
L. W. Kroes, salesman, Ralph Rogers, clerk at
32d and Auer bulk plant, Frank Peters and V. D.
Brown, of the record department, have formed
a quartet. Believe us, these boys can warble.
H. B. Pickard, Milwaukee office, is taking up
astronomy. He came to work the other morning
when the stars were still out. We advise a
little Polarine on the Big Ben, Pick.
MINOT, N. D.
F. O. Tucker, Correspondent

We recently received an 029 from our salesrnan, J. D. Stenson, which sure had a bunch of
lies on it, as follows: Walter Lies, Rudolph
Lies, Lawrence Lies, Matt Lies and Marcus Lies.
Are you sure you got the truth from the above
“Liers,” J. D. ?
At a recent grand opening of the WestlieCharbonneau Ford agency of this city, the fol­
lowing was overheard. In arranging the decora­
tions, a basket of flowers was being carried in
which displayed a Polarine advertisement. A
small boy looking on, remarked, “Gee whiz, Mr.
Polarine is dead.”
Ben Carlson bought a new Ford coupe. Now,
girls, please don’t rush—keep your seats. Ben
calls his pet, his “bicycle with balloon tires.”
We are sure glad to know our Fargo friends
are not with us any longer because it played a
hardship on Frank Hunter. We hear he kept
rather late hours.
Some of the office force are about to form a
Bachelors’ Club if their wives stay away much
longer. Among the charter members will be J. P.
Beaton, H. H. Hathaway, J. H. Hay, F. A. Burlaga, Duane Clapp, E. C. Abrahamson, E. H.
Lindberg, K. P. Hetzler and C. W. Twight. By
the way, Mr. Twight’s wife was only gone three
days but to hear him talk, you’d think she had
been gone three months. Clarence must be
jealous.
Ted Cruden and V. M. Paranto are sure step­
ping out since they came to Minot—never miss a
dance. They sure trot their stuff.
A. J. Pass was recently transferreed to a desk
in the office. It does rather add prestige to the
force to have that magnanimous figure moving
about the office.
F. S. Gremsgard says he doesn’t like girls who
make dates with him and fail to appear at the
specified time.
The “Magic Gum” initiation trick was pulled
on Albert Rotta with great success. He took
hook, line, sinker and all.
Schedules called for a big picnic August 1.
Things sure are stirred up since Eddie Lindberg
was made president of the Social Club. We’ll
tell you more about the picnic in the next issue.
Dollie Mower recently underwent an operation
in a local hospital. We hope that she will make
her appearance at the office again within a few
days.
Lyol Thayer was recently employed and
assigned work in the check department. We’re
here to welcome you, “Spike.”
E. P. Percey has taken up golfing again but
picks on someone easier than Clayton Berdahl
this year.

Dean Johnson, Albert Waa and Ted Cruden
recently motored to Noonan, which by the way,
isn’t far from the Canadian line and always
causes thirst. We are just wondering if they
overstepped the line.
Bill Kernmer says that outside of being
equipped with a new engine, body and tires, his
old Ford is quite a rambler.
The semi-annual Red Crown Social Club elec­
tion was held July 14. E. H. Lindberg was
elected president, R. V. Dunbar, vice-president;
Lillie Erickson, secretary-treasurer, and H. M.
Overby and Mae Balerud, executive committee.
Considering the number of votes cast, our pay­
roll has increased considerably.
We are glad to announce that Ann Richards
recently returned from her vacation wearing only
one ring instead of two.
John Reinbold, agent at Balta, was a recent
visitor in the Minot office.
We are sorry to report the death of Donald
Fauth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fauth. Mr.
Fauth is our agent at Tuttle, N. D. We extend
our sincerest sympathy.
C. A. Brummond of Washburn, recently pur­
chased a new Reo speed-truck. He says he be­
lieves in giving service.
F. W. Asch, agent at Underwood, is still look­
ing for visitors from the Minot office to view his
new home which was recently erected. We’ll
surprise you some day, Fred.
John E. Wood ought to be in the second-hand
business or an auctioneer—he recently picked up
an old, worn out Eversharp, repaired it and
raffled it off during the noon-hour for a quarter.
His initials sure tell the story.
Our assistant general manager, H. R. Coch­
ran, recently paid us a visit.
PEORIA, ILL.
P. A. Johnston, Correspondent

Who said mileage ? Powell went on his va­
cation, drove up to Starved Rock, over into In­
diana, down to St. Louis and back home, and
claims he had three gallons of the original ten
of Red Crown still inside “Henry” when he
landed. Page Taylor!
Lamentable scarcity of news this month. Even
our reliable friends Wimberg and Wilson, down
at Springfield, fail us.
Peterson filled up his storage tank,-------- right
before the price dropped. Wotta wail!
Salesman Hinds dropped in on us as these lines
were written. Gonna get Rainey a job on the
night shift at WGN.
They dared us to tell of our fishing trip, in the
company of “Mary” Heser, and “Porky” Powell.
Well, we went—and got back. Had a lot of bites.
The mosquitoes were so industrious. “Porky’s”
neck looked like a piece of round steak.
Standard Oil representatives were numerous at
the Illinois Motor Bus Transportation convention,
held recently in Springfield. Those in and about
the Company’s artistically arranged booth were:
Dean Treat, railway sales department, Chicago,
Major Price, Chicago, J. H. Wiley and J. S. Flanigon, advertising department, Peoria; C. F. Eber­
le, agent Springfield, and W. D. Stacy and P. R.
Hinds, sales department, Peoria.
Drury of Galesburg, tell Mike Maloney to
■turn loose that prolific pen of his and send in
some news.
58

�Gus Johnson up at Orion used to kick in once
in a while, but not lately.
Our Red Crowns have just hit their stride, ap­
parently. Boast a winning streak of three in a
row at present. The boys are playing the best
ball of any club in the league. Here’s hoping this
little bit of “broadcasting” doesn’t prove the usual
jinx. Frank Westphal and Dan Abel are running
a wild race for the batting leadership of the ball
tossers. Dan got away to a flying start, but
“Mike” is gradually closing in on him.
Harry Kosseick and Phil Hoeft outdo each
other waiting on the lady customers who come to
the warehouse.
Story comes of Wiley, nailing up an emergency
sign, and using a five gallon can of Polarine for
a background. The nail went through the can,
and the oil went through the hole. O, efficiency!
Oliver Hurst wants to know when the bowling
season will open. He’s been working on that
“hook ball” all summer.
Sales Promoter Harley Caldwell wants us to
take up golf. Maybe we will, but the ex-title
holder of the McLean County Country Club
won’t get a chance to show us up till we’ve
learned how to handle our “shiny stick”.
Charlie Dressen and his Ford are getting am­
bitious. Drove to Bloomington the other Sun­
day. Charlie was much interested in the animals
at the Miller Park Zoo.
Following are the latest additions to our ranks;
Peoria Office: Thelma Lewis, R. E. Shaw. Plant
and General: H. Sproll, Hoopeston; M. A.
Mendenhall, Springfield; F. H. Martin, Peoria;
G. Morrissey, Peoria; R. L. Bearce, Lewistown;
T. Roese, Bradford; H. C. Dare, Canton; G.
Kirkpatrick, Bloomington; H. Carver, Peoria; D.
I. Buckner, Peoria; T. Seward, Springfield; H.
R. Maurer, Springfield; C. Blumenshine, Wash­
ington; M. J. Beardstown, W. C. Larson and E.
Green, Galva and C. J. Fisher, Lacon.
QUINCY, ILL.
Henry B. Hardy, Correspondent

Have you noticed Nellie Maxwell’s sparkling
diamond. “Max” is just back from a wonderful
trip through Yellowstone and we’re wondering
whether the diamond had anything to do with it.
Give us an interview, please.
Charles Miranda, agent at Birmingham, Iowa,
swears there is no better fishing to be had in
Illinois than in Iowa. Charlie spent a whole
week in Illinois trying and got nary a nibble, and
this is the type of “fish” story we are inclined
to believe.
Agent Walter Thomas of Macomb, Ill., after
years of driving a Ford is now trying to conquer
a large IHC. Walt sure keeps the traffic cop
busy when he tries to negotiate a corner.
If Santa makes a visit, as of course he will,
to the home of Lottie Nesbitt next winter, we
hope one thing he will be sure to leave there will
be a pair of rubber heels to fit her sharp-shod
“hoofs.”
Some of the boys at our Hannibal, Mo., station
certainly have the fighting spirit. In fact, they
will camp out all night just to get to fight
mosquitos. Boys with that much fighting spirit are
simply bound to win. Aside from Mack and Omo
we wouldn’t mention any names.
Attendants Francis Sullivan and Mandz Read
of S. S. 8, Macomb, are having trouble with their

eyes. Although Salesman N. L. Dunsworth
claims to have diagnosed their case correctly, he
has failed to prescribe the remedy to date.
We have with us a former city detective in the
person of C. F. Fletterer. Clarence should have
no trouble in detecting sales opportunities.
L. R. Janes, attendant at S. S. 32, Perry, Mo.,
has been doing some nice work about his station,
sodding the bare spots and touching up the prem­
ises in general. We suspect, however, that Lon­
nie’s wife is the boss.
Q. H. Landis (some relation to the judge?)
is our new agent at La Harpe, Ill. Quint is a
hustler and we are glad to have him and his
boosters with us.
F. C. Anderson, formerly of S. S. 2, is now
a member of the general sales force, succeeding
W. M. Cook, who has been selected to fill the
newly formed position of marketing cost clerk.
Floyd is one of the most energetic hustlers we
have ever met and we wish him well in his new
job. J. I. McKenna succeeds him as attendant
at No. 2.
Agent Fred Hull of Burnside, Ill., has a new
dog. However, “no dog can ever hope to be as
good as Jack,” says Fred. At that, the quails
need not expect a cessation of hostilities. (Gosh!
Fred, we ain’t never had a taste of quail in all
of our young life. And we ain’t got no dog, nor
no gun, and wooden no how to use one if we
had it. Y’got any idea how we could possibly
get a taste of quail?—Corr.)
H. R. Gracey, agent at Dallas City, Ill., has an
addition to his family—a fuzzy dog. My! My!
Had.
Plans for our annual outdoor picnic are rapidly
taking form and it bids fair to be the best picnic
ever held. The date is August IS, and the place,
Bailey Park, at Camp Point. Here’s hoping the
weatherman treats us fine.
Paul Ingram is temporarily in charge of S. S.
312, LaBelle, Mo., filling the position left vacant
by the death of Riley Culpen.
G. W. Allen is a recent addition to the agent
instructor force. George is no stranger to the
SOCO and we welcome him back and wish him
good luck.
No wonder we haven’t seen them since. One
of those terribly hot mornings not so long ago
Assistant Manager T. P. Jones bethought himself
of a method to somewhat alleviate his suffering
and proceeded to order a pair of seer-sucker
trousers to be sent to his home toot sweet or
sooner. Then at noon T. P. doffs his hot clothing
and climbs into his newly acquired trousers.
“Great stuff” thinks he, when along comes young
Miss Jones and the following dialogue ensues:
Millicent—“Going to stay home this afternoon,
Daddy?” T. P. J.—“Why, no, what made you
think that?” Four-year-old Millicent—“Why, you
have your overalls on.”
Barney Radtke and George Sohm have joined
the ranks of the deserted husbands, their better
seven-eighth.s being away on visits to home-folk.';
and relatives.
Freda Neuer is an added member of the steno­
graphic department and the new face in the order
department belongs to M. C. Mays, transferred
into the office from his former post as attendant
at S. S. 9. E. W. Thompson and W. H. Kampling are again with us after a few weeks of fast
work on the sales force.
59

�Ray Lethcho and B. V. Stockwell are new
members of the Quincy mechanical department.
Our newest service station, No. 34 at Hannibal.
Mo., was to be opened for business August 1,
with attendants W. H. Lewis and Bryan Hayden
in charge.
Congratulations are in order for Mr. and Mrs.
E. O. Bower on the arrival, July 26, of a chubby
baby girl. Emmett is relief attendant for all
Quincy service stations.
W. D. Noel, attendant at S. S. 9, is a recent
benedict and the newlyweds are hereby extended
the best wishes of the SOCO family. The fol­
lowing incident should prove to the satisfaction
of all that Doan is hopelessly in love with his
bride: A week or so after the fatal day another
attendant sought to have some fun by kidding
Noel into believing that the S. S. superintendent
had selected him to fill a vacancy at a distant
town for a few days. Noel appeared to be quite
unconcerned. Just then a car arrived at the
station and the driver asked for a quart of Polar­
ine. Doan makes a grab for the hose, jabs it
into the crankcase and pumps in a couple of
quarts of Red Crown before the astonished cus­
tomer can stop him. The old motor received a
good flushing and the affair was soon adjusted
to the entire satisfaction of all concerned, but
Noel may as well admit that he was just a little
bit fussed.
We have just received a clipping from the
Louisiana, Mo., Press-Journal, which is headlined
“Red Crown and Polarine Soar Over Louisiana”
and reads as follows: “R. B. Pappenfort, attend­
ant at the service station, and H. G. Shaffner,
salesman for the Standard Oil Co., took a view
of Louisiana from the clouds in Lyle Hostetter’s
airplane Sunday afternoon, and showered the
town with advertising pamphlets for Red Crown,
Polarine, and other Standard Oil products. The
boys say this is a great sport, that Louisiana looks
like a real city from the air and the size and
beauty of Stark Brothers’ Nurseries is a wonder­
ful sight.”
Fort Madison, Iowa.—Harry Wood, warehouse
clerk, is the proud possessor of five iTttle English
Bull pups. Better try your hand at hog-raising,
Harry, and keep the butcher’s bill down.
Overheard in the garage: F. L. Brown—“What
in Sam Hill is that song Eddie Haeffner is always
whistling?” J. L. Judy — “That Old Girl of
Mine.”
Lawrence Younk, attendant at S. S. 23, has
his station looking fine. Keep up the good work,
L. R.
Meet Mr. F. P. Kerfoot, our latest acquisition,
hustling tank truck driver who is helping us
spread the fame of Red Crown and Polarine.
Keokuk, Iowa.—O. A. VandenBoom, in charge
of our garage, is stepping high these days. He
is now the proud daddy of a bouncing baby boy,
born July 13, and mother and sonny are doing
just fine. Oscar says the only trouble he has had
so far is that the baby complains because it is so
hot it won’t snow. The youngster wants to
shovel snow and sweep the walks. Thanks for the
cigars, Ockey, they were fine—even if Huston did
get more than half of them.
Walter George Edward Biddenstadt, T. T.
driver, is still making the weekly trip out the
Hilton road and has begun to call for a larger

truck to haul the gallonage he expects to pile up.
Get the gallonage, Walter, we’ll get the truck.
If anyone chancing to read this article has a
few old cigar butts lying around which he has
done using we would appreciate very much your
sending them to S. E. Huston, in care of this
station. While not in the least particular about
the brand of cigar he picks up. Bill much pre­
fers those with a red band about them. But in
case they do not have a band around them, send
them on anyway, as Bill has several Tiands which
he has saved and which no doubt will fit. (Bill
sprained his ankle stepping on snipes and we want
to prevent a like accident if possible.)
Chester Dumenil, stake truck driver; has pur­
chased for himself a brand new sheik haircut.
Don’t you know what a sheik haircut is? Well,
neither do we, but Chester himself said that it
was a sheik haircut, so you will have to take his
word for it. Chester has informed us that there
are several young ladies in Quincy who fancy
this haircut of his, so if you see a young fellow
running loose in Quincy, with a haircut that
resembles nothing in particular it may be our
little Chester.
We are thinking seriously of entering the race
promotion game as we would doubtless be able
to stage quite a classy race right in our own
back yard. There are at this station an unusual
number of hot Fords and there continues an
equally hot argument regarding who possesses the
hottest one. Elmer Hartman drives the Tudor,
Dumenil drives the Fordor, Ernie Moffit rushes
the touring, and Oscar VandenBoom the roadster,
while last but not least comes Siney McCarty with
the Ford—well we would call it a coupe, but Mac
insists that it is a Tudor, for has it not two
doors, one on each side? Some of these days
we are going to put on a race and invite you all
up. Judging by time trials and other kinds of
trials we think it would be a walk-away for Van.
That is, after the first mile, he would have to
“walk away” back home.
Recently there have been two very important
changes in the personnel of H. A. Brunat’s
household. Not many days ago we heard in the
distance weeping and gnashing of teeth. Upon
investigation we learned that some time during
the previous day the Prize Rhode Island Red
cockerel which you have heard all about, bid this
earth a fond farewell and ascended or descended
to the place where all prize cockerels go. But the
sorrow was short lived as very soon afterwards
we learned of a dandy dapple gray pony that was
to take the place of the departed. Young Bobby
Brunat decided that the pony should be called
Silver. H. A. insisted on calling it Red, but
Bobby won. Harry now spends his spare time
in chasing Silver out of the boulevard. We don’t
know whether he is reducing the pony or himself
but hope it will have the desired effect on both.
Moberly, Mo.—We are sorry to report that T.
T. Driver Glen Noel is on the sick list suffering
from a painful abscess. We are hoping for a
rapid recovery. Red. During Glen’s absence his
truck is being nicely handled by J. S. Clemson.
We had the honor of having with us recently.
Manager A. L. Martin, S. S. Superintendent M.
E. Jolidon, and Equipment Superintendent Ed
Swinney, also Mr. Hintz of the equipment depart­
ment in the general offices. It simply poured
goods news that day, and when we have acquired
60

�sonal appearance. He floated into the office with
a new shroud of checkerboard design and a neck­
tie that flashes like a firefly with neuritis. His
face is beginning to show signs of dilligent appli­
cations of lotions and beauty clay that bespeak
an aflrliction of heart throbbing. Well, after all,
Dan Foley fell by the wayside—why not Bob.
fFarehouse—Earl E. Socier, driver at Saginaw
has recovered from an operation for ap­
pendicitis and is back on the job after an absence
of about six weeks. Earl says these things come
in a hurry, but it sure does take some time to
get rid of them.
Picnic.—On Sunday morning, June 14, the em­
SAGINAW, MICH.
ployees at the warehouse and machine shop gath­
S. P. Johnston, Correspondent
ered their families together and all went out for
John W. W. Mooney, our handsome agent at
a picnic. The spot selected was a beautiful grove
Minden City, would walk into a lion’s den and
never put up a fight but when a dog calls his on the slope of Pine River, west of Freeland^
Men, women and children, to the number of 125
bluff he screams like a frightened sand dab. Not
were present. The day was delightful and every­
so long ago he was approaching a farm house
body went prepared to have a good time and
when a hired hand playfully grabbed him by the
Everybody
ankle and made a noise like a dog with the result there were no disappointments.
that Jack threw two five gallon buckets of Per­ brought their baskets filled with good things to
eat. Ice cream cones, soda pop, lemonade, candy
fection over the house and his scream frightened
and peanuts were furnished by the committee, and
the hired girl so bad she threw a pan of spud.s
it took the kiddies and the grown-ups all day to
away.
eat and drink all they brought. The old swim­
D. H. Ward, Carsonville agent, is a fond lover
ming hole was at its best, and many availed them­
of flowers. Any one wishing a real treat will do
selves of the opportunity and spent much time
well to call at his beautiful home when Dahlias
at this refreshing spot. In the shallow parts of
are in bloom.
the stream the kiddies waded and splashed to
Messrs. F. A. Dettenthaler and Albert Linberg
have been seriously ill from the effects of blood their hearts’ content. Games, sports and con­
poisoning. Fred got his by a scratch from a tests were indulged in all day. A pie eating con­
test betwen twenty small boys was pulled off early
typewriter and Albert got his playing with a
in the day. Each lad had his own appetite with
cactus
Hans Albrecht figured in an auto accident but him and the contest was short and snappy. A
was outclassed by Clarence Young and Young baseball game between the men and women was
very exciting and, as may be supposed, was won
Red Willert who both had the same kind of
by the fairer sex. Boys’, girls’ races; threemisfortune.
.
Albert Fierke is managing to work after being legged, sack, men’s and women’s races were held.
It seemed somebody was racing all the time.
confined to his home for some time with a
Prizes were given in each event so there was
sprained ankle.
E. J. Ortner is our new agent at Unionville, keen competition. A cracker eating contest was
succeeding Alfred Stock. He is full of enthusi­ very amusing. Eat a cracker and whistle. Who
can do it first? Try it. Many feats of strength
asm and we think he will be a bear cat. He
resembles Horace Greeley in some respects but and agility were indulged in by the men and some
of these were very exciting. The doughnut eat­
don’t hold that against Horace. Mr. Stock is
ing contest between eighteen men was a scream.
going to do business in the town of Colling where
Can you imagine a long rope stretched between
black is white and dollars have more cents.
two trees and from it, suspended on strings, were
When one meets Earl Timmons approaching in
his Ford Roadster he marvels at such a display eighteen doughnuts, and back of each doughnut,
of shins. Earl has to fold his pedal extremities a man. Pretty tame—eh—what? Wait. We
are not quite ready to start. Next, we dip each
up like an ironing board so he can hold the
steering wheel in his lap like a brakeman sitting doughnut in a can of sorghum molasses. Now
on a box car. Earl says that all great men have we are ready. Go! Oh, Boy! You have to see
this one to get the real thrill. The day ended all
long legs, take Abe Lincoln, ferinkstance.
too soon. Everyone voted this the greatest picnic
Hough Tarrent, S. S. haberdasher, took his
ever. Plans are already under way for another
inspiration out for a ride on the sparkling waters
picnic in the near future.
of the River Saginaw and in some unknown
manner the boat capsized and Hough was forced
Mr. Haeffer from the Chicago office was a
to throw his arms around her to save his life.
caller at the warehouse this week. We are always
Now he is a hero and the next accident will
glad to see Mr. Haeffer when he calls.
probably be at the altar.
A SOCO baseball team is now being organ­
B. G. Hoerauf, cashier, received a fine baby
ized at the plant. The boys have played a couple
girl the latter part of April, B. B. Ragon got one
of games so far and have met with good success,
on the last week of May and Bill Sodeman
which has filled them with enthusiasm and hope.
received a baby boy in July. By a process of
They say all they need now to make them a
elimination you will observe that we missed June
real team are some baseball suits.
but that was a blunder on the part of the stork.
Owosso.—We extend our congratulations to C.
Look for later announcements.
R. Amidon, cashier, who was made the proud
Robert Allardice has placed the Crystal Set
father of an eight pound S. S. attendant, June 4,
in the ash can where it rightfully belongs and
1925.
is devoting considerable of his time to his per­
61

the many fine improvements promised us we will
be second to none in the “A” station class. These
are much needed improvements and we speak the
sentiment of all when we say we appreciate them.
We are tickled pink to have Mr. Rodgers of
Quincy with us this week, also. George is
demonstrating how well his portable painting ma­
chine operates, and, incidentilly, giving our
trucks a fresh coat of paint. Boy, won’t they
look swell when they step out next Monday a. m.
George is some painter, and also some George,
in more ways than one.

�H. H. Keating pleased our service stations by
paying each one a visit.
A Chevrolet “Drive Away” stopped at S. S. SO
last week and typical Standard Oil service was
called to their attention when seven crank cases
were drained and refilled with Polarine Oil in
exactly eleven minutes.
All Standard Oil S. S. attendants will feel
rewarded for their service efforts when they know
that a very prominent Owosso lady made this
assertion: “The Standard Oil boys are the most
courteous lot of people I’ve ever met.”
Mr. E. J. Sonnenberg, S. S. instructor, is on
the job at Owosso.
ST. JOSEPH, MO.
T. R. Ridge, Correspondent

Walter Dougherty drove his car two blocks out
of the way just to see why a crowd was
gathered at a certain corner and found out (to
the tune of $6.00) that they were watching cops
arrest automobilists who were not displaying a
tail light.
Returned goods should be reduced to a mini­
mum since Dan Patton has whetted up the old
06 razor.
Martha Ann Biehl arrived just in time to see
the results of the flood in St. Joseph. She must
think this is a muddy world.
A. J. Brooks has finally convinced the girls in
the stenographic department that it sometimes
rains fish.
Ben Reichmann after careful and deliberate
study approves of the Safety First motto:
“Watch the car just behind the one in front of
you.”
Heinie Leak recently returned from a very
pleasant motor trip to Colorado.
Roy Helenthal is pitching a mean set of gallop­
ing hoofs.
The following were outstanding features at the
Standard Oil Company picnic Thursday evening,
July 23, Sugar Lake, Mo.: Sidney Long won the
fat man’s race; Schall Zimmerman showed won­
derful form as a sea-diver; Leonard Hartigan
as leader of the curbstone quartet scored a hit;
Al Steinhauser gave a rural atmosphere to the
picnic when he demonstrated the “Cross Roads
Twist,” during the horseshoe game; Horace
LeMaster after publicly announcing that he was
engaged to be married, took a boat-load of girls
out rowing.
Horace LeMaster and Harold Pumphrey, both
of the record department have been to the
jewelry store and by the time this article is
printed will be confirmed married men.
Arlie Rinehart, who is on leave of absence, re­
ports that the weather in Colorado is fine.
Foy Watson and Theodore Ridge of the
marketing department have new boarders at their
homes, the names of the new arrivals being Wil­
liam Milton Watson and Evelyn Mae Ridge.
Lit Place, our skinny agent at Gallatin, says
Ted Ridge hasn’t a thing on him as it is now
Frances Louise, born July 8. Lit is all smiles.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Margaret McCarthy, Correspondent

There is romance galore around the office these
days, weddings and announcements and new
sparklers keep coming. The last one to join the

ranks of benedicts is Ed Wittmond, head of the
credit department, who took no one into his confi­
dence, but on the first day of his vacation was
married to Miss Elsie Sartorius. Elsie formerly
worked for the company and is remembered by
many, and Ed’s years of association with us have
proven his worth and the best wishes of all go
to them.
Bob May is back from “their” honeymoon and
says there is no place like the romantic West
for a real honeymoon trip.
In the Spring a young man’s fancy, etc., etc.
Spring comes late for Clarence Jensen, he must
have lost his girl on the 4th of July for ever since
then he has found more excuses for running into
the dictaphone room every time a new girl is put
on. Dark haired ones seem to be his preference,
with Clarence’s blond locks that is as it should be.
Marion Freeman came back from her vacation
wearing a fraternity ring and a heavenly look,
wonder if she exchanged her heart for them in
Chicago ?
Miss Loretta Long, daughter of John J. Long,
assistant chief clerk, was to be married August
8 to James Sullivan. Best wishes to them also.
Report is out that Ray Hotto will be a subject
for congratulations when he returns from his
vacation. We don’t know the girl’s name—^will
give it later.
John S. Seeibert, attendant at Broadway and
Bates S. S., has had life membership conferred
upon him in the United Spanish War Veterans,
General Nelson Cole Camp No. 2. Mr. Seibert
who has received citation for the Congressional
Medal of Honor for services rendered in Cuba
as organizer of the First Post of the American
Legion. For this Mr. Seibert has received a gold
medal, authorized by city, state and national head­
quarters of the Legion.
George Ballew, driver at Columbia, is the proud
father of a seven-pound boy. George says he
will have to work harder than ever now, but it’s
worth it.
The sympathy of all is extended to M. H.
Weston on the death of his brother, and to Bob
Lehman who lost his father recently.
SOUTH BEND, IND.
J. T. Diltz, Correspondent

Elkhart, Ind.—S. S. T. W. Driver C. E. Dunafin, while touring in Illinois last week was ap­
proached by a speed cop who ordered him to
appear before the judge for speeding. Judge—
“Mr. Dunafin are you guilty or not guilty?”
Dunafin—“Guilty I guess, but you see judge it
was like this. I use Red Crown Gasoline and
the brakes wouldn’I hold.”
Philip Bloss, our drayman, is recovering slow­
ly from a shock he received at one of his
famous lakes last week, after losing a four
pound pickerel from his stringer. Same old
story, Bloss, the big ones always get away.
Louis J. Melkus, attendant at S. S. 55, says
his partner, V. E. Circle, is the luckiest man he
ever saw, everyone drives in for lithograph cans
of Polarine on Circle’s track. Lets hope next
month will be your lucky month.
C. R. Glase, city T. W. salesman, is nursing
a sore foot, caused by stepping on some broken
glass while in bathing at Wawasee Lake last
Sunday.

�Wanted: Extra clerk at Elkhart to take care
o’clock on inspection morning. Oh, boy!
of applicants applying for position at our new
Bill Dearing, our expert gauger, declares his
S. S. 108 at Lexington and Vistula.
Ford sedan has a plank roof. Ask the “Swede.”
Rural T. W. salesman O. E. Daly Jr., says
George Hildenbrand, our jolly drayman, has
he never could drive a truck down a hill back­
laid his potatoes by and now he gets back to
wards ; they don’t make the roads wide enough.
work by 1 o’clock.
Logansport, Ind.—Lost; One pound box of
Hurried call on telephone says Art Scarlett,
cherry cocktails. Finder please return to L. R.
M. T. W. driver, is mopping up Hogan’s drug
Yeakley. Oh well, too late to return now. She
store with a man who dared to say that Polarine
has been disappointed.
was no good.
Rather lonesome since Mr. Sparks has moved
Charles Crowe, attendant at S. S. 16, is
into bis private office.
passing the cigars, the reason, a nine pound son,
We wonder if Drayman Rice has made any arriving May 21.
more trips home at 7:00 A. M. to close the
P. D. Wardwell, our city salesman, is very
windows before a shower.
fond of wild animals these days, carries them
It has been suggested that Mr. Haner, ware­
along in his Ford coupe.
houseman, be furnished a team of horses as he
We have all been wondering why Maurice
always yells “Whoa” when loading tankwagons.
House, our cashier, was saving his money, until
J. R. Yocum has accepted a position as at­ we met his lady friend at the Standard Oil picnic
tendant at S. S. 22, succeeding J. R. Breman who
held recently. All right Maurice we are for you,
returned to the office of Penn R. R. Welcome
but think you might tell us the date.
to our midst Mr. Yocum.
Fort tFayne, Ind.—If R. D. Corll, T. W. sales­
E. C. Forgey has accepted a position as sales­ man, starts out to sell thirty gallons of Polarine,
man at S. S. 95, succeeding R. D. Laird, who
it’s as good as sold. He says he could sell more
has been transferred to S. S. 54.,
but hates to show the salesmen up. Line forms
on the left, boys, don’t push.
Everett German was a welcome two weeks’
visitor at our station. The drivers report all our
Paul Cottrell, salesman at S. S. 27, says “Why
trucks running perfect now. Call again, Everett.
should I drive my car when my girl has a car.”
“Yes sir,” K. E. Lakey, salesman at S. S. 30,
The,, contest between the “Blues” and the
“Reds” is running very close. The correspondents is still wearing his gigantic mustache. At a re­
have some odds to wage on the contest, and are
cent inventory he located eleven on one side and
thirteen on the other.
not particular which side they wage it on. So
long as it is the winning team.
S. S. 30 must possess something very fas­
Slocum and Hamer, city salesmen, are very cinating for the stork, as both Lakey and Ulrey
have had recent visits from him.
fond of flowers, especially roses. Why? Ask
them.
William Nichtr, S. S. 85, requests the company
Paul Dilley of the Chicago office is spending
furnish more rags, by so doing he could increase
his vacation in Logansport.
the sale of Semdac. Bill says in his last demon­
Huntington, /„&lt;/.—Charles Schultz is the new stration he used three pounds of rags and fortyfive minutes time, when through the customer was
attendant at S. S. 50. Luck to you Charlie.
Burhl Fahl, attendant at S. S. 58, doesn’t get sold on Semdac but had no money. The next
morning the daughter was down to get the Sem­
much sleep at night since the addition to his
dac. Bill don’t understand “yet.”
family. Somebody said it was a bull pup and
Boys, our hats are off to Ed. J. Zurbuch, clerk
had to be fed every two hours from a bottle
and nipple.
at the bulk plan! He strengthened that “faint
T. W. Driver Ralph found good fishing at heart” and married Miss Agness Luley, July 7.
Yes, the cigars were fine.
Barber Lake. Ralph returned with one catfish,
2% inches long.
Miscellaneous.—Ed. Miller, agent at Uniondale,
still reports fishing rotten.
William L. Folk has been transferred from
S. S. attendant to city T. W. driver.
Ask Bun Keller, S. S. 61, how he likes “carp.”
LaFayette, Ind.—The contest between the Lem­ That is what he fishes for.
onade Giants and the Ice Cream Tigers was
Clark Flaugh, agent at Decatur, is hitting the
fought bitterly throughout the month and ended ball. This is for anyone who is wondering what
with the Giants leading by a few gallons. On he’s doing.
July 19 the Tigers entertained at Tree-Built-Inn
Cecil Bair, S. S. 61, was seen looking at an
on the banks of the Wild Cat, and a most en­
old (Henry) the other day. “Better lay off,
joyable time was had by all those present. A
Cecil, until you can get a new one.”
baseball game was played and resulted in a
Anyone having seen N. W. Abbott, Craigville,
secorid defeat for the Tigers. Bert Force en­
tertained with several acrobatic stunts while lately, please advise salesman covering this ter­
ritory. “Come out of the bushes. Nelson.”
playing third base.
Paul Wardwell who
Bob Marboush, second truck man at Decatur,
captained the Giants was well pleased with his
believes most anything, “Try him boys.”
team but his personal record would have been
Frank Blake says he will support Bob Harris
much better if he had not patronized the dance
as a dog catcher! How come. Bob ?
hall on the North River Road so much.
Art Clemmens, T. W. driver at Mishawaka,
If Charlie Burnham could use his grape vine
sure stepped handsome in July. Reason? Nine
twist on his Polarine sales his quota would have
and one-half pound girl.
to be tripled.
Maurice House, our classy cashier, went broke
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wirt, Wakarusa,
buying all the latest bathing beauty magazines.
a daughter, Kathleen Eileen. Hank says he
Roy Wien, M. T. W. driver, lives two miles
knows he’ll make his quota from now on!
from S. O. Company’s plant and wakes up at 6
W. S. Beigh is under the care of a doctor. Sun
63

�stroke or palpitation of nerves, thinking of in­
coming competition.
Howard McKenzie just received word of the
passing of his grandfather.
Our sympathy is
with Howard during his bereavement.
E. M. Preston motored to Richmond where
the Mrs. Preston and sons were visiting friends
and relatives. Better hurry home.
Did you ever get awakened sharply and sud­
denly in the night? Perhaps a dream, or maybe
a burglar.
How would you feel if you were
awakened suddenly some night, and found your
house a fire, coal dust all over the house, soot
hanging from picture frames, then realize how
close to death, when you discover your house
was struck by lightning! Ask Jack Williams of
.Angola.
Harry Parker is indesposed at this writing.
Josephine says perhaps it was caused by her not
attending Chautauqua with him.
Pyrl Duncan said it reminded him of old times,
while he was relaying gasoline from Hamilton.
Dawson Goral missed a customer on Route 3
the other day, thinking they did not require any­
thing. Next day they called for Red Crown—
about a six mile drive. Moral—it pays to stop.
Roy Schall at Hamilton is using the old army
game. He is trying to drive the enemy out of
Metz.
Clyde Reese at Orland painted his truck tank
the other day, and Standard Oil men in around
Angola, passed him without speaking, because
they did not recognize him.
Herbert Howard and Ford Troop are not
married, so it is unwise to advertise them very
much.
The team of Gallagher and Shean connection
with Standard Oil is becoming more of a reality
than ever, since H’ray Gallagher took on the
job of selling the Standard Oil Company, minus
Polarine.
The Monticello field wishes to express their
appreciation for the last two numbers of the
Record. We like to know our neighbors.
K. Kingsbury has accepted a position as S. S.
attendant at Monticello.
The Standard Oil Company of Indiana has
another royal booster. Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Moore of Monticello a future service station
attendant. Mr. Moore is attendant at S. S. 47.
We wonder what the attraction is at Good­
land. Ask Rufus, he knows.
On the night of July 20, our genial agent at
Sidney went fishing, they never got a bite but
just as they were starting for home a nice two
pound bass took pity on them and jumped in the
boat. Bud says this is the truth, believe it or
not.
Walter Bouse at Claypool says he would like
a couple of days off but he wont tell us who
is to be the lucky lady.
E. Fillabaum, driver at No. Manchester, was
confined to his home one day last week. Early
says is was candy that made him sick but we
think that it was green apples, how about it?
Carl Schmalazried, erstwhile agent at Wabash,
paid us a visit last week. The boys in North
Manchester like to see the big Dutchman once
in a while even if he don’t stay long.

Ligonier station had a slight change.
Mr.
Wolf, former station agent, went to S. S. 52
as salesman and Joe Taylor, S. S. salesman, took
station agent. Both are on the job and going
good.
The Millersburg agent has to go to Goshen
for Solite and he gets some light on how Goshen
is going. Watch him and Decker, Neff.
The entire division extends its sympathy to
Agent F. E. Thompson and Mrs. Thompson
over the loss of Betty Jane, their six months
old daughter.
Miss Nichols of the legal department in the
general office is visiting her father and mother
in Lowell, Ind., during her vacation.
If you
don’t believe it ask Karl Wendell, S. S. sales­
man at Crown Point. That’s right, Karl, it
doesn’t make any difference, even though they
aren’t in the South Bend division.
We understand that on a certain evening not
so long ago T. W. Driver Enno Sager had his
Buick working overtime. S. S. Salesman Ray
Ziese says she didn’t like to ride in a Ford any­
way. Don’t fight, boys.
WICHITA, KANS.
J. A. White, Correspondent

(Ye scribe writes to ye editor telling of
divers goodtimes said scribe had in ye vicinity
of Lake Okoboji and there fore wast unable to
be bothered with such mundane things as ye
notes for ye Stanolind Record.)
The Runaway

It was the day before the race, and an in­
quisitive fan who had been looking over a few
of the entries, came upon a likely looking little
roan being groomed by an old darkey.
“Good horse,” commented the fan.
“There ain’t none bettah, suh,” said the darkey.
“Who was he sired by?”
“Well, suh,” replied the darkey, aware that the
pedigree of his little horse was somewhat shady,
“nobody knows that. This colt is so fast he run
away from home befoah evah he’d heard his
pap’s name !”—Contributed.
* * *
“You naughty, cruel boy!” said the very fash­
ionably dressed young woman, who was taking
a stroll in the park, to the urchin whom she found
despoiling a bird’s nest. “How can you be so
heartless as to take those eggs? Think of the
poor mother bird when she comes back and----- ”
“That’s all right, miss,” interrupted the boy;
“the mother bird is dead.”
The young woman’s expression reflected dis­
belief.
“How do you know?” she asked sharply.
“Cos I sees ’er on your hat,” was the reply.—
Exchange.
* * *
Ups and Downs of Language

“Did you call Edith up this morning?”
“Yes, but she wasn’t down.”
“But why didn’t you call her down?”
“Because she wasn’t up.”
“Then call her up now and call her down for
not being down when you called her up.”—
Boston Transcript.
64

�STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Indiana)
General Sales Department
Allan Jackson, Vice-President

T. J. Thompson, General Manager

Assistant General Managers
N R Grimshaw, Western Division
Amos Ball, Eastern Division

H. R. Cochran, Nortl^rn Division
H. A. Lewis, Central Division

Lubricating Department
C.

B. T. Thompson, General Manager
O. Wilson, Assistant General Manager
L. C. Welch, Assistant General Manager

Asphalt Department
C. C. Lakin, Manager

Branch Offices
LA CROSSE, WIS.

CHICAGO, ILL.

C. F. Hatmaker, Manager
J. W. Wilson, Assistant Manager

H. E. Bruce, Manager
J. E. Monegan, Assistant Manager
MANKATO, MINN.

DAVENPORT, IOWA

T. V. Warren, Manager
J. J. Leu, Jr., Assistant Manager

H. Chesbrough, Manager
J. Clay Lee, Assistant Manager
M.

MASON CITY, IOWA

DECATUR, ILL.

J. H. Bl TIDE, Manager
G. F. Phillips, Assistant Manager

R. H. Thomas, Manager
H. E. Hanson, Assistant Manager
MILWAUKEE, WIS.

DES MOINES, IOWA

H. A. Monson, Assistant Manager
W. J. Riepe, Assistant Manager

P. A. Raupagh, Manager
Ivan Prather, Ass’t Manager (Operation)
W. C. Van Horne, Ass’t Manager (Sales)

DETROIT, MICH.

A. E. Ralston, Assistant Manager
A. E. Ralston, Assistant Manager

MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.

F. L. Cochran, Manager
E. N. Shali.enberger, Assistant Manager

DULUTH, MINN.

MINOT, N. D.

I. J. Shields, Manager
G. E. Webb, Assistant Manager

John Beaton, Manager
H. H. Hathaway, Assistant Manager

EVANSVILLE, IND.

W. J. Lang, Manager
Ewald Brauns, Assistant Manager

PEORIA, ILL.

J. R. Coleman, Manager
A. M. Maulsby, Assistant Manager

FARGO, N. D.

QUINCY, ILL.

F. 1. Packard, Manager
R. H. Dodd, Assistant Manager

A. L. Martin, Manager
T. P. Jones, Assistant Manager
SAGINAW, MICH.

GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.

L. J. Thompson, Manager
F. H. Fillingham, Assistant Manager

H. H. Keating, Manager
E. R. Soop, Assistant Manager
ST. JOSEPH, MO.

HURON, S. D.

A. H. Dodsi.ey, Manager
C. L. Bailey, Assistant Manager

C. H. Wagner, Manager
R. S. Orr, Assistant Manager
ST. LOUIS, MO.

INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

J. C. Marshall, Manager
P. A. Serrin, Assistant Manager

T. B. Clifford, Manager
G. W. Coldsnow, Assistant Manager
SIOUX CITY, IOWA

JOLIET, ILL.

L. W. Cameron, Manager
Carl Monson, Assistant Manager

H. J. Bemis, Manager
J. N. Elkert, Assistant Manager
SOUTH BEND, IND.

KANSAS CITY, MO.

H. C. Griffin, Manager
K. T. Wenger, Assistant Manager

R. F. McConnell, Manager
W. T. Bannister, Assistant Manager
WICHITA, KAN.

P. J. Quinlan, Manager
J. W. Ross, Assistant Manager

�WHAT IS SUCCESS?
It’s doing your work as best you can,
And being just to your fellow man;
It’s making money, but holding friends.
And staying true to your aims and ends;
It’s figuring how and learning why.
And looking forward and thinking high.
And dreaming a little and doing much.
It’s keeping always in closest touch
With what is finest in word and deed;
It’s being thorough, yet making speed.
It’s daring blithely the field of chance
While making labor a brave romance;
It’s going onward despite defeat.
And fighting staunchly, but keeping sweet;
It’s being clean and it’s playing fair
It’s laughing lightly at Dame Despair;
It’s looking up at the stars above.
And drinking deeply of life and love;
It’s struggling on with the will to win.
But taking loss with a cheerful grin;
It’s sharing sorrow, and work and mirth;
And making better this good old earth;
It’s serving, striving, through strain and stress,
It’s doing your noblest—that’s Success.
— New York Telegram.

NEWMAN MONROE CO.. CHICAGO

�;66

29

THE SHTURDAT EVENING POST

“And after that a waiter. And after that a movie
We Went three rounds, in against a large complacent cliff. No doubt the
extra
and a rather indifferent pugilist. I was also for
officials
of
the
United
States
Treasury
Department
the course of which I blacked his eye and he nearly
a time a bouncer in a New York saloon. That was
broke one of my ribs, and then we decided to kiss had felt the same.
one of my failures. I started gaily out one night to
“It’s maddening,” he said.
and make it up. When I saw you, I had just been
bounce an obstreperous client, and, unfortunately,
“I beg your pardon?”
standing beer to him and a few personal friends.
“I was only thinking that there seems to be no he bounced me. This seemed to cause the boss to
You look very happy, Your Highness.”
lose confidence in my technique, and shortly after­
way in which the righteous can get at you.”
“Do I?”
wards I sailed for England to carve out a new career.
“You look as if you would like to strangle me.”
“And I don’t wonder. Running into an old friend
“ No, no,” protested Joe. “ Just beat you over the head Since then I have been doing pretty well.”
like this. I suppose you were surprised to see me
“I am glad to hear that.”
with one of these brass pots and watch you wriggle.”
’here.”
“I bet you are. Yes, I got a job on a paper, and
She laughed.
“Very.”
“You appear still to be the same engaging young held that for a while, and then I became a sort of
“I, on the other hand, was expecting to meet you
stooge or bottle washer to a publisher of dubious
shortly. I am staying at Walsingford Hall, and man.”
“ I imagine we’ve neither of us changed very much.” reputation named Busby.”
heard that you were arriving.”
“You have had quite a full life. Shall we go?”
“Your circumstances seem to have changed. The
“How do you come to be staying at the Hall?”
They started to cross the room. “And since when,”
“I thought it would be nice being with Tubby. last I heard of you, you were a sailor on a tramp
she asked, “have you been a playwright?”
steamer.”
Somehow, he seems to need a brother’s care.”
“You’ve heard about my
“How did you know he was
play?
”
there?”
“I have seen it.”
“Oh, these things get about.
Joe’s sense of futility dimin­
He tells me you are thinking of
ished. He glowed a little. It
buying the Hall.”
was as if he had been a sportsman
“Yes.”
shooting at a rhinoceros with an
“My visit will be a short one,
air gun and one of the pellets had
then.”
caused the animal to wince. It
“ Extremely short. Are you go­
was
true that if his companion
ing back there now? If so, I can
had winced, he had not observed
give you a lift.”
it; but he knew her to be a woman
“ Thanks.”
who hid her feelings.
“Unless you have any more
“Already? This is very grati­
street fighting to do?”
fying. What did you think of it? ”
“No, I’m through for the day.
“I suppose some people would
I hear you have been revisiting
call it clever.”
New York.”
“ The better element are unan­
“Yes. I returned the day be­
imous on that point. Shall I read
fore yesterday. I had to go over
you the notices?”
and see my lawyer about my
“No, thank you.”
income tax. The Treasury people
“It’s an extraordinary thing.
were making the most absurd
Nobody seems to want to hear
claims.”
those notices. Pretty soon I shall
“Soaking the rich?”
be beginning to think there’s a
“Trying to soak the rich.”
conspiracy. How did it go when
“I hope they skinned you to
you saw it?”
the bone,”
&gt; “Very well.”
“No. As a matter of fact, I
“House fuU?”
came out of it very well. Have
“Packed.”
you a cigarette?”
“And they seemed to be en­
“Here you are.”
joying it?”
“Thank you. Yes, I won out
“Immensely.”
all along the line.”
They came out of the hotel.
“You would!”
“My favorite scene,” said Joe,
Once again, Joe was conscious
“is the one in the second act be­
of that reluctant admiration
tween the ghastly stepmother
which he had felt at their meet­
and her stepson. Did they like
ing, and, with it, of the baffled
that?”
resentment which so often came
“Very much.”
to those who had dealings with
“Did you?”
this woman. The effortless ease
“It amused me.”
with which she overrode all ob­
“That’s good. I aimed to en­
stacles and went complacently
tertain.”
through life on the crest of the
“I have been hoping to meet
wave offended his sense of dra­
you, Joseph,” said the Princess,
matic construction. She was so
“because I wanted to discuss
obviously the viUainess of the
that play of yours. We can have
piece that it seemed inevitable
a nice, cozy talk about it in the
that eventually the doom must
car.”
overtake her. But it never did.
She slipped gracefully into the
Whoever had started that idea
Rolls-Royce. Joe followed her.
that Right in the end must al­
As she settled herself in her seat,
ways triumph over Wrong had
he saw that she was smiling that
never known the Princess
quiet smile again, and, but for
Dwornitzchek.
the absurdity of supposing that
He watched her as she sat there
there was any possible way in
smoking and smiling quietly at
which she could now do him a
some thought that seemed to be
mischief, it might have made him
amusing her, and tried to analyze
uneasy.
the murderous feelings which she
He knew that smile from the
had always aroused in him. She
old days.
was, as he had said, undefeatable, and he came to the conclu­
sion that it was this impregnabil­
T WAS just as Joe and the
ity of hers that caused them. She
Princess Dwornitzchek were
had no heart and a vast amount
preparing to leave the hotel that
of money, and this enabled her to
a panting two-seater entered the
face the world encased in triple
High Street and began to proceed
brass. He had in her presence a
along
it at a slow crawl, the girl
sense of futility, as if he were
Her Heart Was Reating Quickly as She Plucked a Pair of Trousers Like Fruit From,
the Sought When a Sudden Exclamation From Behind Her Caused Her to Turn
at the
(Continued on Page 62}
a very small wave beating up
(Continued from Page Z7)

I

�30

THE SATURDAY EVENING POST

September 4,1937

PHOIQ BY R. D. ADAMS

The Hurricane Bench in 1904 Before the Mormons Brought Water From the Virgin River^ and^ Belowt Hurricane Town Today

Sy

MORROW WILBOH

COURTESY OF THE IMPROVEMENT ERA

greatest of Mormon col­
onizers, like Thomas Jefferson, believed that,
as a broad generality, tillers of the earth make
the best citizens. He directed his people to take
farms from a desert wilderness, to reverence farming
not only as a means of livelihood but as a way of
living, to earn completely and to avoid charity.
Today these practical gospels of Brigham Young
remain mandates of the Mormons—properly the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The
Mormons still are fighting, conquering and settling
the desert. In motive and philosophy. Mormon
pioneering of 1937 is virtually identical with Mormon
pioneering of 1857.
On the long-idle Keogh ranch, in the Idaho dry
lands about three miles from Malta, one may see
modern Mormon pioneering. It is a 4000-acre ranch,
once operated for cattle raising, and then, later,
when grass began to fail, for sheep. Last year the
church bought the ranch as a colony site. In March
of this year, a new group of pioneers moved in on the
land.
I arrived at the ranch during the doldrums of a
mid-April noon, picked my way among empty cor­
rals, and called at an aged bunkhouse built of mudchinked logs, once headquarters for a hell-roaring
bevy of frontier cowboys.
There was no evidence of a noontime lull. Four of
the newly arrived colonists were visible and all were
hard at work. One was plowing a dusty field with a
shiny new tractor, another using a big draft team to
plow out a badly neglected irrigation canal, and two
righam young,

B

1

more digging a well which is to supplement irrigation
water provided by a hillside stream.
Less than a month before, six young Mormons had
taken over the abandoned ranch and set out to bring
new life to an establishment long dead. With self­
subsistence as a primary motive, they aimed to re­
place range agriculture with intensive cultivation.
During these first weeks they had plowed and planted
about 150 acres to crops, reopened about three miles
of old irrigation canal and planned the digging of five
new wells which should bring water to about 1000
additional acres.
All the boys have previous farm training. During
their first season they are working as a group, to make
the best possible use of available equipment. The try­
out finished, plans are to tenant the farms in groups
of four, each member owning his own home and about
thirty acres. The land will be purchased with a down
payment of as little as a dollar an acre—on a total
price not to exceed thirty dollars an acre.
Having planted and harvested a first crop, these
1937-model pioneers plan to go to the mountains
near by, cut timber for building homes and saw the
lumber on the grounds, trading labor in order to keep
housing costs at a minimum. All this is in keeping
with original pioneer practices of Latter-day Saints.
Having built homes, the boys plan to marry—one
wife apiece.
First home from work was twenty-six-year-old
Elder Chase—members frequently acquire the title
of elder by the time they are eighteen. Reared in
South Carolina and Florida, Chase spent two years

in a law school, grew weary of legalities, took a sales­
man’s job in Salt Lake and there became a Latterday Saint. Following church usance, he went forth
as a missionary, wandering through England and
Scotland—a fertile source of Mormon converts. The
average return from each missionary is two converts.
Elder Chase obtained his quota, lived meagerly and
paid his own way. The church paid his fare home.
Craving ownership of land, he sent in his applica­
tion to become a colonizer. Last March he arrived
at the Keogh ranch with three other returned mis­
sionaries, Elders Wallace, Hill and Roberts. They
reported to Mark Austin, seventy-two-year-old live­
stock man and former agricultural director of the
Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, who is now unsalaried
and unofficial supervisor of the ranch. They took
over the aged bunkhouse, cleaned out an old well
near by and drew straws for turns at housekeeping.
Bedding, cooking utensils and rations came from a
church warehouse, as a loan and not as a gift.
Elder Chase drew first term as cook and house­
keeper. The fare is simple—dried apples, stewed
peaches, thick bacon and stewed beef.
These pioneers of 1937 came to the land virtually
without money. They are buying necessary food,
clothing and household goods upon the credit of first
crop. The church is making them a temporary loan
of implements, a tractor, two teams of draft horses.
No member is allowed to begin buying land until he
has successfully finished his tryout year. Then his
purchase will be limited to about fifty acres, or what
is regarded as a subsistence (continued on Page 32;

�THE SATURDAY EVENING POST

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�32

THE SHTURDHY EVENING POST

September 4, Z937

farm. When irrigation
canals are repaired and improved, and river water
duly supplemented by the five newly surveyed
wells, virtually all the ranch will be available to
irrigation. Homesites and farms will be available
for eighty or ninety families. At that time the
church will underwrite building a temple, school
and social center.
But for the time being, life on the old Keogh
ranch is one of plain food, rough work, no movies
or bright lights. It’s a life of almost perpetual work
from dawn till dark. But the pioneers declare they
like it and look forward to the future.
Superficially, this present-day pioneering is not
particularly dramatic. But the people of Joseph
Smith and Brigham Young still plod forward to
take subsistence from land. They hitch-hike,
drive flivvers, follow winter-lean nags. It is essen­
tially the same hard way. Some falter. Some will
fail. But many are winning by way of stubborn labor.

group of single young men to
open the way and make a
first crop before the site is
peopled with families of de­
pendents. This is an old ex­
pedient of Mormon coloniza­
tion, followed in opening the
great and beautiful Cache
Valley of Utah and Idaho,
now the greatest stronghold
and show ground of Mormon
agriculture.
Under the present church
security plan, caution under­
scores all new farming col­
onies. Need for placing mem­
bers upon new land is accen­
tuated by apparent climate
changes in various parts of
the intermountain West. In
some areas, persistent decline
in rainfall seems to be under­
Trying it Out on the Bachelors
mining the future of dry-land
ELECTION of colonists, like choice of farming farming, making irrigation a
sites, is never an easy problem. Through the necessity. For example, there
generations, church leadership has found that lik­is the one-time prosperous
ing for farm life, desire to own land and grow crops, community of Vernon, Utah,
is better born in a man than thrust upon him.
where,for thepastdecade,rain­
Well over nine tenths of the Mormons who have fall has grown less and less,
lately opened farms have taken land upon their until now all dry-land farms
own resources, asking no help of the church be­ are abandoned. The same is
yond expert advice, community work and temple largely true of Widtsoe, a
building. These services the church always offers. high-plateau farm community
Among the colonists who require credit, the near Powell National Forest.
church must necessarily make careful selection. Many farmers who bought
There can be no absolute rules; each applicant land on credit have lost it
must be judged on his own merit. Preference goes through foreclosure. Now
to members who are loyal in service to the church, the church seeks to help them
particularly to young men with previous farm to other land.
experience and a capacity for hard work.
The most extensive land
Investigations are made under direction of the service is of an advisory na­
church security board or its appointed agent. ture, directing members who
Applicants expect neither donations nor cash are able to help themselves to
wages. As a matter of mutual safeguard, they must desirable land. The church is
usually fulfill a year’s tryout on the land to prove sending farm experts through­
whether or not they can stick and like it. If they out the intermountain West
can’t, the deal is closed with a minimum of loss. If to make surveys of favorable
they can, the deal is on for a long time.
lands now for sale. Under
For proving the settlement possibilities of un­ direction of the security
tried land, the church is prone to send first a pioneer council, these investigators
(Continued, from Page 30)

S

PHOTO BY R. D. ADAMS

The Hand^Heivn Canal by Which the Mormon Pioneers
Laboriously Brought Water to the Desert, Below—Part
of Half a Milliori Cans of Surplus Foods Stored in
the Church Security Warehouses at Salt Lake City

PHOTO BY JOHN R. TALMAGE

COURTESY OF THE IMPROVEMENT ERA

The Grand Canyon and ^he Mormon Church' s
Grand Old Man, Heber Jeddy Grant, Now Eighty

appraise the land, re­
port upon its water
resources and price,
and then publicize
the information
through the various
wards and agencies
of the church. Mem­
bers are urged to col­
onize in groups.
At present, the
founding of inde­
pendent farm settle­
ments is in progress
in various parts of
Oregon, Montana,
Idaho, Colorado, Ari­
zona and New Mex­
ico. Colonizing is
most active in Southern and Central
Idaho, and in the
areas of Idaho Palls,
Rexburg and the
Twin Palls irrigation
center.
For members un­
able to afford land,
the church is buying
tracts for tryout
settlement and even­
tual resale. During
the past year and a
half the church has
bought about 10,000

acres in this manner, allocating the land in small
strips of, usually, fifty acres or less to the family.
After carefully investigating the applicant, it
offers the member a year’s trial lease at little or no
rental. Then, if the venture shows promise, the
church resells the land to members on long terms
and with low interest, invariably without fees or
profit.
Colonies of the Future on Principles of the Past

RICES must be low. Payment of prevailin'g
averages for land would plunge the moneyless
colonizer hopelessly into debt. In most instances,
the church favors sites where water can be brought
to the land by means of home labor and enter­
prise. Since many of the pioneers have neither
seed, livestock, nor implements, the church fre­
quently supplies tractors for breaking the land
and advances implements and seed—wherever posr
sible from church-operated warehouses. Charges
are cut to a minimum. But some form of payment
is expected, in keeping with the Mormon tradition
of allowing no able-bodied man to feed from the
labor of another.
The church has lately helped locate a twelve­
family farming community about 100 miles east of
Calgary, Alberta. Another new venture in coloniz­
ing is near Salmon, Idaho, a once-famous livestock
co’iintry. About 500 members have recently
settled in the Salmon area, and are now buying
farms. The church recently bought the former
Governor Shoup ranch near Salmon and resold the
land to ten families, who now own farms ranging
from 30 to 500 acres
(con tinned on Page 37)

P

�THE SATURDAT EVENING POST

heart wrong? Come home now, gallant it tears my heart,” he said. “Whisper
man, and you’ll see me make the weeds here! But don’t use it aginst me. The
and the daisies bow their heads like name he called me was Snotty Nose.”
Though often sorely tempted, I have
Barney Doony.”
He came closer and his voice again never called Thomasheen James by that
changed and lowered. “ I’U do it though opprobrious name.

PJOWSMSs

19^^

CURE YOUR CAR'S
HUNGER FOR OIL
"BETWEEN MEALS

(Continued from Page 32)

i

each. Most of the old ranch, once too
dry even for reliable range, is now un­
der irrigation. Principally with their
own labor, the settlers have completed
about three miles of irrigation canals,
and mustard-brown range is changing
to green fields and alfalfa and timothy
and experimental crops of sugar beets.
Labor is paying for the land.
At Bluewater, about forty miles east
of Gallup, New Mexico, the church is
now in course of buying about 2300
acres of desert land newly available to
irrigation. It is probable that colonists
will take over this site early in 1938.
All these are Mormon colonies of the
future. Not yet finally proved, they
are a direct revival of colonizing prin­
ciples which have opened most of the
Mormon land now in use. Brigham
Young and his followers projected the
state of Deseret to include not only
the present Utah but most of Arizona,
Nevada, Eastern Colorado and New
Mexico, the southwestern corner of
Wyoming and the lower third of Cali­
fornia.
For a century. Mormon land taking
has been a gradual and laborious en­
deavor. To change the deserts of today
into secure farm lands of tomorrow
takes time and work. To appreciate
this, one has but to visit Hurricane, a
Mormon community up in the occa­
sional mesas of Southeastern Utah,

possibilities for a canal. Years passed.
Finally about 100 men organized a
stock company to build an irrigation
canal through the badlands.
Blocks of stock were hmited to
twenty shares each, all payable in labor.
Each share entitled the owner to one
acre with “primary water rights and
an equity in a town lot, exact choice of
land to be decided by drawing straws.”
The length of the proposed canal was
marked off into stations of four rods.
Stations were assigned to stockholders,
who pledged themselves to work out
their stock payments. Labor credit for
various sectors of the canal was de­
cided upon a basis of the difficulties to
be met in the construction—whether
solid rock, loose rock or earth.
Meanwhile the settlers faced the
need of earning a living. In summer
they ceased canal building to tend their
farms. Between November and March,
able-bodied men and boys packed grub
boxes and went to the mountains, leav­
ing the women to tend the homes and
livestock. Workers wintered in the
rough lands, marooned for months at a
time by blizzards and high water.

,

JI Homemade Canal

As an engineering feat, the most re­
markable thing about the canal is that
it can and does carry water. As a dem­
onstration of human persistency, of
courage in the face of ruinous odds,
this reporter believes it second to none.
The men who built it, their children
and grandchildren, are just now begin­
ning to realize benefits. By the magic
of sweat, a desert has been changed
to luxuriant fields and a community of
good schools, churches and homes.
This area has been opened entirely
without Government aid or any other
outside help. There is always water in
the Virgin River. There was rich sod.
awaiting the water. Fourteen years of
relentlessly hard work performed the
magic union.
Back in 1893, a group of citizens
from less-successful Virgin River set­
tlements appointed a committee to go
through the canyon and consider the

.. -Ki,

•

/say,

BIC
BOY, HOW
ICOME YOU
USE LESS
OIL THAN
LITTLE ME?

SIMPLE, SHRIMPA
I HAVE SEALED
POWER PISTON
RINGS

Virgin River to Virgin Land

Nine years of labor found the canal
at a standstill. To dodge starvation,
part of the workmen were forced to
mifliaitiiiiTiWitKiMtwi g'liRUBgum niftf
tional T’ark.
than a dollar a day, more than $32,000
Hurricane is a Mormon colony of worth of labor had gone into the un-

the present, only recently become green
and plenteous with good farms. The
life of the community depends upon a
homemade irrigation canal which taps
the rambunctious and unpredictable
Virgin River. The canal is about eight
miles long, nine feet wide and four
deep. It carries enough water for fortyfive farms and irrigates 2200 acres, on
which live about 1000 people.
Mormon settlers spent fourteen hard
years shaping this canal. They dug it
with picks, shovels and drills, breaking
through nine tunnels, guiding its course
along sheer cliff walls from 50 to 200
feet above the mesa table, and hoisting
high board flumes upon trestles.

57

dertaking. Yet much of the hardest
construction, including the nine tun­
nels, was stiU unfinished.
James Jepson, president of the group,
went to Salt Lake to ask a loan from
the church, offering as credit collateral
shares in the venture. The church subscribed $5000 worth of the stock. Most
of this money went for supplies—prin­
cipally dynamite and blasting powder.
Workers were paid 25 per cent in
cash, 75 per cent in stock until the job
was finished. Finally the canal carried
water to the desert—which meant land­
clearing, plowing, planting and home
building. The first ten families to move
in spent their beginning year in tents
and dugouts.
Rich soil and plenty of water now
make this land semitropical in appear­
ance. Fruit trees grow well, and though
the community is still about fifty miles
from a railroad. Hurricane peaches,
grapes, figs, pecans and walnuts are
taking a welcome place upon inter­
mountain markets. The second year
after its colonization, the Hurricane
ward, or church, contributed about
S5000 in voluntary tithes, representing
a first-crop income of about $50,000.
Probable cost of the eight miles of
canal was $60,000—at least $50,000 of
it in labor. Today the income from a
single crop would more than meet the
expense of the entire project. Orig­
inally, the desert land was bought for
an average of a dollar and a quarter an
acre. It now sells for as much as $300
an acre. Jim Jepson, chief organizer
for the amazing canal, is alert and
healthy in his eighty-third year.
In 1857, while giving counsel to the
effect that it is cheaper to feed Indians

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�THE SHTURDHY EVENING POST

58

YOU’LL BE GLAD TO
MAKE YOUR FACE A

FOR
THIS EXPERIMENT
'VT’OU have everything
to gain — nothing to
lose—by trying the reJ markable new Listerine
Shaving Cream.
y
i
You. will at least get a
*
shave the equal or any
you’ve tried and the chances are that you
will get one that is a whole lot better.
Approximately 7 out of 10 men who
accepted our samples are now regular
users of this special cream.
Our biggest boosters are the tough­
beard, soft-skin fellows who used to shop
around for all sorts of creams until they
found Listerine Shaving Cream. They
say it combines the benefits of a healing
lotion and a lather that "takes the
strength out of the toughest beard in a
few seconds.”
Your razor glides over a lotion film
of glycerine, Nature’s oldest balm. There
is absolutely no tugging. No pulling.
No redness, rawness, or burning. After
the shave, your skin is cool and pliant
as a baby’s.
Risk a quarter and get a big 104-shave
tube at your druggist’s, or send lOfi in
coin and we will send you, postpaid, a
20-shave trial tube of Listerine Shaving
Cream and a genuine porcelain razor
blade container of smart design (which,
incidentally, the kids think is a dandy
toy).

Lambert Pharmacal Co., Dept. 209
2101 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo.
Gentlemen: Enclosed find lOji for which please send
postpaid, a 20-shave trial tube of Listerine Shaving
Cream and porcelain blade container.

Name____________________________________________
Address_____ ;_____________________________________
City_____ u_______

Sfflfe

_____ _

than to fight them, Brigham Young
pointed out that the terrors of the
wilderness, such as Indians, man-eating
grizzlies and uncrossable rivers, were
but temporary drawbacks. Indians
would grow accustomed to white men.
Mormon hunters would soon wear
down the grizzlies. Ways and means
would eventually be found for bridging
the more troublesome rivers. But
Brigham Young never entertained any
illusions to the effect that wilderness
fighting is a game for softies, or that
the intermountain West, even when
won, would be easy to hold.
Today there are few, if any, maneating grizzlies left in the Mormon
country. Indians no longer take the
war trail. Roads are moderately pass­
able. But the old devil, weather, stays
on. Floods and wind erosion are for­
ever menacing the farmers. Cheap
land that will grow crops becomes for­
ever scarcer. Most of the good land
accessible to water is already either in
use or held at prices beyond the purse
of a poor colonizer. The job of colony
founding was never so difficult as it is
today; the return of men to the land
never more difficult. Church leaders
realize this. They are buckling down to
the fight of all fights.
The present urge is toward cautious
expansion and the improvement of
present holdings. Gradually, the land
is being made more productive, better
to fill the needs of a fast-growing
membership. Rapid expansion or simul­
taneous movement of any great num­
ber of colonists is frowned upon by the
church.
Among the Mormons, most of the
remaining unemployed are unskilled
laborers. How to train these unskilled
workmen in the midst of complicated
labor uncertainties is the immediate
problem. The one answer seems to be a
widespread return to land. Through­
out the Mormon country, poverty and
distress have been found principally in
towns and cities, the most secure liv­
ing in farming community. Thus, the
church’s biggest job is to help more
young men and women to help them­
selves to land.
The Church Organization

It’s a yea-and-nay proposition. On
the yea side is a tradition of pioneer
hardihood which has brought under
cultivation much of the American des­
ert. There is the statistical truth that
Mormon population now has the low­
est death rate of any group in the
United States, one of the highest birth
rates among all Caucasian peoples, a
life span longer than average. Among
Mormons the proportion of college
graduates and professional degrees
likewise sets an all-American high for
any similar group. The average hold­
ing of wealth is, perhaps, the highest of
any comparable church membership.
Financially, the church is strong and
free of debt. Tithe revenues are highly
reliable. There is no salaried ministry.
Still more pertinent to the new chal­
lenge of economic insecurity is the fact
that the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints has an organization
founded to suit temporal as well as
spiritual needs. The church is actively
interested not only in farming but in
merchandising, banking and invest­
ments and manufacturing.
International headquarters are at
Salt Lake City. The church is appor­
tioned into 118 regions, or stakes,
roughly similar to counties, as admin­
istrative units. The stake, governed
by a presidency and a council of twelve,
embraces a number of wards, similar to

individual churches of other denomina­
tions. The ward is directed by a resi­
dent bishop and his council. Actual
leadership is almost entirely in the
hands of businessmen, farmers and
other professionals, who serve without
cost to the church. In all, there are
now 1080 wards with a total ward
membership of about 747,000.
Farming remains the dominant trade
of Mormon membership, with the farm­
ing communities scattered throughout
the arid and semiarid West from Can­
ada to Mexico. Water is the lifeblood
of this agriculture. Use of water is the
real foundation of Mormon security.
In its practical sense, irrigation in
the United States probably began in
Salt Lake City—just two blocks from
the church’s administrative building.
That was ninety-six years ago. Mor­
mon pioneers undertook to plow the
first dry furrow to carry water.
Scientific Irrigation

One plowshare broke. But the sec­
ond dug into the dust and hardpan,
opened a way for water which irri­
gated a first crop of potatoes. Since
then the irrigation ditch has been the
Mormon trail to security. Now irriga­
tion has changed from a frantic ex­
periment of a desert frontier to a com­
manding science. In this fact church
leadership reads a foremost hope
for continuation of Mormon selfsufficiency.
Irrigation is a tough subject. At
best, it is no certain key to success.
Its first complication begins in inter­
pretation of property rights. From a
standpoint of common law, ownership
of water involves much the same rights
as ownership of land. Mormon pio­
neering substituted the viewpoint that
ownership of water can be retained
only so long as water is put to benefi­
cial use.
Some forty years ago, the church
experiment station at Logan, Utah,
began studying uses of water on soil,
making scientific experiments to de­
termine just how much water is actu­
ally needed for making a crop.
This pioneering in the science of
irrigation has provided a new yardstick
for measuring water resources. It has
proved, for one thing, that unless the
soil is naturally rich, irrigation is usu­
ally a poor risk. Several Government
irrigation projects now current are
storing huge quantities of water which
are available only to poor land. Churchdirected research also proved that ac­
tual relation between amount of water
applied to land and crops harvested is
often affected by the law of diminish­
ing returns. That is, the first five inches
of water to the acre may make fifteen
bushels of wheat; the second five
inches only seven additional bushels,
and the third only four bushels more.
In general, returns from irrigation are
likely to increase as a given source of
water is spread over more land.
This suggests irrigation as a new
method of crop control. Dr. . John A.
Widtsoe, foremost church authority
upon irrigation, was one of the first
students to demonstrate that by cut­
ting off water from wheat immediately
before harvest time, the protein con­
tent of the grain can be materially in­
creased; that food or feed qualities of
various other crops can be materially
influenced by control of irrigation.
Scientific agencies of the church are
going further with this study. They
find that better fertilizing of land can
greatly reduce water requirements of
various crops and that quantities of
water now being lost in seepage from

September

t9S7

canals and ditches might be saved. Yet
untouched are a great many deep­
channel sources, where water is plenti­
ful, but the expense of raising it to fields
still too great.
Doctor Widtsoe, like other outstand­
ing students of the subject, believes that
persistent improvement in sources and
technique can substantially increase,
and possibly double, the present acreage
of irrigated land. This would make
possible the establishment of a great
many new farming colonies, and yield
better returns for the labor and water
fees now spent for irrigation.
For more than a century. Mormon
management has recognized the fact
that success in farming rests partly
upon towns and cities—upon the
townsman’s ability to stay employed,
to earn and to buy. Helping men and
women back to land is one of the
schemes which have already taken
more than 21,000 Mormons off Federal
relief and given assistance to, perhaps,
30,000 members in want. It has also
helped to fill twenty-four regional
storehouses for the benefit of needy
members who are willing to work for
what they eat and wear, and has found
jobs for at least 23,000 idle members.
April, 1937, marked the end of the
first year of the church security pro­
gram. For the coming year, the goal,
according to Harold B. Lee, president
of Pioneer stake and managing director
of the security plan, is “to create at
least one worthwhile rehabilitation
project for each quorum, ward, stake
and region within the church.”
Helping Them to Help Themselves

Admittedly, one year is too short a
time for final judgment or proof. But
the security plan is po novelty. In­
stead of being a new deal, church se­
curity is a deliberate return to a gospel
of pioneering days and ways, a gospel
old as the church itself. For, “the aim
of the church is to help the people to
help themselves ... to set up a sys­
tem whereby evils of the dole will be
abolished, and where independence,
thrift, industry and self-respect can
again be established among our people.
Work is to be re-enthroned as the rul­
ing principle of the lives of our church
membership.”
This statement by President Heber
J. Grant suggests the .church’s out­
spoken disapproval of prevailing prac­
tices and principles of Federal relief.
In October, 1935, about 85,000 Mor­
mons, were receiving relief—7300 from
the church, the rest from the Govern­
ment. Church leadership estimated
that between 15 and 20 per cent of the
relief takers “either did not need it or
had farms that might, if farmed, have
kept them off relief.”
But there was no immediate way of
taking all members off rehef. With
opening of the Mormon security pro­
gram, the church admonished mem­
bers to get off the WPA as soon as pos­
sible, meanwhile to “be scrupulously
careful to do an honest day’s work for
a day’s pay.”
Meanwhile the church security plan
swung into action, offering work with
payment in needed merchandise rather
than cash, and stressing the declara­
tion of First Counselor J. Reuben
Clark, Jr., that the more productive
the labor on projects can be made, the
more economically sound is the pro­
gram.
Church security work now includes
planting and cultivating gardens and
orchards, canning meats, canning and
drying fruits and vegetables, making
(Continued on Page 6OJ

�THE SHTURDHY EVENING POST

59

Ifs the hidden values that determine your moneyss worth—remember there is

No Reclaimed Rubber
In General Tires
Just 10 short years ago, America went through an
epidemic of putting reclaimed rubber in tires—
based on the false premise of rubber conservation.
America knows the disastrous results of that costly
experiment—using 3 sets of tires to go the distance
one should travel, blowouts, constant trouble.

General Tire warned motorists then that "You
can’t save rubber by using less of it.”

Today, history repeats. When crude rubber was 3c
a pound all manufacturers used it extensively. The
price of crude rubber has soared—it is up 110%.
But here is the important fact. The necessity for
using the same quantity of good rubber for the

sake of quality does not change regardless of
fluctuations in rubber prices.
Putting reclaimed rubber into a tire is as funda­
mentally wrong as the subterfuge of putting
water in milk. It saves money for the manufac­
turer, but it dilutes the quality of the entire
rubber structure.
When you buy General Tires you buy tires made
from fresh, pure, virgin crude rubber stock. Never
an ounce of reclaimed rubber.

You should know the facts. There is no economical
substitute for quality. See the General Tire dealer
today and find out how easy it is to get America’s
Top-Quality tire on your car.

THE GENERAL TIRE &amp; RUBBER COMPANY • AKRON, OHIO
In Canada — The General Tire and Rubber Co. of Canada, Timited, Toronto, Ontario

FRESH RUBBER

comes from the
rubber plantation. Nature gives
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General Tires.

RECLAIMED RUBBER is made
from tires that have run out their
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its freshness, its strength and elas­
ticity. It can never get it back.

WATER IN MILK.

Putting re­
claimed rubber into a tire is as
fundamentally wrong as putting
water in milk. It dilutes the quality
of the entire rubber structure.

SOLID RUBBER. Reclaimed rubber
is all right for the toys your children
play with. Solid rubber products
don’t need the soft, resilient strength
that pure, fresh rubber gives to tires.
© The General Tire &amp; Rubber Co., Akron, O.

�THE SJITURDHY EVENING POST

60
(Continued from. Page 58)

offer of work in return for food, shelter,

and remodeling clothing, repairing
shoes, woodcutting and establishment
of city wood yards, butchering, remod­
eling homes, building storehouses, root
cellars, furniture making and repair­
ing, community hospitalization, voca­
tional training for boys and girls, mak­
ing tractors and farm implements.
To date, twenty-four storehouses for
crop harvests, canned goods, clothing,
leather, farm tools and various other
products of relief work are completed
and in operation. In the main, these
buildings and space have been contrib­
uted by members in addition to cus­
tomary tithe offerings. These store­
houses are widely distributed through­
out Mormon territory and offer the
beginning farmer an immediate supply
of necessities, with the chance to repay
in kind rather than in cash.
Here is a typical instance: Last year
a farmer in the lower Cache Valley had
an enormous cherry crop. He sold the
first harvest while the market was
strong. When the market began to
weaken, he contributed the remainder
of the crop—about three tons—to the
local storehouse. Women of the ward
rallied for a canning bee and put the
entire three tons of cherries into cans.
It happens that the new Mormon
pioneer community near Calgary, Al­
berta, located in a great cattle country
where fruits cannot be grown, has a
great oversupply of beef and a per­
petual undersupply of fruits. So a
warehouse trade was effected—canned
beef for canned cherries. The Canadian
government made special provision for
free admission of the exchange. Rail­
roads reduced freight on the barter
goods to half.
On farms, as in towns, the Mormon
works program marches on. In addi­
tion to tillage, storage, manufacture
and education, seventy-three new tem­
ples are now being built. The church
pays about 60 per cent of total costs
from general funds. This is enough for
purchase of materials. The wards con­
tribute the remaining 40 per cent, prin­
cipally in labor, part of it given gratis,
part paid in crops or in storehouse
goods. A few of the members stiU cling to
the Federal works,rejectingthe church’s

clothes and medicine, and expressing
preference for Government cash which
they can spend as they like. To meet
this problem, the church relies most of
all upon “moral persuasion,” upon the
co-operation of members in reasoning
with the work-shy minority.
Speaking as a non-Mormon on­
looker, this reporter believes the Mor­
mon prowess of moral persuasion is one
of the most amazing of all American
phenomena. It is the invisible power
behind the entire security program; it
energizes the whole project of coloniz­
ing new land. Just now the power of
moral persuasion behind Mormon
land taking, and the security program
generally, appears to take primary
source from one individual—an ex­
tremely plain-living and plain-spoken
old man who works in an extremely
elaborate gold-and-marble office suite
in Salt Lake City.
His name is Heber Jeddy Grant.
He was eighty last November. He is
now serving his eighteenth year as
seventh president of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
The church has just celebrated its
hundred and seventh anniversary.
During more than half of this time,
Heber Grant has held responsible office
in various branches of the church. In
addition to church duties, he is presi­
dent organizer of the Beneficial Life
Insurance Company, president of Ho­
tel Utah, Utah-Idaho Sugar Company,
Zion’s Co-operative Mercantile Institu­
tion, Utah State National Bank, Zion’s
Savings Bank and Trust Company,
Deseret Book Company, all of Salt
Lake City.
JI Protege of Brigham Young

He was founder and first president
of the Bank of Utah. The bank failed,
throwing him S100,000 in debt. He
was co-founder of a farm machinery
company, now the Consolidated Wagon
and Machine Company, of Salt Lake.
He promoted building the first beetsugar factory ever to be equipped with
American-made machinery, founded a
soap factory, a daily newspaper, mill­
ing plant, library, a church mission in

I

Japan. But he estimates that his hard­
est undertaking was learning how to
sing. For years he took voice lessons,
practiced assiduously, endured criti­
cism and complaint. Now he can sing
The Flag Without a Stain practically
without a flaw.
A youthful medal winner in pen­
manship, President Grant made his
start in business by writing in longhand
such social documents as calling cards,
holiday greetings and wedding invita­
tions. He taught penmanship and
bookkeeping at the University of Des­
eret, now University of Utah.
At nineteen he became assistant
cashier, janitor, paying and receiving
teller, note clerk and bookkeeper for
Zion’s Savings Bank and Trust Com­
pany, of which Brigham Young was
then president. Signing young Grant’s
bond was, perhaps. Young’s last busi­
ness act. During the same day the
master colonizer of Mormons was
stricken, presumably, with appendi­
citis, which caused his death. Sixty
years later, Heber Grant tells the story:
“I had to give a bond of $25,000
vouching my honesty. I walked up to
the office of President Brigham Young,
and just as he opened the door with his
cape on his arm, I said: ‘President
Young, as you know, the other day I
was elected assistant cashier of this bank,
and they require a bond of $25,000
guaranteeing my honesty. I thought it
would be very appropriate for the presi­
dent of the bank to sign my bond, and
I’ve come up for your signature.’
“He smiled and said, ‘Heber, I don’t
see how in the world I can get out of
signing your bond. I said so many
good things about you at the directors’
meeting that if I refuse to sign your
bond, they’ll accuse me of not telling
the truth!’”
Soft-spoken, bearded. President
Grant looks upon an everbroadening
world. During his lifetime he has
watched the rise of all the famed build­
ings of Salt Lake—the Mormon tab­
ernacle, the great temple, church head­
quarters, statues, shrines, modified
skyscrapers. He has watched streets and
thoroughfares smother out subsistence
gardens, pastures and orchards. He has
seen the rise and prosperity of hundreds

Jieptember 4, 1937

of towns and farming communities
throughout the intermountain country,
seen millions of acres of desert made
farmable and verdant.
All this Heber Grant regards as a
logical development of truth. He con­
cedes that truth is a pretty hard word
to define. For further explanation, he
relies heavily upon a little book called
The Power of 'Truth, written by Wil­
liam George Jordan,* and often pauses
to read aloud the opening sentence:
“ Truth is the rock foundation of every
great character. It is loyalty to the
right as we see it.”
The Idler and the Laborer

Heber Grant believes in the power
of moral persuasion and believes its
foundation is truth. Truth demands
practical administration for any estab­
lishment, from a subsistence farm to a
billion-dollar church. He believes that
a continuation of colonizing is the best
possible foundation for continuation of
a solvent church. He believes that
good planning and moral persuasion
will continue to lead Mormons to the
land. But colonizers of the future
must work and hold their ground in
the manner of land takers of the past.
Mandates of the church direct that
“the idler shall not eat the bread of
the laborer.”
He believes Government relief is
bad for business, still worse for social
and spiritual stability. A Government
dole, as he sees it, is a matter of living
in an air castle. This inspires another
one of Heber J. Grant’s favorite quota­
tions from William George Jordan:
“Living in an air castle is about as
profitable as owning a half interest in
a rainbow. It is no more nourishing
than a dinner of twelve courses, eaten
in a dream. . . . The atmosphere of
air castles is heavy and stupefying
with vague hopes and phantom ideals.
The architectural error about air cas­
tles is that the owner builds them
downward from their gilded turrets in
the clouds instead of upward from a
solid, firm foundation of purpose and
energy. This diet of lotus leaves is a
mental narcotic, not a stimulant.”
♦Editor op The Saturday Evening Post, 1898-99.

GO TO OOTO
(Continued from Page 23)

almost everything, than I am now,
when I believe very little—and that
with reservations.
I have reservations, of course, when
I go to church. I cannot, for example,
go down the fine word for word with
the Apostles’ Creed. For that matter,
I do not take the church itself in my
stride, as I once did. I have seen the
ecclesiastical wheels go around and I
know that they are very much like any
other wheels. Nevertheless, when I go
to church I meet up with a great deal
that I can stiU revere—more, in fact,
than I meet up with anywhere else.
A good many of my friends have
very strange ideas about God. I never
argue with them about Him. A few of
my friends are intellectuals—ultra­
ultras. They say that in an intelhgent
man’s universe “there is no room for
God.” I never argue with them either.
But when I ask them what their “in­
telligent man’s universe” does have
room for, I stand in awe before the
things that they admit nobody knows.
On the next Sunday morning, there­
fore, I go to church. I go reverently,
because I believe in God. But if I did

not believe in Him, I would go, any­
way—out of reverence for the size of
the mystery with which the little we
know is surrounded. Then, too, I go to
church because the big idea back of what
goes on there is to encourage whatever,
in me, is good. My preacher does not
go in very much for polities and eco­
nomics. He just keeps hammering away
on right and wrong. Sometimes I think
he hammers away at me. But he is
almost always right, and I take it.
It is very much like having an an­
nual physical overhauling or seeing
your dentist twice a year. Except that
in the area where the church operates,
I think I need to be overhauled oftener
than that.
It is hard to say how much of an im­
pression the church and the preacher
make. They undoubtedly want more
honesty and patience and unselfishness
than it is possible—things being what
they are—to get. I think our preacher
would admit that. But I think he be­
lieves that it is a good idea having a
regular check-up on the ideal, even
though we keep on falling short of it.
I agree with him.

I go to church because, after having
sized things up all week by more or less
selfish standards, I am ready for an
hour in which they are sized up by
moral standards. I can generally tell
what I want to do without calling in
any outside help. When it comes to de­
ciding what is right to do, I can afford
to have some counsel and advice. I do
not think I lose anything, either, by
having my conscience poked a bit.
I suppose that nearly everybody in
my town agrees with all this. They say
that they “wouldn’t live in a com­
munity that didn’t have a church.”
Some of them get terribly steamed up
about what Russia has done to re­
ligion. They talk about “subversive in­
fluences” that are out to destroy the
church in this cpuntry. But next Sun­
day morning, when I go to church, only
the same faithful seventy-five will be
there. It seems to me that our absent
and vicarious believers ought to fish or
cut bait. The thing our church needs,
more than their defense, is their
patronage.
Some of them, of course, teU you
that they do not go to church because

they had to go so much in their youth.
I doubt if they ever had to go that
much. And I have never seen any very
great outpouring on Sunday mornings
of those who did not have to go to
church in their youth.
As for the argument, popular among
golfers, about God and the great out­
doors, all I can say is that, having done
a little Sunday-morning golfing my­
self, I know what most people get on
such occasions from the great outdoors.
They get exercise. They get tired.
They get mad. After eighteen holes, or
less, they may get a highball. To get
these things may, or may not, be desir­
able. But they are not the things that
one gets from church.
I go to church to get the things that
the church has to offer. In our little
church at the end of the street, the
trappings are not all that could be de­
sired and the technique is sometimes
poor. But I go anyway. I go because
the things that I get there are not
offered anywhere else. And I have been
going long enough to be sure, in my
own mind, that I get along better with
those things than without them.

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                <text>The reformatted text and images in the Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are for personal, not-for profit use of students, researchers, and the public. Any use must provide attribution to the Casper College Archives and Special Collections (Western History Center). While being the property of Casper College, all text, images and other materials are subject to applicable copyright laws.  Commercial use, electronic reproduction, or print publication ot text, images, or other materials is strictly prohibited without written permission. All permissions to publish must be obtained from the rights holder and are not the repository's responsibility for securing. The rights holder may or may not be the repository.  Users also agree to hold the repository harmless from legal claims arising from use of material held by the institution and made accessible in this digital repository.</text>
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Wyoming State Journal, Lander, Wyoming, Jan. 25, 1933
&gt;4"' ceased to fall and the wi^ -was
f* less furious.-. Mr. Ryder, .there­

frozen but her hand.s, feet and
! face were quite badly frosted and
for, although badly frozen,,'a.gain [
the awful ordeal thru which she
A set out in a last heroic attempt t
had passed had completely unf to. secure help. In this effort he ,
nerved her. She, however, re­
5 succeeded in reaching the. Dry |
sponded at once to the rest and
i Sandy station, but he was .’in al
care accorded her at the Dry
^ terribly exhausted condition and
Sandy station and it seemed that
waa able to give to the stock fen­
she would recover. Several days
Stage Drivers Worked Heroically to Get Thru
der,. John Thorn, -little informa- I
passed before her family at South
❖
With Passengers Who Suffered Greatly
tion as to where he had left his!
Pass learned of her plight, b,ut as ■
*
passenger, Maggie Sherlock and I
soon as the roads had been igain
(By Peter Sherlock of South Pass)
the horses and sleigh. Mr. Thorn, I
opened to travel, her stepfather,
however, gained some idea of
James Smith, went out to Dry
where the sleigh had been left, I
Sandy and brought her home, ar- j
riving with her at South Pass on !
While, the fi.rst half , of the win­ bearings, he set out again. Short­ and with a fresh team of horses,
February 11th. After her return '
ter of 1882-3 in Wyoming, had ly after the second start was he at once started out in quest of
home she continued to improve for i
not been marked by the usual se­ made, the wind Increased in ve­ the .missing girl. After searching
several days, giving rise to fond ;
vere December and January locity, the snow fell faster and the for some time, Mr. Thorn finally
hopes on the part of the faoiily
storms, there had been a number storm assumed the proportions of • saw the seat of the sleigh,, pro
i truding from, a deep snow, .drift
; and friends that she would iiot ,
of light falls of snow and the I a blizzard.
i only be completely restored 1 to i
weather, for the most, part, , had [
George Ryder was a young man, and removing the seat of;, the
complete health but that her
been cold and disagreeable, but! a Texan by birth, who had come J sleigh and digging down into, the
hands and feet would also l^a
up to January 3.0th, 1883, the i north during the summer of 1882 snow beneath it, he found .MagWhoozit No. 142
saved from the surgeon’s knil^
snow which- had accumulated on ! and he was therefore unacquaint­ ; gie Sherlock, wrapped in a buffa­
the ground, had not reached such i ed with the rigorous winter cli- lo robe, still alive, but in a semi­ could and after proceeding about There hopes, however, were d™j!
Adepth
zirtf 1^ rtasei +toi-i make
rr* a V Q it-necessary
i 4co . fO'c! mate of Wyoming. Soon after |
condition. He extrifl a mile, he came upon Mr. Stuart fined to be creully crushed as t^^
J. L. Sanderson &amp; Co. then oper- j making the second start from the I cated ,lhe sleigh from the snow, a'a lying in a bed of a deep gulch, al­ ! period of recovery was follow®!
ating a stage line, furnishing mall ( Dry Sandy station, he again lost 'speedily as possible and hifching i most burled in snow and in an al- ( by a sudden change for the worsH
and passenger service between the the road and he became so be- the team to it, he returned with ! most unconscious condition. With until on February 21st, deal®
town of Green River, on the U. P.-■ wlldered by the blinding storm, the girl to the pr^l Sandy station ! great difficulty Mr. Manning suc­ claimed her as its shining mark.H
R. R. and Ft. Washakie, 150 miles that he had no idea where he was ■Where/ Mrs. Thorn received her ! ceeded in reviving him and in get­ !
'W. J. Stuart and Al Doughert®
to the northward, .andy serving, en or what course to pursue to pro­ and tenderly chred for her, for ! ting him to Pacific Springs sta­ /were taken to Green River as sooiw
route, the towns Of South Pass, ceed on his way, or to return to several ' days, until she could be tion where first aid ti-eatment was ! as possible after the roads hadB
Atlantie-C it y :and. rLanide r,-. :to-'in ake-.'■ the'shelter of the station at Dry rernoved to her home in South ' applied to his feet, hands and face I been opened. Mr. Stuart received!
which were found to have been
■'' '
attention at Green River!
the usual winter change in mode Sandy. He drove about for some Pass. '/' *■’
of conveyance, from spring wagons hours but made little headway be­
I and Mr. Dougherty was sent to at
The .stage for South ^ass left I terribly frozen.
to sleighh On Jan. 30th. howev- cause of the snOw which the wind the station at, Big Sandy , pn the i
Mr. Clark, like Mr.. Scott, per- ! hospital in Laramie, Both ultl- i
or, a heavy snow storm set in now blowing at a terrific rate, evening of Jan. 30th with a man ! ished in the effort to reach safety. ihately recovered, but Mr. Stuart [
along the line of this route and'as .had piled in huge drifts through by' the name of Scott as driver and Mis body was found little more lost both hands, portions of both i
the stor'm' Continued throughout which the horses drawing the William V. Clark, a ranchman of ' than a mile frOm Pish creek, feet, his nose and both ears, and J
the night tand ■was unaccompanied .■sleigh, floundered with great dif- the Lander valley, as passenger, i where the sleigh was abandoned, Mr. Dougherty had one foot am­
by wifid,^ the show lay Where it ;: flculty,: Night had closed in and The snow which had been falling! but buried in a deep drift of snow, putated above the ankle and the'
fell, with the result, that by naofn- imi&gt;enetrable darkness added to all day and which continued to-1 it "was not discovered until several other at the instep. He also lost !
ng of Jah. 31st. hilltop And low- the blinding fury of the storm; the fall throughout the night, com­ weeks after the tragedy.
portions of most of the fingers of ;
.ahd were blanketed twith hnow to _ temperature; too, had dropped pletely obliterated the track and !
The stage scheduled to leave both hands. Both men were there-!
V depth of Over 12'inhheg; "
rapidly and the cold had become as darkness closed in, the driver; the station . at Bi^ Sandy
, for Green fore hoplessly crippled for the re-!
i
The schedule on the Green Rlv- intense. In spite of the intense lost the road and wandered about ! River dti’ the mOfUing of January malnder of their lives.
5r, Ft,. Washakie stage line call- cold, the- smothering snow with making little headway, until morn- 31st, with Al DOugherty as driver,
Wyoming has long been noted
3d- for the trip, one way, to be which the air was laden, was ex­ ing, With daylight, the road was delayed startiiig for several hours as ,a land of rigorous winters .
^ave been the blizzards
hade in 36 hours and this was di­ tremely wet, this being a charac­ located and the stage proceeded awaiting the arrival Of the stagej
vided into three drives of about teristic of the north east blizzard, on its way toward South Pass, ar­ : due from South Pass, but as the that have swept over the moun­
10 miles each, these being a ^day |I and the wet snow, driven by the riving at Pacific Springs . about i South'Pass stage failed to arrive, tains and across the prairies tak­
I fierce wind, adhered tenaciously noon Jan. 31st, where Mr. Stqart Mr. Dougherty started for Green ing their toll of human lives and
Jrlve between . Green River 'and
&lt;
3ig Sandy, a night drive hetween j to whatever it came in contact boardeil it to return to South.,; River in the afternoon.
He ----had leaving widespread destruction in
.
Jig Sandy and South Pass and a. Vflth .and ,^t,, once fornie^
a Pass; there were therefore on the i Proceeded on his way Only about their wake, but never since the !
iay drive between South Pass and ! sheet of ice. To face such a stage leaving Pacific Springs for j ®®von miles when the blizzard I! earliest white settiers entered this :
i;t. Washakie. ! lt.-had however, storm was. a human impossibility South Pass, Mr. Scott, the driver,/ struck him and so fierce was the !: section has it been visited by a
that he.was unable to either ii blizzard equal in intensity, duraP^'actice of the stage com- and’ to 'travel' with it, through Mr. Stuart, superintendent of the !
)any to discontinue the night deep drifts of snow,' in impene- stage company and Mr. Clark, the [SO forward or return to the Big !j tion and fury to that of 1883. No
'.five, during fhe. winter, months;’^Wable darkness, and t with Uhe :air passenger. Mr. Scott had sug- j Sandy station, and to remain record is available of the temper- j
ereby increasing the time . re- J thick,.with whirling, wind-driven gested that the stage lay over at ."^i’ere he was seemed a;imost cer-!! ature which prevailed thruout the
ired for making the through, snoyv, was almost equally impos­ Pacific Springs until the tblldwing | tain death. He knew that the Big !I storm, as no one in the region
to .60 hours, but because of sible. Under these frightful con­ morning, as he and Mr. Clifk were i Sandy river, on which the stage !I where the blizzard reached its
absence of serious, snow ditions, the team driven by Mr. weary from a sleepless night and ! station bearing that name was sit- greatest intensity, was provided
s up to the last week in Jan- Ryder became exhausted and day of travel, and signs of the im-J uated, ran two or three miles to with a spirits thermometer, but
1883, this change from sum-' when he drove into a depression, pending blizzard were already in the west of the point he had reach­ it.is known that the temperature
to winter schedule had not, filled yVith snow, he waS unable evidence, but Mr. Stuart insisted ' ed with the stage, and he there­ was far below zero as the mercury
Igne into effect. The storm.' t0 urge the horses forward and on proceeding on the way to South ' fore decided to make an effort to in the ordinary thermometers des­
^lary 3ofh prevented ttie arr", tj)pre.' the sle,igh remained until Paas, saying that as the road had ! r^.&lt;lb...t.h.e strga.m hoping , that he cended into the bulbs and
Just been staked the remainder of ! mig’llf tiien be able to fbliow 'up mained frozen for two days. Sii
g* South Pass of the stage the/s,torm was over.
^eft Pt. Washakie that ■ ' It is proHabla that Mr. Ryder, the trip could be made without the streani ',to th,e station. He ac­ ! the time of this blizzard it 1
cordingly unhitched the horses and
and was due to arrive ,at like most persons after becoming serious difficulty, ■
been the practice of old settl
ss In the. evening and be-' lo^t; had traveled, for the most
The furious north east blizzard with a Arm hold on-the traces he' ! in discussing any storm of unu
the failure of the Ft., pirt, in a Circle, as the place where was encountered shortly- after
the., v---scveiny
severity to Compare it with
,
■St stage to arrive the stage ''his sleigh was found after the stage left Pacific-Springs and al-: tng westward, with the storm hn,,.,rd nf isss

Fifty Years Ago Many Pioneers Lost Lives
When Exposed to the Terrible Cold in the

BLIZZARD OF 1883

�^^^T^nd .gloomy, ine sl^
^^Vvily pvercas},_and snow was^, which the stage road pa’^ed ’and^ Pass, but the .storm .had , now travel up stfCarh. He finally go'
BR^bt^t there was no wind ai],d he was therefore unable to recog­ reached its. height and the worn this, question straightened out ii
nize the gulch and to take advan­ out horses could no longer be in-1 his rnind, hut found that in ordei
|n.empevature, was soriiewhat
----- "
tage of
of making
wt it
XV as
I*u a
*-&gt; means
—
- c3
UUVCM to
duced
LU face
X&lt;XVC: it.
it.
X'Xg 11 V' had
Night
’ilCvVl come!
VVUltJS to follow Up the stream
oviv^Clllt he
IIC woUlc
TVWUXV
*^jve normal for
that
time
ef
-- - Sandy station, qj^ and inky darkness added ■ to j he cohipelled to face the storm t&lt;
[,'It was therefore thought! his’Way to the Dry 'Kio
Tl 1 1 and
Fti O M
.1. v _ . . _ . . n .1
■ j __ . •
2 tj rSi TVl /S ' ' ici v+
' ‘a « J ' X V 1 _ ' 1 ■
L.
[thereby saving his own/nXTlife
Ryder, driver of„ the,■. that
“
,■
,lady
, passenger the, horrors of the situation. The j ®h.uie extent' and[ this he was un
ini-en. George
~
of the young
three
men
held
a[
hurried
consul,
hble
able
to
,do.
,dq.[
He
therefore
decidec
’jge 'le'ft South Pass for Big San- I who ahardd his awful plight.
tatidh, in which it was decided to remain, where he was and hj
that morning that he would
Jjite the 'drive without serious- ■ ; Throughout the night of ' Jan. that to. face the storm for the dis- rlgprous exercise escape freezins
..ijjfticUlty. He had with him, as,■^ist the blizzard raged with un- tance of 4 tniles to the town of until the storm had abated. The
J passenger,’Maggie Sherlock, the. ■dilmihlshed ' fury. Maggie Sher­ South Pass wpuld be a physical , h’-'y ^iP^ along the east side o,
lock"Was wafnfljr clad an'd_ well impossibility, but they thought'*
: the.
’’'' riyer hfdhe the wind, to somt
eighteen year old daughter'qf Mrs.
provided
with
wraps
and
crouch
­
[extent,
and a'patch Of willows
that
they
might
be
able
to
retrace
j&gt;.net Shiith, of South Pass, who
[ growing along the banks of the
plahhed ’ gotn^ to Salt Laite City ing in the box of the sleigh, she their steps traveling with the
(fherO she intended atteudlng protected herself, ad best she storm, and reach the shelter of stream furnished a little proeccould, from the bitterly cold wind the station at Pacific Springs eight tion. He thought of trying tc
school. ' W'. J." Stuart, the super­
intendent Of the'stage company, and the whirling snow: JJt. JRyd- miles distant. They unharnessed start a fire but in that hurricane
er unhitched the horses and he the worn out horses and turned of wind and with the air a mass
was also on the outgoing stage
,'ind the stagewas loaded to ca­ spent the night in walitfng back them loose and they then set out of. wet. driving snow, he knew that
pacity, wifh'''fcuridies of long wil- andforth, beside the sleigh, in an to battle for their own lives in he .ivquld never be; able to get a
10ws^ which Mr,...Stuart, intended effort to keep;.up circulation and an effort to reach Pacific Springs. fife s.farted; therefore, fastening
using to [stake, .t^e^ tqad ajs he went withstand the penetrating death- 1 For a time the two men remained the ends of the traces of the hardealing " cold.? Both fervently J_
_ of the
______________
at_one
stakes alongside the hess Oh'one of the horse’s together
along, from Hq^'th [Pass to. Pacif­
hoped
that-with
the
light
of
day
j
poad
while
the other weqt forward, and funning his.arm thru the loop
ic 'Spriii'g^ th’e'..fir3t[ .atatiqn Out
- the
- pext stake,.!
- ' thus formed he. drove the horse
fromi. Soti'l:h ,[Fais. . The ^ '['distance the storin' would abatef.and that: until he had- found
of .Pacific fepriiigs ffpni [ South they would then be-able'to reach i when he would call td his two rbefpfe him thru the snow alongPass' was 'afou't'.'12 ’’milesi'. The shelter, or that _help.--woUld come companions and when 'they had [side the 'patch of willows oh the
staMrt.g"[.d'7th®.
whs done by to them, but theTnorning of Feb., come up to him he would again I hahk of the stream and forward
pla’nting. 'a if&gt;lllp^*'.upfight‘in the 1st broke with no cessation lir the go forward and locate the next! and back he drove and, followed
sndV," ^!' iiife'rvals’’of '26[['Or .30 fury of the elements and the storm stake, but as the progress made [ and stumbled'afUf the horse thrufeet, along the side or the road continued with undiminished in­ in this way was, very- slow and as [ piit the night and the next day and
and the purpose was to enable the | tensity throughout that day and Scott and Clark felt ■ that they f the night following, until at last
stage dri^r .to follq^ the road in the night which followed. Dur­ could not long endure the terrific; on Fehruafy 2nd the storm modsevere storm ~or when the track ing the day, Mr. Ryder made sev­ storm, they set out Saying the [ efated.
had become obliterated bjr, heavy eral futile attempts to make his case was one in which each man,' Al Dougherty was a young man
falis of sno'W.' This was the first way to the Dry Sandy station, but should strive to save himself, an(li of powerful physique, but his
trip for the winter of ,a sleigh ov­ each time, he returned to the leaving Stuart who because of his hands and feet were badly frozen
anxious buffalo overcoat and heavy cloth­ and he was nearly exhausted by
er'th.e road and'its prdgrOss was sleigh, to report to his
retarded, to some extent, by the passenger, the failure of his ef­ ing was unable to keep pace with the terrible experience thru which
work of Staking the road .and the fort; he also got Miss Sherlock on them. None of the three men he, had passed. He therefore
depth Of the nfe'W unpacked snow. one of the horses and mounting succeeded in reaching - Pacifi&lt;| realized that if he would save his
• life,he must seek aid without de­
It -was therefore nearly noon when the other horse himself, they Springs during the storm,
On February 2nd Rafter thq day, and with this end in view, he
the station at Pacific Springs was started out, hoping to be able to
on
reach the Dry Sandy station
blizzard had subsided,sJoe Johnl started up the stream driving the
reached. [ ["
'”
HCre ilTr. ■Stuart remaihed in­ horseback; but this too proved un­ son, the stocktender ^t * Pacifii i horse before him and clinging tc
successful and returning to the Springs started on foot’ifor South i the traces of the harness as he had
tending to await the incoming
remain Pass and a short distanch, from the
done for the proceeding forty
stage and to. return, with it, to sleigh, they decided to
there
until
the
storm
had
passed,
South Pass. A change of horses [
road on top of the dividC between hours, but the snow was deep and
which they accordingly did.
Pacific Springs and the Sweetwater! .horse and man were worn out alfor the outgoing stage, was had
'With the dawn of day, on Feb. rlver. about three and one halt mostto the point of collapse,
at Pacific Springs and’the driver,
Mr. Ryder, with his youfig lady 2nd, the storm gave signs of miles from Pacific Springs, hi therefore, progress was slow.
passenger, proceeded on their way breaking. The cold was still in­ found.the trozen and lifeless body ;Mai|y times; the struggling man
for the next drive of 11 miles, to tense, but the snow had almost of Scott. Loyal Manning, also ai lost his hold on the traces and
employee of the stage company a| fell in the snow, but with desper­
the station at Dry Sandy. This
Pacific Springs had left the stai ate tenacity, he each time regained
drive was made without serio-us
tiOh a short time after the depart his feet and again securing his
incident’, but travel Was slow be­
ture of Mr. Johnson and made hij^ hold on the - traces he once more
cause of the constantly increasing
way to the top of the divid^ moved slowly forward. Within
defith of the sndw which had con­
toward Sweetwater, thinking thaj two hundred yards of the station,
tinued to fall throughqhf the day.
he might possibl}^.; find spuieon^ ' at Big Sandy, he fell and it seem­
By the time the Dry Satidy station
had been reached, the day was
[ who had been caught in the storr^ ed to him that the end of the
well Spent, and to add to the
[ and who would be in need of a^ struggle had been reached as he
gravity of’ the situation, a strong
! sistance. When he had reached was now so utterly exhausted that
north east wind had sprung up
! a high emminance,'comm,anding d he could not regain his feet, he
and the snow had commenced to
good view of the surrounding however, made one desperate ef­
drift. It would have been the
country, he saw on a. hillside some fort and crawling on his hands and
part' of wisdom for’the driver to
distance off to the north west ft knees reached the station in that
have remained at the Dr'S; Sandy
dark object. He started toward way.
station until the storm had abated,
this object which he later found
When George Ryder reached the
'But Mr, Ryder insisted on going
to be only a dark rock which had station at Big Sandy, his hands,
^rward, and after securing a
been swept bare by the wind, buj feet and other portions of his
kange of horses, he set out, with
while traveling toward this object, body were found to have been ter­
■passenger, on the next drive of
he discoverd a line of indistincjl ribly frozen, and although Mr. and
^H|ailes to the station on Little
! marks in the snow, and believing Mrs. Thorn did everything within
He had proceeded only a
! that these might be footprints Of their power for him, it was evi­
^^^^^^ance when he lost the
[ some one traveling thru the snoW dent from the first that he could
after some difficulty he
during the storm, and that thp not survive his awful experience.
the Di'y Sandy station,
footprints had been nearly obliter­ He died on the third day after
^^^^^Believlng that be could
ated by the drifting snow, he fol- [ reaching the station. Maggie Sher­

after securioi bie

Whoozit No, 137 S

' lowgd the line »»

cipsely »» b( lock bad not b?ep

so sortousiy

�Bridger also named Alum creek
a tributary of the Yellowstone
One 7

in cjj

'^day he crossed a creek and rode
several miles out into the prairie.
The return journey seemed only
about half the distance of his out­
going trip, and his horse went lame
He dismounted to look at his ani­
mal’s feet and discovered that they
had shrunk to pin points. He tasted
some water near by and found it
heavily charged with alum. He at­
tributed the shrinkage of the dis­
tance and the condition of his
horse’s feet to the astringent quali­
ties of the alum water, and named
the creek accordingly. Alum creek
it is to this day.

What Daniel Boone was to Ken-1
^cky Bridger was to Miiiilwmi'THII
' ' . He was the true type of
i mountain man. He was one of the
best of the fearless generation which
scouted out the obscure trails, out­
guessed the Indians at their own
game, and made the way clear for
the more settled life of the pioneers
who were to follow. Bridger deserves
a high place in AtoaMaMb nail of '
fame^
Colter he was tli&gt;n»&lt;i»it.
' white
known to have visited the
Yellowstone National park, his per­
sonal knowledge of the wonderland
dating back to 1829&lt;fff
&lt;^Eridger haa'^seEIimany wonderful
things in the west, of which he told
j his friends, but the public was inclineej to doubt his veracity. So,
when he tried to inform his ac­
quaintances on the lower Missouri,
where he would go occasionally with
a boatload of furs, of tl^ scenicmarvels of the Yellowstonejlaiis, he'
TOS laughed out of countenance.^
^ne of the stories credited to him
had to do with the celebrated obsid­
ian cliff, of black volcanic glass,
familiar to tourists who have visited
the park. Bridger claimed to have
discovered it on a hunting trip. His
story was that one day he was in
the park hunting. He came up to
a bull elk of gigantic proportions
which, apparently, was grazing only
a short distance from him. He took
careful aim at the animal and fired.
To his astonishment, and he was a
dead shot, the elk did not appear
to have been wounded, and paid no
i attention to the report of the rifle.
I He shot again, with the same result,
i Four times in all he fired, missing
each time. The elk continued to
graze undisturbed, and paid not the
slightest attention to Bridger. Dumfounded, he rushed toward the elk.
crashing into a wall of transparent
glass. He walked around t^e glass
cliff, but the elk had disajjpeared.
Then he walked back and the elk
was again grazing within a few
feet of him. He repeated the per­
formance with the same result. Sev­
eral miles away and just discerni■ ble, he saw his elk. The obsidian
glass, according to his explanatiorx 7
was a telescopic lens and brought
the elk up to within a few feet of
him.

snciksrffianr-iupidiy

'■Another Bridger story was about
a hot lake which he discovered in!
the Yellowstone park. Thousands of i
young ducks covered its surface.!
When he got to the lake shore he
noticed that every few minutes more!
young ducks would pop up out of
the water in every direction. He
found that the mother duck laid'
her eggs in the warm water, which
hatched out the young ducks, and
as they freed themselves from the
shells they would pop up to the
surface. The lake was a natural in­
cubator.
"Along the shores of the Yellow-1
stone lake are several immense
springs which discharge boiling wa­
ter into the lake. About the place
where the hot water flows into the
lake it lies several feet thick above
the cold water, on account of the
difference in specific gravity be­
tween the hot and cold water.
Bridger’s story was that he would
bait his fish hook, and with weights
on his hne, sink it through the hot
and into the cold water, when he
had hooked his trout he would pulli
it into the hot water just above!
and let it remain there until it wa«i
cooked.
____
. —Xhese wereia fe^df 'thFstbfiM
with which old Jim Bridger regalfd.
the tenderfeet living in
and other Missouri river towns, oni
his occasional trips back to civili­
zation. Because of them he made a!
Munchausen reputation for himself.
So when he told the world of the
wonders of the Yellowstone park,
along in 1835, his story QiUih£_ri»F
was discredited, and no one
would believe him. He went to the
newspapers and publications of the
time with his narrative, but the edi­
tors laughed at him. One western
newspaper, which had ridiculed his

Describefl EcW’Vtvidly
Bridger also told of a remarkable!
echo, near a spot where he frequent­
ly made camp. According to hisi
story, it took the words thrown;
against the cliff just six hours to
come back after utterance. When
he was retiring he would say to the
cliff, “jrane to get up!” Six hours
later, at a time he wished to arise
, from his slumbers, his own words
would awaken him.

Another of his stories was to the effect that while
Ore^^lalTS^ the bweetwater country on his way to the
S
valley at a point about five miles east
o&lt; Devil s Gate, he picked up a stone and threw it across
the river at an antelope. He missed the antelope and ^h^
stone sank into the ground. Several years later, when he
returned, the mistle he had thrown across the river had
grown to, such proportions that it was as large as a goodsized h^se, and finally grew into what is now known^as
which covers an area of twenty-five
acres and it its highest point is 193 feet.

years after the derisive publication^
apologized to Bridger editorially
after the knowledge of the existence,
of the Yellowstone park became!
generally known. &gt;)
I

sd

'tiaL

�1

/*

&lt;

CAPTAIN BOKKEVILLSli ADVENTUBSft

-——.

*'

Most Interesting, Fascinating and Enchanting Stories of
the Far Vilest -Ever Published.
Mors than a century ago Captain Benjaioin L.3. Bonneville re­

turned to the ^JBl^tes" from the "Fur Country of the Far West”, after
a ■Bhr_99 year’s experience of hardships in the mountains among the

trappers and traders and the Indians. The expedition had coat the

people who furnished the money for the enterprise more than $75,000.
Bonneville himself had lost his standing in the army by violating

end overrunning his leave of absence{ he was generally discredited,
and he was decidedly a disheartened man. Today he is looked upon by
'^&lt;njany'/as the moat popular "explorer” that ever invaded this then wild,
{rv^

savage country, aed the man who crowned this venturesome, valorous,
distinguished hero v/ith so much fame and glory by transcribing his

jumbled notes into a fascinating,bewitching story v/as never west of

the hiissouri^Rivar at St. Louis.
It was mors than a century and eighty years before Bonneville
was bom that Shakespeare wrotsi "Some men are bom great; some

achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them." Many

historians and authors claim that Bonneville came under ths lattsr
classification; that the wily captain not only had greatness thrust
upon him, but that he was a speculative adventurer and a deceptive

faker.

Whatever may have been the captain's true standing as an ex­
plorer or a fur trader, it cannot be denied that he performed a great
and lasting service to thia wonderful west, even though all may be
,4
true that his opponents have written
him.
Benjamin Louis Bulalie de Bonneville was 'oom in Francs April

14, 1796. He came to America with Thomas Pains and secured a cadet-

,

�ship at West Point and graduated in 1819. He returned to France in
1825 with General LaFayette where he remained several years and upon

his return to America he was assigned to duty on the western frontier.
He secured a leave of absence from August, 1831, to October, 1833, with

permission to explore the Far West, The letter from the War Department

specified that he vzas to "explore the country to the Rocky fountains
and beyond, with a view to ascertaining the nature and character of
the several tribes of Indians inhabiting those regions} the trade which

might be profitably carried on with them; the quality of the soil, the
productions; the minerals, the natural history, ths climate, the geog­
raphy and topography, as well as the geology of the various parts of
the country."

Alfred Seton, a Kew York capitalist, provided the funds for the
Bonneville expedition. One hundred ten men composed the party, and

they had the finest assortment of goods and equipment that was ever
taken into the mountains, tiiagons drawn by oxen and mules - were ths

first to go forth on an expedition of this nature. They left Fort

Osage, ten miles from Independence, tiseouri, on Lay 1, 1832. The
route was up the valleys of ths Platte and Sweetwater, through South
Pass, and then on to the Green river valley.
Bonneville erected his first permanent trading post on the
west shore of Green river, about five miles above the mouth of Horse

creek. In history this was called Fort Bonneville, but the trappers

called it "Fort Nonsense” or "Bonneville’s Folly", because of the
fact that the winters at thia point were so severe the Indians and
trappers sought a more convenient climate, and Bonneville, for the

same reason, after he made the discovery of his mistake, set out for
a new location, and finally established his headquarters on the Lemhi

�fork of tha Salmon river. After hunting and trapping in this part of
the country all winter and meeting with many disappointments and

some misfortune, Captain Bonneville in the early spring set out for
the headvzatera of Powder River. Here ho was oeaieged by the Aricara
Indians who pilfered and robbed him of horses, furs and supplies,

and as a result of his year's work, the captain hadyjbwfe about twenty-

three packs of beaver, and on^ a few horses.

In the valley of the Godin river, and on the plains of the
Snake river, where can be seen the Three Buttes to the south and the

Three Totons to the far southeast, on June 22, 1833, Nathaniel J.
Wyeth met one of Bonneville's clerks, a man named Hodgkiss, and by

him Wyeth sent a letter to Bonneville proposing a joint hunt in the
country south of the Columbia river as far as the vicinity of the

Spanish settlements in California. The proposition was accepted Iqr
Bonneville, and Wyeth joined Bonneville on July 2, at a point about

eighteen miles east of Henry river, where they remained for five
days, writing letters and making arrangements for ths hunt. It was

arranged that Wyeth should lead the party. In less than two weeks,
however, the//pgwpoiaiittun Qmd fitl.lan thrsugh, and Bonneville continued

on his own resources.
In a letter written by Fontenelle to KcKenzie at the Green

River rendezvous on September 25, 1833, he says* •'Bonneville, seeing

that he is nearly gone, playa the devil with us. He offers to common
hands $350 to $1,000 per annum, knowing that when the time is up he
r
will pay them with wind. Kany of the men that I have ^ught out, having

received a larger allowance in ^S^' Louis, have left ma ... He
(Bonneville) is out of goods and can get no supply thia year. I am ir&gt;

hopes we shall get clear of him ... If he continues as ha has done,

�$80,000 will not save him,"
Bonnsville*8 leave of absence would expire in October, but

in ths face of this he did not return to the '^Htates" with his
meagre returns, but detailed his first assistant, M.S. Carre, udio
was to deliver them at St. Louis, while he decided to inaugurate

his fall hunt in the Crow country, but in order to make a "thorough

exploration of the Great Salt Lake and the country around it," he

sent out one of his men, I.R. ffalker, by name, whom he considered
coispetent to make the important "exploration." But on thia “explor­

ation" Bonneville's instructions to Walker were to "Xeep along the
shores of the lake, and trap in all the streams along the route,"

Walker took with him on his Salt Lake "expedition" forty men, and he
was to be absent a year. Bonneville was to meet him the following

summer in ths Bear river valley.
The Walker party departed for the Salt Lake country on July

24, 1833. It is evident they had explored sufficiently the "Great
Salt Lake and the country around it* in a vary short time, for on

iUigust 7, they set out in a westerly course through the Salt hake

desert and after several weeks* travel over the barren plains they

reached the Hxuabolt river. Indians were encountered while following

down this stream, and a number of the red man were killed by the
trappera because of their thieving propensities. This enraged the

Indians, and a few days later a battle ensued in vhich thirty-nine
of the rod men were killed, and only one or two of the white men
slightly wounded with arrows. This ended the trouble with the mis­

chievous Indians, and the men proceeded on their westward way, to be
hindered only by the mountain fastnesses. They encountered many hard­

ships, found no game, and finally were compallad to kill their poor

�horaea for food. After weeks of wandering, suffering and consuming
seventeen of their horses, they reached the foot of the main range
of the Sierra/l^ountaina on October 30. They then came upon the
Yosemite river, which they followed and finally, in the middle of

Hovamber, reached the San Francisco bay, then traveling in a

southerly direction the party on Kovember 20, first caught sight
of the Pacific ocean,
fhe Walker party remained in sunny California during the
winter and on Fabniairy 14, 1834, started on their return trip to

again join Bonneville in the Rocky Mountains. They encountered
nearly as much hardship on their return trip as they did on their

westward journey, and they again came in contact with the same

tribe of Indians with whom they had had trouble^another
battle was fought and fourteen Indians ware killed and mAwy were
wounded.

Three of the man ware slightly wounded. The party made

its way up the Snake river, and on June 1, arrived at the appointed
rendezvous on Bear river where they were mot on June 20, by Captain

Bonneville. Ths California trip by the Walker party was a disappoint­
ment to Bonneville, and he deamad it a great failure, for the

•‘Great Salt Laka and the country around it* had not been sufficient­

ly explored, and no furs ware brought in.
On July 25, 1833, the captain and his full party left the
rendezvous fa* the headwaters of the Sweetwater rivar and arrangements

ware made to transport what furs they had to^^ Louis. After much
maneuvering to avoid the troublesome Indians, the captain finally re­
turned to headquarters on the Snaka river where his men were to trap,
while he decided to explore the Columbia river. After toiling over

the mountains, having numerous encounters with the thieving Indiana,

�and meeting with great hardships, Bonneville and his two men on liar ch

4, 1834, reached the Hudson's Bay post near walla'Walla, where they
were graciously received, but they ware denied supplies, because

Bonneville was considered a competitive trader to the Hu/idson’s Bay

company, and not an explorer for the United States government. On
account of being wholly without supplies, Bonneville was precluded

from further descending the Columbia river, and on liarch 6, started
on his return trip to his winter camp on the Fortnauf, arriving

there on May 12.

From hare the reunited party left for tha Bear river valley
rendezvous, whara they found Walker and his party, and soon after

Cerra ratui*ned from

Louis with the annual supplies.

Thera was

general rejoicing among tha mountain men on account of once more

being united and they indulged in the customary celebration of
feasting and drinking, but not so v/ith the leader. On account of the
poor supply of furs gathered during the year there was but gloom for

him, and it was ths general opinion among the traders and tappers
that another year "would ba the end of him in the mountains", for

the niuabsr of furs that had been sent to the market would not bring
a sufficient sum to pay the man half the money due them.

In the face of the gloom and the past two unsuccessful years

the captain decided to stay another year in the mountains. Tha furs

that had been accumulated the past winter were sent to

Louis and

hia men were sent to different sections of the trapping country, and

Bonneville himself decided upon another trip to the Columbia. He
left on July 3, with twenty-three men, going via the Snake river,
and in due time reached the Columbia about fifty miles below the

Walla Walla, but tha Indians showed their prefaranca for the Hudson's

�Bay company, and ones mors the expedition proved unaucGsssful—or
rathar a complete failure, and the captain once more faced toward the
east, and after a great deal of suffering and hardship they arrived
on the Snake river on October 30, and on November 17 they arrived at

the caches on Baar river, and spent the winter on the upper ©id of

that river, where game was plentiful and hardship and want was un­
known, The party was visited by many bands of Indians, and occasion­

ally some white trappers. In the early spring of 1835, Captain Bonne­
ville commenced to make arrangements to leave the mountains, and on

April X he broke camp on Bear river. On June 10, ha had arrived at a
point a short distancevto the east of the Wind River Jfiountaina. On

June 22, he reached the rendezvous on the forks of Wind Jtiver where
he was joined by his men who had been sent to the Crow country, and
the united party here celebrated the Fourth of July, after which
Bonneville started on his journey toward the states, arriving at (S^

Louis on August 22, 1835.
The captain’s leave of absence had expired in October, 1833,
and he was dropped from the rolls of the anay on May 31, 1834, He

immediately set out to be re-instated, but there was a strong oppo­

sition to his re-instat ament among the aray authorities, but on
April 19, 1836, he was re-instated by President Jackson "on account

of his contributions to geographical knowledge of the mountain coun­
try, and for the further reason that his expedition had been at his

own expense and none whatever to the United States government,"
After being re-instated. Captain Bonneville served in the Seminole
and Mexican wars. He was wounded in the latter war.

It is said that his sympathies were with the secessionists

during the Civil War, but he remained loyal to the Union, In due

�time ha was advanced to idajor and later to Lieutenant Colonel, than

to Colonel and finally to Brevet Brigadier General on liarch 13, 1865.
Soon after the Civil War he retired from the army and made his
home at Fort Smith. He was married twice, end died June 12, 1878, and

hie remains ware interred in Belle-fontaine cemetery at St. Louis.

Commercially, Bonneville’s expedition was a failure, for the
captain was not trained in business, especially to compete with ths
Hudson’s Bay and the other companies that were then in the fur trad­

ing business, for he held himself above the base methods resorted to

by the other traders. He was always hospitable and quite popular
among the Indians as well as the whites. During his four years in
the mountains not one of his men were lost and not and Indian was

killed by his orders.
Xt is claimed that the two maps of the western country he

furnished the goverament wore "filched" from the maps made by Albert
Gallatin the year before, but Bonneville has been given full credit

for them, and it was these maps, mors than anything else, that caused
President Jackson to re-instate him in the army,

No doubt ths greatest debt the people of the United States owe
to Bonneville of a historical nature was the furnishing to Washington
Irving the notes from which ware written that intensely interesting

description of the Rocky Uountains, which, when it first appeared

bora the title of "The Rocky Uountaina, or Scenes, Incidents and Ad­
ventures of the Far Y/estj Digested From the Journal of Captain B.L.B,

Bonneville, of the Army of the United States, and Illustrated From

Various Other Sources," In later years the revised and re-printed edi'fei
bear the name of "Adventures of Captain Bonnevilla,"

**By tha Eternal

’

S'?

I’ll

that you are ra-instatad to your

�conmaad. For this valuable aarvica to the War Department and the

counti*y you deserve high promotion.'* Thia was the exclamation of
President Andrew Jackson when Bonneville showed him his two maps of

the mountain country, one of them being the region about the sources

of the laissouri, Yellowstone, Snake, Green, Wind and Sweetwater Rivers,
which also included the region of the Great Salt Lake. The other map

included the country westward to the Pacific ocean.
Albert Gallatin had prepared maps the year before which con­

tained nearly all the important features of the Boiuxeville maps, but
in some instances ths Gallatin maps were more nearly correct than
BonnevilH’s, It is evident that Washington Irving’s emballieliment of

Bonneville’s adventures into high-class literature mads them mors in­
ters sting and gave the captain more fame than his actual discoveries

during his ^Exploration" of the Mountain Country of four years.

It will be noted on the maps furnished by Bonneville that he

gave the name Youta (Stau) to the Great Salt Laks, but posterity has
very propsrly refused to recognize that great body of water undsr that

name.
Additional light discovered since Washington Irving wrote
Bonneville’s Adventures disclose many discrepancies and considerable

presun^tuousness on the part of Captain Bonneville upon his "explor­
ations'* and "discoveries", which are too numerous and too extended to
mention hers.

It may be said in Captain Bonneville’s favor, however, that he

was a popular leader of men on his expedition to the Mountain /dwntry,
and that he managed the men in his party with open and splendid judg­

ment, and during his four years in ths mountains not a man of his

party lost his life, while great numbers of men from other companies

�lost thair lives through sickness and being killed by the Indians.
Bonneville was popular with the Indians, and although they robbed

him and imposed upon him, he never killed any of them and seldom had
a dispute with them. Ho never furnished liquor to the Indians to in­

duce them to trade with him, and this, no doubt, was one of the con-

tributing factors for his expedition^ being a complete failure from
a comercial standpoint. It was the rule among the Indians in those
early days to trade with no one who would not furnish them with

enough Tire water” for a week or ten day’s debauch. "Mo fire water,*
no trade*, was ths universally adopted slogan among all the tribes
of ths red men.

iill through life Bonneville was lucky. -Even his unsuccessful
expedition to the Mountain^pduntry proved to be his most successful
adventure, for his luckiest day was when he met Washington Irving,
who took his notss and worked them into one of ths most interesting,

fascinating and enchanting atories of the Far West that has ever been

published.

Alfred

Mokler, Author

\

Bibliography}
Washington Irving’s "Adventures of Captain Bonneville."
Putnam n.d
Hiram M. Chittenden’s "History of the Fur Trade of the Far V/est."
Harper 1902

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                <text>Lander Journal</text>
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                <text>" other newspaper articles and captions, and a paper titled "Captain Bonneville, a Speculative Adventurer: Most Interesting, Fascinating and Enchanting Stories of the Far West Ever Published."  </text>
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                    <text>The question has often been asked how the town of Greybull and the river hard by

L
wore gibon such a strange appelation. There are several versions, but I will tell you

of an old legend, and I will tell it to you as it was told to me in the summer of 1901
while C. H. Townsend and I were traveling by team and buokboard through the Big Horn
country. Readers of thia interesting and informative daily column may take it for what

it ia worth—believe it or not, as you wish.
* ♦ ♦

This is the story: In the very, very early days a gray buffalo bull ranged in

the Absaroka valley, along what is now known as the Greybull river, feeding on the

luscious grasses of the broad, verdant meadows. In this valley ranged wild animals of
many kinds, because there was always an abundance of feed, and the water was good. This

was the only gray bull that had ever been seen in that part of the country by the red

men. It was considered a good omen.
♦ » ♦

Arapooish, chief of the Crow tribe, who had possession of the vast Absaroka domain

issued an edict that the extraordinary animal, which excited so much wonder and admira&gt;
tion among his people, should not be molested or harassed in any way. In honor of the
bull Arapooish named the stream of water in the valley "Greybull," After a number of

years, as must all living things, the bull died. The carcass was skinned and the pelt

was made into a beautiful rug for Arapooish, which was placed in the center of the great
chief’s tepee. Only the most honored guests were allowed to tread upon it.
• ♦ *

In a very few months after the death of the deeih ef the bull, which had been
held in such high reverence and awe, hard luck, disater and death overtook the Crow

tribo. Came the Sioux, the Cheyenne, the Blackfoot and the Pawnee Indians from the east
and the south. The Absaroka country and the Crow tribe wore encircled by the invading

enemy. Hany of the Arapooish fighting men were killed. Their horses were stolen and
several hundred Crow children were carried away. Young squaws were captured and forced

to become the wives end slaved of the hated Sioux and their allies.
♦ ♦ ♦

Forced to retreat, after many moons of hard fighting, Arapooish and what was left
of his people, established themselves on land farther to the north. The invaders took

possession of the Absaroka country end held it for many years. Although, by conquest,
the ownership of the rich hunting ground was changed to the Sioux and theiriallies, the

name of the stream given by the Crow chieftain, remained unchanged.
* * *

Later came the white man from the east, far beyond the 'ather of the Waters. The
great government these pale faces represented gave to the rod man allotments, annuities,
reservations, pensions, chatties, schools, missions, liberty, and everything under the

�- 2 -

sun that could be given for their comfort, happiness and convenience, in exchange for
their hunting grounds, which were now almost depleted of game. The red man accepted
the generous gifts from the Great V^hite Father, but they wanted to "eat their cake and

still have it." It cost the United States givernment billions of dollars end the lives
of more than a million white men, women and children to convince the red man of his error.

* • *
After years and years of warfare between the Indians end the United States government,
the Absaroka country, the fertile valley and the placid stream in the Big Hom Basin re­

tained the name given it by the Crow chieftain, Arapooish.
« * *

Translated from the Crow language, Absaroka, means sparrow hawk, or the land of the

Crow. The Cx*ow tribe was not numerous, end probably did not number more than 10,000 in

their most flourishing days, but their land was the richest hunting ground in the Great
Northwest country, and it was considered the most pleasant place in the vast Rocky Moun­

tain region to live. The Crow Indinas were physically and morally the best of the West­
ern Indians, and in proportion to their numbers they possessed more and better horses

than any of the other tribes.
• ♦ ♦
Absaroka was the valley and watershed of the Big Horn and the Little Big Horn

rivers, and it extended considerably to the eastward, including the valleys of the
Rosebud, Tongue, Powder, Sweetwater and Platte rivers, as well as a strip of territory

on the north bank of the Yellowstone. Arapooish was chief of the Crow tribe for many

years, and in addition to being friendly to the whites, he was always loyal to his own
people and their country. That he was possessed of great wisdom may be judged frcm the

following eulogixan:
» * ♦

"The Crow country," he said, "is a good country. The Great Spirit has put it

ex­

actly in the right p&gt;abe. While you are in it you fare well; whenever you go out of it,

whichever way you travel, you fare worse. If you go to the south, you have to wander
over great, barren plains; the water is warm and bad, end you meet the fever and ague.
To the north it is cold; the winters are long end bitter; with no grass you cannot keep
horses there, but must travel with doge. What is a country without horses.* On the Colum­

bia they are poor and dirty; they paddle about in canoes, and eat fish. Their teeth are
worn out; they are always taking fish bones out of their mouths. Fish is poor food. To
the east, they dwell in villages; they live well, but they drink the muddy water of the
Missouri—that is bad. A Crow's dog would not drink such water. About the forks of the

Missouri is a fine country; good water; good grass; plenty of buffalo. In summer it is
almost as good as the Crdw country, but in winter it is cold; the grass is gone, and
there is no salt weed for the horses.

• * *
r
V**

The Crow country is exactly^the right place. It has snowy mountains and sunny pl»i«5^*

�all kinds of climates and good things for every season. When the summer heats scorch the
prairies, you can draw up under the mountains, where the air is sweet and cool, the grass
fresh, and the bright streams come tumbling out of the snow-banks. There you can hun^ the

elk, the deer, and the antelope, when their ekins fre fit for dressing; there you will

find plenty of white bears and mountain sheep. In the autumn, when your horses are fat

and strong from the mountain pastures, you can go down into the plains and hunt the buffalo,
or trap the beaver on the streams. And when winter comes on, you can take shelter in the

woody bottoms along ths rivers; there you will find buffalo meat for yourselves, and cot­
tonwood bark for your horses; or you may winter in the Wind River valley, where there is

salt weed in abundance. Tes, the Crow oountzy is eaakly in the right place. Everything
good is to be found there. There is no country like the Crow country."
* ♦ ♦
It was some time after the Crow Indians lost possession of their valuable lands
that Port Reno and Port Phil Kearny were established, and soldiers were stationed at

these posts for the protection of ths white people who were passing through that part
of the country over the Bozeman Trail, but the Sioux and the Cheyenne stole their horses

end killed the defenseless emigrants, who believed that the Indians would respect the
ft
treaties signed at Fort Lramie by the heads of the different tribes. These forts were

as cities of refuge in a boundless wilderness, but it was not long until the hostile
such
Indians had congregated iiv'great numbers that the soldiers and forts were attacked by
large bands of Indians, which finally resulted in the Petterman massacre.
* * *
* in*

* this *perti *ef *the *eewntry *wae 1‘absndened *by * the *white *peep le * *

When I made my first trip into the Big Horn country a few months more than forty-

two years ago there was no town of Greybull, and only a few Bettered settlements in that
vast territory. The land where the thriving little city of Greybull now stands was as

free as the sky above and primeval as the redman's trail. It was still a wilderness. But

in the space of two score years flourishing settlements throughout the Big Horn Basin
have developed into bustling trade centers. Their patterns of paved streets, public
squares, comfortable homes, substantial business blocks, factories, modem school build­

ings and churches ^ave advanced by stages into numerous little cities of charm and beauty.

�Block

Precinct

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                <text>The reformatted text and images in the Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are for personal, not-for profit use of students, researchers, and the public. Any use must provide attribution to the Casper College Archives and Special Collections (Western History Center). While being the property of Casper College, all text, images and other materials are subject to applicable copyright laws. Commercial use, electronic reproduction, or print publication ot text, images, or other materials is strictly prohibited without written permission. All permissions to publish must be obtained from the rights holder and are not the repository's responsibility for securing. The rights holder may or may not be the repository. Users also agree to hold the repository harmless from legal claims arising from their use of material held by the institution and made accessible in this digital repository.</text>
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                    <text>DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS

Bulletin, 1928, No. 8.

INDIAN MISSIONS
of the

UNITED STATES

�INDIAN MISSIONS of the UNITED STATES
AT HEART, the American Indian, as may be said of most

primitive peoples, is essentially a devout person, his
sacrifices, his fasts, his fetishes, his ceremonies being
most rigidly adhered to, having predominence over all other
matters of merely temporal importance. He acknowledges
the existence of a Supreme Being, appeals to Him in matters
of importance to himself and his tribe, and expects to spend
the life beyond in accordance with his merits. To him, re­
ligion as introduced by the whites wa.s no new thing; the
dogma was changed, but it was simply a variation of the old
theories and the old ceremonie.s of his fathers, and in this
variation the attraction lay.
Missionary efforts among the Indians date from the
earliest acquaintance of that race with the white man. Most
particularly were Spain and France aggressive in their mis­
sionary labors, many of the early explorers or voyageurs
being themselves representatives of their churches and
countries in an official capacity, their work being under the
direct supervision of their governments. The Spanish mis­
sions were propagated by the Franciscan Fathers, and the
French by the Jesuits, the former coming into the country
through the south, and the latter through the north.
The earliest records are those of 1542, when Coronado, in
search for the Seven Cities of Cibola, was accompanied by
his priests in his explorations among the tribes of Mexico
and as far north as the present state of Nebraska.
- It was not until a century later that the first Protestant
missions were founded in New England, under the super­
vision of John Eliot, of the Congregational Church. It has
been noted that England left her missionary efforts to the
philanthropically-inclined individuals or to organized
societies.
/ The early missionaries contributed not only to the religiou,s advancement of the Indians, but historical and geo­
graphical matter,s of importance were not neglected, pre­
serving most valuable material which would otherwise have
been lost to posterity. The archives of the old Spanish
missions of the Southwest and of the French missions of
Canada and the Great Lakes region are replete with in­
valuable manuscripts, maps of early explorations, diaries of
the early discoverers, notes on the habits, languages, and
characteristics of the tribes when their first acquaintance
was made by the whites.
1

�2

INDIAN MISSIONS OP THE UNITED STATES

The white man’s civilization was advanced by planting
colonies on the frontier, placing the white race in direct
contact with the primitive red man; the very outposts were
held by the missions under the direction of fearless men
who, in the interests of their State or of their religion, made
a highroad for those who came after.
The later years w'ere devoted more strictly to religious and
educational instruction. The Moravians were the real pio­
neers in Protestant denominational work along educational
lines, followed by the establishment of schools by the
Friends in 1795, the Baptists in 1807, the American Board
(Congregational and Presbyterian) in 1810, Episcopal in
1815, Methodist in 1816, Presbyterian (North) in 1833,
Methodist (South) in 1844, the American Missionary
Association (Congregational) in 1846, Dutch Reformed in
1857, Presbyterian (South) in 1857, Hicksite Quaker in
1869, United Presbyterian in 1869, Unitarian in 1886, Re­
formed Presbyterian (Covenanter) in 1889. Almost all
denominations are represented in this work, ranging from
the Roman Catholic and the various sects of Protestantism
to the Orthodox Russian among the Indians of Alaska, and
the Mormon Church of Utah, and practically every tribe has
come under the influence of the teaching of some Christian
religion, led by such men in the earlier days as Samson
Occum, the Mohican student of Rev. Eleazer Wheelock’s
Indian School in Connecticut; James B. Finley, David Zeisberger, and other pioneers of Ohio; the teachers of the
Society of Friends in Pennsylvania and adjoining States;
Evan Jones and Samuel Worcester among the Cherokee of
the South; the Williamsons, Riggs, and Ponds of the Sioux
country; Bishops Whipple and Hare in Minnesota; Whitman,
Lee, and Spalding among the tribes of the northwest coast;
Father Hamilton among the Omaha; Father de Smet among
the northern tribes west of the Mississippi; Cyrus Byington
among the Choctaw; Father Ravalli as priest and physician
among the western tribes; a list much too lengthy to
enumerate, taken from all Christian religions.
In 1832, four Nez Perce Indians came to St. Louis, then
the seat of the western activities among the Indians. The
story is told that they came in search of the “White Man’s
Book of Heaven.” They were feted, and just prior to their
return to their home, two of them having died, one of the
survivors is reported to have made a speech, the authen­
ticity of which is disputed, but which is well worthy of
repetition:
“I come to you over the trail of many moons from the
•^setting sun. You were the friends of my fathers, who have

INDIAN MISSIONS OF THE UNITED STATES

3

all gone the long way. I came with an eye partly open for
my people, who sit in darkness. I go back with both eyes
closed. How can I go back blind, to my blind people ? I made
my way to you with strong arms through many enemies and
strange lands that I might carry back much to them. I go
back with both arms broken and empty. Two fathers came
with us, they were the braves of many winters and wars.
We leave them asleep here by your great waters and wig­
wams. They were tired in many moons and their moccasins
wore out.
“My people sent me to get the ‘White Man’s Book of
Heaven.’ You took me to where you allow your women to
dance as we do not ours, and the book was not there. You
took me to where they worship the Great Spirit with candles
and the book was not there. You showed me images of the
good spirits and the picture of the good land beyond, but
the book was not among them to tell us the way. I am
going back the long and sad trail to my people in the dark
land. You make my feet heavy with gifts and my moccasins
will grow old carrying them, yet the book is not among them.
When I tell my poor blind people after one more snow, in the
big council, that I did not bring the book, no word will be
spoken by our old men or by our young braves. One by one
they rise up and go out in silence. My people will die in
darkness, and they will go a long path to other hunting
grounds. No white man will go with them, and no White
Man’s Book to make the way plain. I have no more words.”
The United States Government contributed annually to
the education of the Indian, such funds passing through
the hands of the missionaries, until the year 1870. It was
about this time that the Indian country was apportioned
among the missionary societies, both of Catholic and
Protestant persuasion, each society having its own particu­
lar field of labor, thereby establishing the foundation for the
large communities of Indians found in every section of the
country in which communities practically every person is
found to belong to the same church as his neighbor. In
1869, the first contract school was established, which schools
at first consisted only of day schools, later reservation and
nonreservation boarding schools being developed. This
plan was abandoned in 1900, when the several societies with
some exceptions took over their own schools, paying their
own expenses.
The work in the mission schools consists of training along
elementary lines such as is given in the public schools. No
professional schools are maintained. However, industrial
education is carried on along such lines as agriculture and

�4

INDIAN MISSIONS OF THE UNITED STATES

INDIAN MISSIONS OF THE UNITED STATES

stock raising, the various trades, domestic science, certain
branches of arts and crafts, especially those arts which are
primarily Indian. Some schools and missions have given a
great deal of effort to forward the sale of such articles as
are produced by the Indians under their charge, thereby
enabling them to earn a comfortable livelihood.
At the mission schools, instruction is given along religious
lines of the particular denomination having charge of the
mission, and the children are expected to attend religiou.s
services. Not only are instruction and services held in the
strictly mission schools, but in many of the Government
reservation and nonreservation boarding schools certain
portions of the buildings are assigned by the superintendent
10 the workers from the several churches who may hold
services on Sunday, and mid-week instruction may also be
given, two hours a week being devoted to the latter work.
The transformation of the American Indian, under this
tutelage, from a barbarian to a civilized man is regarded as
almost miraculous, most particularly when one considers
that it has been only within the last half century that in- ,
tensive training along educational lines has been given by
missionary societies.
In the early days of the missions, when western land
was not so valuable, it was the practice of the missionaries
to go among the Indians and take up such quantities of
lanu as would be necessary to support their plants, holding
these lands, it might be said, by right of occupancy with the
consent of the Indian tribes. Later, when the Indian coun­
try was scheduled and allotted to the Indians, the following
was incorporated into what is known as the “General Allot­
ment Act.” (24 Stat. L., 390) :
“And if any religious society or other organization is now
occupying any of the public lands to which this act is appli­
cable, for religious or educational work among the Indians,
the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to confirm
such occupation to such society or organization, in quantity
not exceeding one hundred and sixty acres in any one tract,
so long as the same shall be so occupied, on such terms as he
shall deem just; but nothing herein contained shall change
or alter any claim of such society fox' religious or educational
purpose heretofore granted by law.”
Sundry legislation has authorized issuance of patents for
land found to be so used at the time of the legislation. Mis­
sions have been enabled, through this possession, to be
practically self-supporting, at least so far as farm products
are concerned.

The report of the Indian Office shows that in 1923 there
were 410 Protestant and 240 Catholic missionaries engaged
in work among the Indians, and a total of 41,072 Protestant
and 52,316 Catholic church-going Indians attending 991
churches. These statistics do not include the Five Civil­
ized Tribes of Oklahoma, who are largely Protestant.

Missionary

5

headquarters

Baptist:
American Bapti.st Home Missionary Society, 23 East 2Gth St., New
York, N. Y.
Southern Baptist Convention, Home Missionary Board, 1004 Healey
Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Woman’s American Baptist Home Mission Society, 276 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Catholic:
Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions, 2021 H St., N. W., Washington,
D. C.
Christian Reformed Church:
Board of Heathen Missions, Christian Reformed Church, 737 Madi­
son Ave., S. E., Grand Rapids; Mich.
Congregational:
American Missionary Association, 287 Fourth Ave,, New York, N. Y,
Disciple or Christian:
United Christian Missionary Society, 1501 Locust St., St Louis,
Mo.
Evangelical:
Central Board of Home Missions, Evangelical Synod of North
America, 130 Chatham Road, Columbus, Ohio.
Free Methodist:
General Missionary Board, Free Methodist Church of North Amer­
ica, 1132 Washington Boulevard, Chicago, Ill.
Friends:
Associated Executive Committee of Friends on Indian Affairs, 1226
Stephen Girard Building, Philadelphia, Pa.
Lutheran:
Board of Home Missions and Church Extension, United Lutheran
Church, York, Pa.
Mennonite:
Board of Foreign Missions, General Conference, Mennonite, Goessei,
Kans.
Methodist Episcopal:
Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of M. E, Church,
17th and Arch Streets, Philadelphia, Pa.
Women’s Home Missionary Society, M. E. Church, Allendale, N. J,
Joint Committee on Indian Work of the M. E. Church, 740 Rush
St., Chicago, Ill.
Methodist Episcopal, South:
Board of Missions, M. E. Church South, 810 Broadway Nashville
Tenn.
Moravian;
Board of Church Extension of the American Moravian Church,
Bethlehem, Pa.
’

�6

INDIAN MISSIONS OF THE UNITED STATES

Presbyterian:
Board of Home Missions of the Pi-esbyterian Church, U. S. A., 156
Fifth Ave., New York. N. Y.
Executive Committee of Home Missions, 1522 Hurt Bldg., Atlanta,
Ga.
Women’s Board of Home Missions of the Presbyterian Church,
U. S. A., 156 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Protestant Episcopal:
National Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 281 Fourth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Reformed:
Women’s Board of Domestic Missions, Reformed Church of America,
25 East 22d Street, New York, N. Y.
Board of Home Missions. Reformed Church in the United States,
15th and Race Streets, Philadelphia, Pa,
L’nited Presbyterian:
Board of Home Missions, 209 Ninth Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Woman’s General Missionary Society, United Presbyterian Church
in North America, 95 Trenton Avenue, Wilkinsburg, Pa.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bartlett, S. C,:
History of the American Board among the North American In­
dians. Boston, 1878.
Barton, Winifred W.:
John P. Williamson, a Brother to the Sioux. Chicago: Fleming H.
Revell Co. 1919. 269 pp., ill. $1.75.
Breck, Chas.;
Life of Jas. Lloyd Breck, chiefly from letters written by himself.
New York; 1886.
Gather, Willa:
Death Comes to the Archbishop. New York; A. Knopf.
Chittenden, H. M.:
Life, Letters and Travels of Father DeSmet among the North Amer­
ican Indians, 1801-1873. New York: Francis P. Harper. 1905.
4 vols., ill. 1624 pp.
Copway, George:
The Life, History and Travels of Kah-ge-gah-bowh (George Cop­
way), a young Indian chief of the Ojibway Nation, a convert to
the Christian Faith, written b5’ himself. Philadelphia: J. Harmstead. 1847. 158 pp.
Eells, Myron:
History of Indian Missions on the Pacific Coast, Oregon, Washing­
ton, Idaho. Philadelphia; The American Sunday School Union.
1882.
Father Eells, or Results of Fifty-five Years of Missionary Labor.
Boston-Chicago. 1894.
Marcus Whitman, Pathfinder and Patriot. Seattle: Allee Harriman
Co. 1909.
Ten Years of Missionary Work among Indians. Boston: Pilgrim
Press. 1886.
Engelhardt, C. A.:
The True History of the Missions and Missionaries of California.
San Francisco: J. H. Barry Co. 4 vols. 1908-1913.
Evans, James:
E. R. Young, the Apostle of the North, Revell. 1899.

INDIAN MISSIONS OF THE UNITED STATES

7

Finley, James B.:
Life among the Indians; edited by D. W. Clark. New York: Meth­
odist Book Concern.
History of the Wyandotte Mission at Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Cin­
cinnati. 1840.
Heckewelder, John:
A Narrative of the Mission of the Moravian Brethren’s Church
among the Delaware and Mohegan Indians from 1740 to 1808.
Philadelphia. 1820.
Hinman. S. D.:
Whipple, H. B.:
Taopi and His Friends. Philadelphia: Claxton, Remsen &amp; Haffelfinger. 1869.
Howe, M. A. DeW.:
Life and Label’s of Bishop Hare, Apostle to the Sioux. Sturgis &amp;
Walton. 1911.
Huebner, Francis C.:
The Moravian Mission in Ohio. Washington; Simms &amp; Lewis.
1898. 128 pp.
Humphreys, Mary Gay:
Missionary Explorers among the American Indians. New York;
Chas. Scribner’s Sons. 1913.
Jackson, Helen Hunt:
Father Junipero and the Mission Indians of California. Boston:
Little, Brown &amp; Co, 1902,
Johnston, Julia H.;
Indian and Spanish Neighbors. Home Mission Study Course (In­
terdenominational). New York: Fleming H. Revell Co. 1905.
194 pp.
Kip, W. L:
Early Jesuit Missions in North America, compiled and translated
from letters of French Jesuits, with annotations. New York.
1847.
Kenton, Edna;
The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents: Travels and Explora­
tions of the Jesuit Missionaries in North America (1610-1791),
with an introduction by Reuben Gold Thwaites. New York: Al­
bert and Charles Boni. 1925. 527 pp., ill.
Lindquist, G. E. E.;
The Red Man in the United States: An Intimate Study of the
Social, Economic, and Religious Life of the American Indian.
New York: George H. Doran. 1923.
Loskiel, G. H.;
History of the Missions of the United Brethren among the Indians
in North America. London. 1794.
Love, W. Deloss:
Samson Occum and the Christian Indians of New England. Boston:
The Pilgrim Press. 1899. 379 pp.
McAfee, G. F.:
Missions among the North American Indians. Woman’s Board of
Home Missions of the Presbyterian Church of the U. S. A.
McBeth. K. C.:
Nez Perce Indians since Lewis and Clark. New York: Fleming H.
Revell Co. $1.50.
McCoy, Isaac:
History of Baptist Indian Missions. Washington: Wm. M. Morrison.
1840. 611 pp.

�8

INDIAN MISSIONS OF THE UNITED STATES

McSherry, James;
Here Jean, or the Jesuit Missionary; A Tale of the North American
Indians. Baltimore. 1847. 256 pp., ill.
Mitchell, Joseph:
The Missionary Pioneer, or, A Brief Memoir of the Life, Labours,
and Death of John Stewart (Man of Colour), founder under God
of the Mission among the. Wyandotts of Upper Sandusky. Ohio.
New York. 1827.
Moffet, Thomas C.:
The American Indian on the New Trail; or. The Red Man of the
United States and the Christian Gospel. New York: The Presby­
terian Department of Missionary Education. 1914. .302 pp.
Palladino, L. B.:
Indian and White in the Northwest: or, A History of Catholicity
in Montana. Baltimore: John Murphy &amp; Co. 1894. 411 pp., map.
(Rev. Ed. Lancaster, Pa.: Wickersham Pub. Co. 1922.)
Palou, Francisco:
Life of Ven. Padre Junipero Serra. San Francisco: P. E. DougbCTty
&amp; Co. 1884. 156 pp.
Life and Apostolic Labors of the Venerable Serra. Founder of the
Franciscan Missions of California; edited by-George Wharton
James. Pasadena. 191,3.
Parkman, Francis:
The Jesuits in North America in the Seventeenth century. Boston:
Little, Brown &amp; Co. 1902.
•Pitezel, John H.;
Lights and Shades of Missionary Life: Containing Travels, Sketches,
Incidents, and Missionary Efforts, during the nine years spent
in the region of Lake Superior. Cincinnati: Western Book Con­
cern. 1860.
Pond. Samuel M.:
Two Volunteer Missionaries amongi the Dakotas. Boston: Pilgrim
Press.
Riggs, Stephen R.;
Mary and I; or. Forty Years arpong the Sioux. Congregational
■ S. S., £ Pub. Society. 1880. ,388 pp.
Tah-koo-walf-kan; or, The Gospel among the Dakotas/ Boston 1869.
Shea, John Gilmary:
History of the (iatholic Missions among the Indian Tribes of the
United. States, 1529-1854. New York: Kennedy. 1899.
Discovery and Exploration of the Mississippi Valley, with the Orig­
inal Narratives of Marquette, Allouez, Hennepin, and Douay.
New York. 1852. 286 pp., map.
Whipple. Henry B.:
Lights and Shadows of a Long Episcopate. New York: MacMillan.
1912. 580 pp.
Winship. George; Parker:
The New England Company and John Eliot; the Ledger and the
Record Book of the Corporation for the Propagation of the Gospel
in New England and Parts Adjacent, covering the years 16501686; printed from original manuscripts, with introduction by
G. P. Winship. Boston. Published for the Prince Society. 1920, ‘
Wynne, J. J.:
The Jesuit Martyrs of North America, Isaac Jogues, .John de
Brebeuf, and others. New York. 1925. 246 pp., ill., maps. / •

�A WHITE INDIAN WOMAN

417

A White Indian Woman
During the years from 1889 to 1906, or until the Northwestern
railroad was extended from Casper to Lander, the Arapahoe and
Shoshone Indians from the Wind River reservation and the Arapahoe
sub-agency hauled the freight and supplies from the railroad station
at Casper to the reservation, the distance being about one hundred
and twenty-five miles. On these trips there were usually from twenty
to forty buck Indians and generally about half that number of squaws.
During the month of August, in 1900, there came to Casper with
one of these bands of Indians a white woman, who wore the usual
Indian garb, painted her face as the Indians do and spoke the Indian
language, but she could not speak the English language. The woman
attracted the attention of some of Casper’s citizens, and it was learned
from the white man in charge of the visiting Indians that the woman
had been captured by the Cheyennes when she was a child about two
years old, and had been raised with and married to an Arapahoe In­
dian named John Brokenhorn. The story was published in the Na­
trona County Tribune, and was copied in a number of western news­
papers. The newspaper article attracted the attention of Mrs. A. M.
Cook of Davenport, Iowa, who wrote a letter to the publisher of the
Tribune, making further inquiry as to the identity of the woman.
Mrs. Cook said she was very much interested in the news, for she was
captured thirty-five years before at Rock Creek, Wyoming, and her
baby sister, Lizzie, was captured at the same time, but she had not
seen her since the night of the capture. Mrs. Cook said that her
father was Jasper Fletcher, who came to the United States from
England in 1861. They started for California in 1865, there being the
father and mother, three sons and two daughters. They left Quincy,
Illinois, in May and on the plains the Fletchers united with a train of
seventy-five wagons and continued their journey until they reached
Rock Creek station in Wyoming territory, thirty-one miles east of
Fort Halleck. Just as they had camped for dinner at noon and when
the entire Fletcher family was near a stream a little distance from the
train, a war party of three hundred Cheyenne Indians sprang up all
around them. Mr. Fletcher and his three sons escaped to the wagons.
Mrs. Fletcher and her two daughters, the younger, Lizzie, being but
two years old, were seized by the Indians. The mother was thrust
through the body with a spear, and instantly killed. One of the
Indians seized Lizzie, raised her to his saddle and rode off. Her sister
saw her once again that day, but never afterwards. Mary Fletcher,
the older girl, who was thirteen years of age, was struck with arrows
in several places and pulled them out with her own hands. Menimick

�4i8

HISTORY OF NATRONA COUNTY

was chief of this band and Black Kettle was chief of the tribe. Menimick took charge. One of the leading braves took charge of Mary,
and she remained his slave during the whole term of her captivity.
Immediately after the capture, the band fled rapidly to the moun­
tains, where the squaws belonging to the band were concealed. There
was a white boy with the squaws, who had been captured by the band
of Indians in New Mexico. The boy pointed to the valley and cried:
“Look! That is the way they serve them all.” The train of wagons
was burning and white people were being murdered. In one of the
wagons was a ten gallon cask of brandy, and the Indians had drank
this and were indulging in a scalp dance, all the Indians being wildly
drunk. The scalp dance is one of the most horrible sights that can be
looked upon by a white person, and the oldest Fletcher girl, who was
being guarded by her captors, was compelled to witness the whole
affair.
The next morning the Indians tied the girl to a saddle and trav­
eled in an easterly direction. Two days after the capture the band
came upon a family named Cackle, who were on their way to Colo­
rado. The Indians took a small child from Mrs. Cackle’s arms and
seizing it by the feet, dashed its brains out against the wagon hub.
Mr. Cackle, two children and the mother of Mrs. Cackle were killed
on the spot, but Mrs. Cackle was carried away. Three nights after
the capture, however, the woman was placed against a tree in a sitting
position and she was made a target of, her body being pierced by more
than a dozen poison-pointed arrows' before her prayers were answered
for the ending of her terrible existence. That same week this band of
Indians and the soldiers of Fort Laramie engaged in a fight, and dur­
ing the combat a buck Indian stood over the Fletcher girl ready to
kill her, should the soldiers get in a position to recapture her.
Darkness came on, fighting ceased, and the Indians made their
escape. The next morning the white girl’s face was painted red and
striped green and black and her hair was colored with soot water, and
her eye lashes and eye brows were burned with hot ashes. The girl
was compelled to care for fourteen ponies during the day while they
were traveling, packing them in the morning and unpacking them at
night, and her other duty was to gather wood for the fire that was
built every night. The Indian braves rode the ponies during the day
and the squaws were compelled to walk, and the girl and the white boy
‘To procure the poison for their arrow heads the Indians would Ike a fresh deer liver and fasten it
to a pole, then go to a den of rattlesnakes and poke the liver toward the snakes. The snakes would strike
the liver until it was saturated with poison. The liver was then put away until it became thoroughly drv
pounded to a fine powder and then placed in a buckskin bag, to be used as they needed’
J •
to any moistened surface. The Indians used these poisoned arrow
h^ds in their battles, and it was their delight to imbed one of these poisoned points into the flesh of a
white man, which meant slow but sure death.

�A WHITE INDIAN WOMAN

419

tramped on foot with the squaws. After about six weeks’ traveling
the band reached the main village of the tribe, among the mountains
in eastern Colorado. When all the bands were assembled there were
about four thousand Indians in the village. Here they indulged in war
dances, and these dances are described as the wildest orgies in sav­
agery that possibly could be imagined.
The bands started out on another expedition after four days of
feasting and dancing, and on this journey the squaws would beat and
abuse the white girl to appease their anger. During the remainder
of the summer and fall and winter and spring that followed the band
was continually on the move; they waded and swam the creeks and
rivers, struggled through deep snows and endured the severe cold and
all kinds of hardships. One day in the early spring while crossing a
river the ice broke loose and started rapidly down the stream. The
girl was on the floating ice and was unable to escape. She was carried
rapidly with the current, and the squaws laughed and danced with
glee to see her moving rapidly to her destruction. She finally leaped
from the ice into the stream and swam ashore, where she was wel­
comed by the braves as a heroine, but the squaws were jealous of her
and treated her with all kinds of indignities.
In the spring of 1866, the band came to a white man’s trading
camp. A man named Hanger was in charge of the trading camp, and
the Fletcher girl walked into his tent, dressed and painted like an
Indian girl, and in English asked Hanger if he had any soap. The
girl had been ordered to keep out of sight of the white men, but if
anything did happen that she should come in contact with them to
act as though she was an Indian girl and not to speak a word of
English. One of her captors was in the trader’s tent when she came
in, and when she asked for the soap, the Indian struck her in the face
and knocked her down. She was carried out of the tent and given in
charge of the squaws. The squaws were jealous of the white girl and
wanted to get rid of her, because she was becoming a favorite among
the braves, but they did not dare to kill her. The squaws arranged to
take her to the white man’s tent, unbeknown to the bucks. Hanger
told the girl that he would buy her from the captors, and in due time
he paid the Indians sixteen hundred dollars in cash, one good horse
and a gun for her release. The white man then placed the girl in
charge of an Indian agent who took her to Fort Laramie, and from
there she was taken to Fort Jura, and from there the Forty-eighth
Wisconsin infantry took her to Fort Leavenworth, and from there she
was sent back to Illinois among friends, arriving in Illinois in Decem­
ber, 1866. A year afterward she was married in Davenport, Iowa,
to William E. Cook.

�420

HISTORY OF NATRONA COUNTY

After her marriage she and her husband went to Salt Lake, where
the girl met her father, who informed his daughter that he lay in a
ditch two days after the Indians attacked him, and he was badly
wounded. Her three brothers all made their escape and two of them
went to Colorado and one to California, but until the article was
published in the newspaper she had never heard anything concerning
her baby sister.
In due time Mrs. Cook came to Casper, and from here she went
by stage to the Arapahoe sub-agency, where she found the woman and
positively identified her as her sister, who was then thirty-nine years
of age, having lived with the Indians for thirty-seven years. She was
married to John Brokenhorn, an Arapahoe, and a number of children
had been born to them. She could not speak English and she dressed
and lived like the other squaws. Through an interpreter Mrs. Cook
told her sister how she had been captured, how their mother had been
killed and how their father and brothers made their escape, and how
she herself had been compelled to live with the Indians for sixteen
months, and how she made her escape. She wanted her to go back to
Davenport with her where she would be cared for, and where she
could dress and act like the white woman that she was, but Mrs.
Brokenhorn would not go; she declared that she was an Indian, that
she was satisfied to live as she had always lived; to call a tepee her
home, to wear a blanket, to do the drudgery as all the squaws were
doing, and to claim a full-blooded Indian as her husband, and that
she could not remember anything about being captured, as her white
sister had explained to her.
Mrs. Cook returned to Casper alone, and went back to her home
with a broken heart. She said that although she had had many bitter
experiences, when her sister refused to give up her wild life and live
like a woman civilized, it was the hardest blow she had endured since
she saw her mother killed by being thrust through the body with a
spear by a blood-thirsty Indian.
The absolute proof that she was actually a white woman had its
effect on Mrs. Brokenhorn, and although she continued to live on the
reservation with her husband, she made it plain to the squaws of the
tribe that she felt she was of superior birth and was of considerable
more importance than the common Indians. That he had a white
woman for a wife also elevated Brokenhorn, in his own estimation at
least, to a higher plane than his fellow men, and while he, like most of
the Indians, seldom made much of an outward display of his emo­
tions, nevertheless he was actually raised to a higher degree than he
was before the fact became established that his wife’s parents were of
the white race. In fact Brokenhorn felt that he was so great that

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�"Sometimes she spake with those who had seen her beloved and known him.
But it was long ago, in some far-off place or forgotten.
*
'Gabriel LajeunesseJ' they said; *0 yesi we have seen him.
He was with Basil, the blacksmith, and both have gone to the prairies;
Coureurs-des-Bois are they, and famous hunters and trappers.'
'Gabriel Lajeunessel' said others; 0 yesl we have seen him.
He is a Voyaguer in the lowlands of Louisiana.'
Then they would say; 'Dear child I why dream and wait for him longer.'"
* * *
"All is ended now, the hope, and the fear, and the sorrow;
All the aching heart, the restlessness, unsatisfied longing;
All the dull, deep pain, and constant anguish of patience I
And as she pressed once more the lifeless head to her bosom.
Meekly she bowed her own, and murmured: 'Father, I thank thee I"*

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�Basil Lajeunesse was one of Fremont’s men, and accompanied the explorer
on his first expedition into Viyoming, and was honored by his commander in his

selection as one of the party to make the ascent of Fremont's peak . This
was
pioneer/descended from a numerous family of hunters, trappers and traders.

Gabriel Lajeunesse, his uncle, tradition says, was the hero of "Evangeline."
Francois, Basil’s brother, was one of the Premont party in 1843. These two
brothers are spoken of by old trappers as remarkable mon. They wore not only

successful hunters and trappers, but were familiar with the mountains, streams

and valleys in every part of incoming. They trapped many years before they met
Fremont. Thet were associates of Jim Bridger, Thomas Fitzpatrick and other men
of their daiy

who made fame and renown as well as wealth in the fur trade. Both

of them became permanent residents of Wyoming. In 1858 Basil Lajeunesse estab­
lished a trading post on the Overland Road above Devil's Gate, about 100 yards

south of the place where the residence of Tom Sun is now located. He traded with
Indians and supplied emigrants who passed through the country, doing a prosperous

business. His family lived on a ranch at what is now Ferris, and it was there his

children grew up. In 1862 he started to make a trip to Derr Creek for the purpose
of trading with the Sioux. He took with him two men and fifteen pack aniipals loaded
withgoods. On the way the party was attacked by Indians, Lajeunesse killed and all
hisgoods and mules run off. he was married to a Sioux woman and had seveal children.

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�WOUNDED KNEE BATTLE NEAR PINE RIDGE AGENCY
*
/
Ghost Dance and ’’Medicine Men’’ Who Predicted the
Coming of the Messiah Brought on the Conflict
*

Legend has bequeathed many garbled versions of the Ghost Dance at the Pine Ridge agency
and the Battle of Wounded Knee^whxch started on December 29,1690,and continued four days,
tri t. (u rtinff

untH/^January 1, 1891. Wilson I. Austin, who was a member of the Home Guards of Rushville
happened,
’
Nebraska, was on the spot when all the trouble/msiaxMotj His story, written shortly after
the unfortunate affair occurred, said that Sitting Bull was killed at Standing Rock while
resisting Indian^ police, and not at the Battle of Wounded Knee, as many reports have it.

Si Tanka (Big Foot) did not lead the Wounded Knee battle, as^popularly supposed. Big
Foot had contracted pneumeonia while he was engaged in the Ghost Dance, having danced all

day and all night. He was dragged from the arena unconscious and left on the frozen ground

to "cool off," the Indians having a peculiar sense of how to relieve sickness of that nature.
Big Foot was ill on a cot in his tepee when the troopers came to escort his band of follow-

ers to the agency. He rose up on his

bed to askfwhat in the hell they wanted." Colonel E. V.

Sumner of the Ei|th Cavalry, tried diplomacy, and talked with Big Foot. The chief said he

xvanted to be friendly. In proof of this, he said, S3S of his people surrendered on Decem­
ber 21. But Big Foot proved by his actions that he did not want to be as friendly as he
would have the soldiers believe. Then orders were issued to have the chief arrested. Big

Foot’s band fled to the ba^ld lands on December 22. Nearly 3,000 troops began at once to
close in dn them. On December 28 Major Whiteside of the Seventh Cavalry, found the village

on Wounded Knee creek and called on the Indians to surrender.
Big Foot tried to parley, and said^"we want peace. I am sick, but when I am well my
people will surrender." The two men argued for an hour to no

irllI'"TLL.alsh

ther-iMWHPwWtve.

Meanwhile General L. W..Colby, who commanded the Nebraska militia,^and W. F.,Codv and
Little Bat, the lndian interpreter, found

on her mother's dead

body, oh t:^"Battlefirst of Januray, 1891. This was the fBttrfeh day
of.,-theb‘attle.

The Ghost Dance trouble among the Indians started with the treaty of 1867. This treaty

�■ - 2 -

stated that: "to every Indian who came in and settled there, and would be good, were to

be provided with rations of food and clothing, which would be issued at stated intervals."
The Indians said they understood that this was to be forever, but the government took a
different view, and ruled that when an Indian "was producing he would receive no rations."

Ten years later the Indians never forgot that situation. They showed their displeasure on

every possible occasion. They claimed that the government had not kept faith with them.
Then McGuillacuddy, who was superindendent of the Pine Ridge agency, cut down the ra­

tions, according to Orders from his superiors. This made the Indians very angry. Among the
I

rations issued by the government were clocks, and many other things that the Indians knew
nothing about. They were given wagons and told to keep the wheels greased. However, instead

of putting the grease on the axels, they rubbed it on th^Jpokes, and really thought that
this made the wagons run better. When they learned their mistake, they used the grease for
butter.

The coming of the "medicine men," however, was the real cause of the Ghost Dance trou­
ble. These "medicine men" clehmed that one of them was the "Messiah." The Indian word for

Messiah is Wakantaka, which means God. Some of these "medicine men" were Indians, but most
of them were whites. They claimed also to have had visions of th© "happy hunting ground."

Among them was one who came to Rushville, twenty-six miles from the Pine Ridge reservation.
This "medicine man" wa3=»e#=Scoteii==dws«eTit^=wnd wore his beard in the style of Christ, ’ hile
in a state of beastly intoxication he fell and broke his leg.

Big Foot (si Tanka) had planned to meet this supposed Christ, but hearing that he was
on
not coming, he formed a hostile camp and was^his way to join another band of Indians when
he was intercepted by the Seventh United States Cavalry, under General Forsythe, at Wounded

Knee, fifteen miles from the Pine Ridge reservation.

Meanwhile, the''medic ine men', who were well educated and posed as prophets, told their
red skin comrades of visions they had of the white man being pushed back and the return
of the happy hunting ground. The buffalos were to return, they predicted, and the Indians

T/ere to reign supreme. It was a tempting vision, and the Indians accepted it.
These "medicine men" had

invented a '^host shirt," made of cloth with holes cut for

the head and hands. Some of these shirts were highly ornamented, but others were simply
common cloth, "womdiheca waci, which interpreted, means ^spirit dance." Ghost dances, they

�- 3 were called, and were held all day and all night in a nearly air-tight tepee. In the center

of these tents the medicine men placed r/jhot atones, and dashed water over them.

Into

that hot inferno an Indian was told to go and dance until he saw "visions." Some braves

danced all day and all night, and only stopped when unconscious, and were dragged out to
cool off on the frozen ground. They then told of the "visions" they had seen. Probably
they did see "visions," Who wouldWt?

The exposure after the dance led to many cases of pneumonia. And among the number

that contracted the disease was Big Foot, the chief of the band. So at the time of the

battle of Wounded Knee, Big Foot, a victim of the dance fever, was on his cot and did not
load his men, as was stated at the time.

Meanwhile, the Seventh Cavalry, under Colonel Forsythe, and the Ninth Infantry, from
advanced to within hailing distance of the encamped tribesmen.^Colonel Forsythe and Big Foot had a parley and the efforts of the officer to get the

Indians to give up their arms and submit in peace to an escort to the agency met with fail­

ure. The Indians were under the spell of the'medicine men and refused to listen.
Big Foot was profane in his accusations, and called the troopers "tu we wahtesni'(damn
rascals) and told them to go to "wakan-sicati" (the Indian's hell). Big Foot considered him­
self a great orator, and he did himself proud on this occasion. He swore in Indian and in
English, and in every language he knew. The chief was employing strategy in his parley, for

he knew that if his band were able to reach the "bad lands," which at the time was their
destination, it would be almost impossible for the troopers to dislodge them. His tribes­

men were composed of remnants of the "olyotanke tatankabodoka" (Sitting Bull) band, that
was broken up several days before when Sitting Bull was killed by Indian!^ police while re­

sisting arrest.

The "bad lands," almost indescribable, were impregnable. Just a dim view may be had,
if one thinks of New York city as being several times larger than4

then imagine the

streets and alleys strewn with huge rocks, several hundred feet high. Explorers in the "bad

lands

always plant flags on their trail, as it is almost impossible to tell directions,

even by compass, as the lava deposits which make up the terrain deflect the instrximent.
There are cases in some parts where there is an abundance of grass, but the water in many

of the pools is poisonous.

�- 4 Colonel Forsythe had detailed Captain Wallaoe to search the tepees of Big Foot’s
hand. TShen the captain approached on his errand he was met by an Indian carrying a flag
of truce. The Indiar^ smiled and extended his hand. Little Bat, the Indian interpreter,

saw that the Indian was reaching out his left hand, and cried out to Captain Wallace to

"look out.’" But it was too late. The IndiariS emissary had drawn a wr club from his blanket
and struck the captain over the head, killing him instantly. (Several years later Little
Bat was killed on the streets of Crawford, Nebraska. When he was killed he was not armed
ft

and was living as a peaceable citizen. The tough who shot him bragged that he had "beat
Little Bat to the draw^^ but the citizens of Crawford soon put a stop to this.)
Immediately after the killing of Captain Wallace. 120 Indian bucks drew up in threeT'*'^^^
facing the cavalry. The Indians were wearing their "ghost shirts" ubder their blankets,
the "medicine men" havii:^ told then that no white man's bullet could pierce these shirts,

Many of the Indians had participated in the Custer massacre, and it was said that the

troopers "had it in for them." This was not true, for the officers argued for hours, try­
ing to get the Indians to give up their arms, even after the shooting. They were implored

to bring al}, their firearms, twenty at a time, and the Indians evidently accepted the pro -

posal. The first twenty, however, iReturned, bringing only two guns. The next twenty did
but little better, and the officers, seeing that the arras were not being brought up, gave

the order to search the Indiahs. As soon as the search began, the "medicine men" began to
chant in the Indian tongue. The first Indian searched had no gun, but the next one had a

sawed-off shot gun under his blanket and refused to give it up. During ths struggle for

this gun it was discharged, and then the battle was on. The Indians threw off their blankets,
revealing sawed-off shot guns they had hidden, and were in readiness for the battle. The

Indians fired the first volley, as is shown by the following letter:

Seventh Cavalry, Fort Bliss, Texas.
January 16, 1924.
Wilson I. Austin
Norfolk, Nebraska.

•

Dear Sir:
^?I am inclosing notes of the battle of Wounded Knee, - ade by Chaplain McMurray, of the
history division. Major General Melson A. Miles, commanding the division, was at Rapid
City, South Dakota, exercising command of the forces in. the field. Brigadier General John
N. Brooks, in field and made all military preparations at the Pine Ridge agency, fifteen
miles from Wounded Knee. Some malcontents had formed a "hostile camp." Big Foot was making

�- 5 for this camp when he was overtaken by Colonel James Forsythe, of the Seventh United
States Cavalry at Viounded Knee. Every precaution was taken to protect the squaws and
papooses—they were placed in a separate camp, about one-fouth of a mile from the bucks.
Cause of the battle was the rfusal of the Indians to give up their guns, and the firing
by the Indians on the troopers. The first volley was fired by the Indians toward their
squaw camp. The Indians then turned and fired point blank at the troopers. The Indians
were armed with sawed-off shot guns that they had hid under their blankets. The battle
was fought December 29, 1890. The burial party, a few days later, buried 146 bodies.
Twenty-one were buried later in the trench at Wounded Knee. When the Indians fired point
blank, the troopers dropped to the ground to make room for the artillery. The Indians re­
treated right toward the squaw camp, thu§ making it impossible to discriminate.
"Fjtz Hugh
"Commanding the’^ Seventh cKrolry,
"Fort Bliss, Texas."
It was generally supposed, on account of the position of the troops, many of the troop­
ers were killed by their own comrades. Colonel Forsythe was court martialed later for bad

disposition of the troops, but was acquitted, as he should have been, for no mortal could

have seen that the Indians would retreat toward their squaw camp. At the battle the Indians
saw for “the first time, explosive shells. They succeeded in reaching a dry canyon, however,
where they picked off troopers at will. They were finally dislodged, but with a loss of

sixty troopers. Thus ended the battle of Wounded Knee, regretted by both the whites and
the better class of Indians. Some of the striking events of the battle were;

V/hile Phillip WeIls-While, Indian, interpreter of the Seventh Cavalry, was endeavoring
•f ht fn
to persuadeyito surrender, his nose was cut off. The writer has a photograph of General L.
W. Colby, on the back of which is written,by Colby, these words:

"Zitkala Nuni (Lost Bird) Indian baby girl, found on the Wounded Knee battlefield, by
the side of her dead mother, on the fouth day after the battle, and adopted by me. She
was given the Christian name of Marguerite Elusabeth, after the wives of the two Asay
brothers, storekeepers at the Pine Ridge agency. She was frozen on her hands, feet and
head, but has entirely receovered. Si Tanka (Big Foot) band was largely made up of the
remnants of Sitting Bull's band, of which Big Foot .doubtless one. If so. Lost Bird is
an 'Unk Papa Teton Sioux'."
L. W. P^lby, 1891.
Lost Bird, lovable as a baby, had an interesting and checkered career. When she was

fourteen years of age she ran away and married an Italian in California. The Italian died

and then Lost Bird married a Cherokee Indian. She separated from him and then married a
white civil engineer, named Allen. All in all she faced the altar five different times,

and no doubt would have married oftener, but death overtook her at Hanford, California.
When she died she was in her thirty-fifth year. Before going to California, she had jourthe
neyed to/Cheyenne reservation to see Pretty Voice, and Julia Pretty Voice, her supposed

parents. She remained there about a year. It has been proven that Pretty Voice and Julia
were not her parents. General Colby, Wm. F. Cody and Little Bat, the Indian interpreter.

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                  <text>Natrona County (Wyo.) -- History</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>The Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are a series of the larger archival collection that are his papers. Both his Letterboxes and his Notebooks available in this digital repository include holograph manuscripts, which is to say, manuscripts written in the author's hand. Much of the material in Mokler's Letterboxes dates to the 1920s and 1930s.</text>
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                <text>Alfred J. Mokler&#13;
</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1466">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/"&gt;http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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          <element elementId="56">
            <name>Date Created</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1467">
                <text>1924</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1468">
                <text>1928</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1469">
                <text>1935</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1470">
                <text>1939</text>
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                <text>Alfred J. Mokler</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1472">
                <text>Dell Ward</text>
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                <text>Department of the Interior Office of Indian Affairs</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>This letterbox contains the following: a bulletin from the Department of the Interior Office of Indian Affairs titled "Indian Missions of the United States" from 1928, notes from Alfred J. Mokler regarding the Lajeunesse family, an account of Charles Lajeunesse from Alfred J Mokler written on June 16, 1935, a short biography of Basil Lajeunesse, a letter from Dell Ward to his sister discussing Basil Lajeunesse from May 26, 1939, an account of "Wounded Knee Battle Near Pine Ridge Agency" from the Seventh Cavalry on January 16, 1924</text>
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                <text>The reformatted text and images in the Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are for personal, not-for profit use of students, researchers, and the public. Any use must provide attribution to the Casper College Archives and Special Collections (Western History Center). While being the property of Casper College, all text, images and other materials are subject to applicable copyright laws. Commercial use, electronic reproduction, or print publication ot text, images, or other materials is strictly prohibited without written permission. All permissions to publish must be obtained from the rights holder and are not the repository's responsibility for securing. The rights holder may or may not be the repository. Users also agree to hold the repository harmless from legal claims arising from their use of material held by the institution and made accessible in this digital repository.</text>
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                    <text>"MAGAZINE SECTION

THE DENVER POST—FIRST IN EVERYTHING—SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 17, 1938

TAe Post Phone—'Main '2121

�Crossed the Plains
day, July 24, hailed
thruout the intcrmountain sec­
tion, is the Mardi Gras of the

ORJION

M

west.
The date—a state holiday in Utah—
calls for a solid week of celebration
and from July 19 to 25, this year, the
event will be widely and wildly her­
alded, in Salt Lake City and Ogden
especially. Annually there are solid
rounds of parades, processions, wild
West shows, rodeos and dramas depict­
ing the trek of the Mormons (LatterDay Saints) in the early days to Utah.
The celebration this year will com­
memorate the ninety-first anniversary
of the state’s founding.
On July 24, 1847, Brigham Young,
Mormon pioneer leader, with his band
of Mormons, arrived in Salt Lake City
(then a wilderness) after a trek by
handcart and oxteam across the plains,
from Nauvoo, Ill., to found his western
empire.
“This is the place,” cried Pioneer
Young, setting his staff in the ground
end halting his followers.
Today nearly one million Mormons
In all parts of the world echo this cry
end on Mormon day revere his mem­
ory, The west is colonized.
OVERED wagons have been greased
for the long lines of parades which
will be staged daily. Oxen have been
given final training in drawing heavy
oxcarts for the processions planned for
thousands of spectators which annually
ere drawn to Ogden and Salt Lake City
by the celebrations.
Pioneer costumes have been made
ready for the dances and pageants
which will be held. Sagebrush days
will come to life as Utah gets “wild”
and the “good old days of the west”
will be relived by the Beehive state.
Mormon day queens are chosen anrually from among the fairest in Mormondom. This year, at Ogden, for the
pioneer Days celebration, blond Mar­
jorie Anderson, 16, will reign, heading
the procession on her buckskin pony.
Pal. Helen Vent, curly-haired eques­
trienne, will head the horse .show and
jodeo.
At Salt Lake City, for the Covered
Wagon Days celebration, brunet Kay
Robins will reign, assisted by her aids,
Elaine Hatch and Betty Lee Buehler.
The beauties will reign supreme at
the rodeos, parades and head pageants
into which will be woven the back­
ground of Mormondom, followers ol
the Angel Moroni. Heber J. Grant,
bearded president of the Mormons, an­
nounces that services will be held thrucut Mormondqm—Pioneer day comes
cn Sunday.
Tributes will be paid in the various
Mormon wards or branches and at the
world-famrfus Tabernacle Square, in
Salt Lake City, to the valiant colonizers
■who braved the wilderness, Indian.s,
starvation and thirst on that perilous
1,037-milo trek across the plains west­
ward.
The movement began at Nauvoo, 111,,
February, 1846, when the Mormons

C

Kay Robins, center. Is
queen of the Salt Lake
City celebration. Her as­
sistants are Elaine Hatch
and Betty Lee Buehler.

Bridger helped guide them part' of the'
way, pointing out the route to Great
Salt Lake valley. He said, however, it
would be useless to try to farm—he
would give $100 for the first bushel of
corn grown on the alkali flats. '•
On July 23, 1847, Pioneer Young,
lying ill in the wagon of Edgar 'Wilford
■Woodruff, obtained his first view of
the land in -which he purported to find
rest and peace for his weary people. '
Young gazed out upon the Salt Lakei
valley for a long time and then said;
“Enough. This is the place. Drive on,”
The pioneer band passed thru Emi«
gration canon and came into the val­
ley of the Great Salt lake on July;
24, 1847.
_
Then came “hard times,” the build--';
ing of the commonwealth; days of
bread and molasses, the discovery of i
the sago and other edible roots on
which the pioneers might survive; the
sowing of grains and the coming of.
the Mormon cricket scourge—but thru
it all lived the pioneers and others who.
followed.
Ci
They raised the Stars and Stripes
everywhere over the new Mormon
empire in the Rockies, then Mexican
territory, and in a few years applied
for admission to the union as the
State of Deseret.
A great commonwealth which fed
the California goldseekers en route
west and others had been founded.
A NNUALLY, on July 24, the achievejnent of conquering the plains,
and the making of the desert “blos­
som like a rose” i.s celebrated.
In Salt Lake City the so-called Covcred Wagon Days celebration extends
from the year 1849, when the Mormon
pioneers gathered in “Pioneer Park,”
then a stockade of protection against
Indians.
Mormon day ha.s codtinued intermit- ,
lently thru the semicentennial celebra­
tion in 1897 and is designed to reach
its climax with a government-spon­
sored “Centennial Celebration,” ob­
serving the hundredth celebration of
the settlement of the territory.
Ogden, second largest city of the
state, caught this spirit five years ago
and staged a mammoth Pioneer Days
celebration, led by Mayor Harman W.
Peery, Utah’s “cowboy mayor.” The
event was one of the most successful
This great Mormon cathedral in Salt Lake City, Utah, will be the center
celebrations—bar none—ever held,
of Founders day activities.
and each year the day has been re­
peated.
day in Salt Lake City, Og­
band followed the meanderings of the the bare skin of the feet was covered denMormon
and thruout Mormondom will com­
Platte river, keeping mostly on the with bark and animal hides.
The pioneers were a determined lot. bine the pioneer spirit and the gaiety
north side of the stream. They touched
Fort Laramie, an old trading post, and Braving the scarcity of food and water of modern days.
(Copyright. 1938.)
also Red Buttes, Independence Rock, and the danger .of .nearby redskins.
Page TItre±

Devils’Gate, Little and Big Sandy and
Fort Bridger^
Finally the pioneers arrived at Echo
canon, where ..they met certain trap­
pers—among them being Martin Harri.s and Jim Bridger. • These two gave
the pioneers very dismal pictures of the
Salt Lake valley, on the shores of
America’s great inland sea. Great
Balt lake.
The trappers urged the pioneers to
go on to the fertile lands of the Pa­
cific coast. But Pioneer Young had
decided to seek shelter in “the great
basin in the Rocky mountains.” Joseph
Smith, founder of Mormonism, had
conceived this idea—the building up
of a permanent abiding place of the
people belonging to the Mormon
church.
He would not be dissuaded and the
pioneer band trudged on. Skulls of
oxen, bulletins of the plains, marked
their route. Shoes were worn out and

Heber J. Grant, left, president of
nearly oiie million Mormons, and
Reuben Clark, high in Mormon ■
church circles, will greet their fol- ,
lowers on Mormon day.

banded together to flee from religious
persecution. The multitude of church
folk numbered 12,000 persons, who
possessed 30,000 cattle, mules, horses
and sheep. Leaders were chosen in the
first exodus from Illinois, with Brig­
ham Young at the head.
The companies left Nauvoo in the
winter under the command of Pioneer
Young, 400 wagons stopping to pitch
tents at the first of the “Camps of
Israel” upon snow and ice. They renewed the journey on the first day of
March, when they traveled five miles
and rested on Sugar creek. Permission
had been obtained to cross thru Iowa.
The company was divided into two
parts and each of these into hundreds,
fifties and tens, with captains. The
prescribed outfit for a family was one
wagon, three yoke of cattle or three
teams, two cows, two beef cattle, three
sheep, 1,000 pounds of flour, twentyfour pounds of sugar, a tent and bed­
ding, seeds, farming tools and rifle, a
total being estimated at the value
of $250.
But in addition to. those which were
thus equipped there was a large num­
ber of nondescript outfits, the make.shifts of poverty, from the unsuitable
heavy cart that lumbered on mysteri­
ously, with its crazy two-wheeled
trundle, to mere handcarts pushed by
humans.
Roadf? were bad most of the way
and wagon.s were always breaking
down, so that the company considered
it had made remarkable progress when­
ever it covered fifteen miles in a day.
The people of Iowa used to tell that all
day long the slow procession' passed
over their prairies—the strangest spec­
tacle they had ever witnessed—and
that they sjnnpathized with the toil
of those quiet but zealous pioneers.
*T^HE main camp established itself at
winter quarters, on the east bank
of the Missouri, partly occupying some
bluffs at which the Indians were wont
to hold their councils, whence the later
name of Council Bluffs. The house.s
were built of logs, a fortification was
erected, a grist mill and log taber­
nacle put up and school established—altho the Mormons knew they were to
stay a short time, a year or two at
most.
The winter was a hard one and the

Thi» monument marks the spot •where Brigham
Young halted his followers and said: “This is
the place.”
Their long journey across the
plains was ended. Ross Beatty will re-enact
.
the scene.

Marjorie Anderson is queen of the
Pioneer day celebration which will^
be held at Ogden, Utah
real cowgirl and quite
the saddle.

journey just complet^ had its dark-i^
side. Sickness had beeij|general. Deaths i)
had been so frequent (that burials had ,
to be performed wjxhout ceremony. H
Sorrow and lamentatjbn had been daily ■
visitors. No family had escaped; few ,i[
but had buried one or more.
Early in the spring of 1847 PioneerYoung gathered the famous Pioneer 4
company together at winter quarters J
and on April 17, 1847, they crossed’,
over on the north side of the Platte
river, breaking a trail toward the ’
Ko&lt;;ky mountains.
Pioneer Young took with him 143 ;
men, three women, two children, 148
souls in all; seventy-two wagons,
ninety-three horses, fifty-two mules,
sixty-six oxen, nineteen cows, seven­
teen dogs and some chickens. He also
took along a cannon to awe the Indians.
The men were farmers, mechanics
and blacksmiths—sturdy pioneers from
all walks of life, and progenitors of the j
present “hardy” Utahans who today
celebrate this famous trek westward. I
The women did their share of the work,';
being tender persons who nursed the '
feet and wounds of the men folk and
helped to cook the meals and arrange
the tents and the wagons. They cheered •.
with songs such as “The Girl I Lett:
Behind Me” and the religious favorite
of the Mormons: “Come, Come, Ye
Saints,” the latter ending: “No toil i
and labor fear, all is well, all i.s well.” ;
For hundreds of miles this pioneer '

�THE DENVER POST—FIRST IN EVERYTHING—SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 17, 1938

■ MAGAZINE SECTION

The Roaring Machine Lurches to the Side . • .

The Helpless Driver Is Shot High in the Air . ..

Racing Enthusiasts Everywhere Go to See the Spills. This One Ended Tragically
for the Driver. George Herzog, 23, Is Shown Falling from His Racing Machine as

Both Man and Machine Spin Above Track . . .

It Turned Upside Down. A Moment Later It I.anded on Top of Him and Snapped
His Neck. He Died in an Ambulance on His Way to the Hospital.

was the Canada Rid, himself,
TA
•
71
7
ITsU^^frhTnXSlVtXaS
Jewel Acquires Some Mighty

whence

he

had

sprung

(one

his haven of sanctuary.
“With all this here org’nizin’ an’

HiJfaintin’ Ideas Which Sort
£

y

jr

\J

The Driver Falls, the Engine Bears Upward ...

J

-jy" • J

The Post Phone—Main 212T '

Another Victim for the God of Speed.

This Spill Occurred at the Memorial Day Race at Indianapolis When the Car of
Al Gordon and Frank Howard Went into a Spin. Miraculously, They Lived.

�back. An’ my business, bein’ in a sort
o’ luxury bracket for its source, is
feelin’ the pinch.”
The Kid’s business, of course, is
that of being the slickest pickpocket
in all the Americas.
"I was sayin’ to Jewel,” he con­
tinued, bringing in, as he always did,
his adored red-headed wife, “that
it’s no use stickin’ your fingers into
kicks what ain’ got nothin’ in ’em.
“Big shots ain’ makin’ no profits,
most o’ the workers is on strike an’
most o’ the rest of ’em is out o’ jobs.
I s’pose I could lift a few relief
checks, but I ain’ fellen that low yet.
i‘I figger these here lib’ral labqr
laws is what’s at the bottom o’ the
brief. An’ yet, I belong to one o’ the
oldest an’ most hon’rable unions in
the land.
“For half a cench’ry or more, the
Pickpockets’ Trust, or Dips’ Union,
has had headquarters in Ch’cago an’
branches aroun’ the country.
“Ev’ry p’fessional is a member. The
dues is on percentage, the amounts
is paid on the honor system, an’ our
bpys play on the up-an’-up with the
org’nization. The dues is a tenth .o’
the take; the scripchural tithe.
“It’s what we call ‘fall dough.’ A
‘fair is when one o’ the lads gets in
trouble. Then the fund gets him a
square mouthpiece if that’ll help, or
a fixer what can reach the right peo­
ple—judges, juries or prosecutors—

a^tiTITHE
A True Story From Real Life

!*‘My Business, Bein’ in a Sort o’ LuxSury Bracket for Its Source, Is Feelln’
»
the Pinch, Too.”

By Jack Lait
or it puts up in cash so he can lam
the bail if it’s hopeless.
“It don’ say ‘Pickpockets’ Trust’;
on the door, o’ course. But it’s a law
firm, see ? That firm ain’ got no other
kind o’ cases. An’ they gets paid by’
the year, so much.
“The head office is in a skyscraperowned by a big bank, an’ the rent is’
paid on the'line.
“lye got ev’rything an org’niza­
tion o’ workers or industrialists—fig-;
ger us either way—could need, excep’
a press agent or a senator.
,
“We exchange inf’mation about
conditions aroun’ the country, where
the bulls is tough, where a new D. A/
can or cannot be reached, what race­
tracks is bearin’ down, where we can

So She
Throws a Book
at Me—an’ the
Book Is b.y One
o’ the M a r X
Brothers — 1
Think Karl.”

Illustration
by Geo. A. Fish

slip a few grand in the campaign
fund of a right judge—an’ if any
brother is in distress, penal or
pers’nal.
“We even got international c’nections to fence bonds an’ di’monds an’
such where it ain’ too close to their
home. I, my?elf, never touch securi­
ties or ice. Currency is my dish. It
ain’ got no identity. It’s tough
enough to chance a rap for ‘larceny
from the person’ wit’out havin’ to
get by ‘possession o’ stolen goods’
or c’nspiracy falls.
“But I say I’m a good org’nization
man. I come clean with my tithe an’
I appreciate what p’tection it gets
me.
“But we ain’ in no fed’ration or
other union o’ unions. We ain’ tryin’
to shape over the world. We’re sim­
ply one for all an’ all for one; we ain’
lobbyin’ for no floor'under what a
sucker can carry in his wallet or a
ceilin’ over how long one of us can
chump cased.
“Some weeks I work forty hours
an’ some I jus’ lay aroun’ the house
an’ look at Jewel, an’ some weeks I
stay on a trail night an’ day till I
clip my cluck.
“If Stalin Is handin’ out
orders to all these here unions,
he hasn’t got aroun’ to ourn
yet, an’ if he ever shows up
at our headquarters one o’ the
members’ll prob’ly frisk him
for his five-year plan.
“Nach’rally, like in all
groups, we have our radicals.
Some o’ the tithe-payers in
good standin’ are defi­
nitely for packin’ the
Supreme Court the
New Deal way, though
me, myself, I don’ see
how you’re gonna get
in the pockets of a sapi
all covered up in a Ku1
Klux kimono.
“My Jewel — who’sI
got some red in her.

Sideswiped! Charles Engles Ploughs Over the Side Wall After Striking Car No.
34, Driven by Don McKenzie, Whose Machine Was Turned Completely Around.
-mostly in her hair—says as how
he
bein
’ byI’m
trade
a shoplifter
—•
“—
She
says
a tory,
an Indivij;fould never
nothin
out ofana’
ualist,
out of swipe
time wit
’ the’ times
torenowhat
a picket-line; she
^ot
sense had
o’ solidarity.
zouldn
’ work
a place
what
“I says
it ainin’ so.
I’m for
old was
age
[nfair.
I saysyour
that hands
was a flock
o’
msionsSo when
get so
loloney
an’can
I’d’t not
go at’empty
rough
laky you
put only
’em in
1itch-pocket
picket-line wit
but’out
go turnin
t’rough
aa
picket
’ in
riot
i—
if heI’m
had for
anything.
ill.
share-the-wealth—I
ant a share of anybody’s wealth,
n’ I can sit down with as much enirance an’ enthusism as any man.
“Jewel asks me am I for c’lective
irgaining, so I tells her no but she
bughta be. ’Cuz when them mammas
p’lect for bargains in them stores,
that’s when she can put in her best
licks. An’ she says stop kiddin’—do
stay on the job if he’s got a good--.. I ptand for the closed shop? So I

i

says avboob what marries a red-head
learns to stand for anything. So she
Ithrows a-book at me—an’ the book
is by one V the Marx brothers—I
think Karl.
\
w’ cho
ii■? “An
she says she’s a hund’ed per
;ent behind the ti
tirls in our hand
the corner, what’s
laundry aroun’ thi
been out now for two months for a
livin’ wage an’ shorter hours.
i “So I says, well if them laundry
girls wasn’ gettih’ no livin’ wage an’
struck for one, how was they livin’
ipp to then? An’ she says maybe I
Bbetter not ask. Girls who can’t get
&amp; livin’ wage have been forced to
feates worse’n death. I says I don’
tbelieve it, ’cus I’ve seen the girls in
phis laundry.
|. “Anyway, Jewel says, they’re right
fin demandin’ shorter hours. So I says
|l don’ know. How many hours was
[they workin’ before they struck an’
^demanded shorter hours? An’ she
bays she don’ know an’ that’s beside
fehe point.
I “I says how ? If you don’ know
blow many hours they was workin’,
plow can you say that many hours
ithey was workin’ was too long an’
tthey’re right in strikin’ for less
|hours ?
j “An’ Jewel says, bless her, she
Ididn’ unde’stand they was strikin’ for
jUESS hours—they was strikin’ for
SHORTER hours!”

Al Gordon Does a Solo Flight This Time. He Crashed Through the Fence Below
the Wheels and Flew 125 Feet In the Air. He Received a Broken Nose and Bruises.

Note How This Thrill-Provider Is Trying to Extricate Himself Before His Whirl­
ing Slachine Falls on Top of Him. The Driver Escaped with Minor Injuries.

Copyright. 1338, King features Syndicate, Inc.

Page Four
'

,, '• i.

-.1

............

�</text>
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              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes</text>
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                  <text>Local authors -- Wyoming -- Natrona County -- Casper</text>
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                  <text>Casper (Wyo.) -- History</text>
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                  <text>Frontier and pioneer life -- West (U.S.)</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1225">
                  <text>The Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are a series of the larger archival collection that are his papers. Both his Letterboxes and his Notebooks available in this digital repository include holograph manuscripts, which is to say, manuscripts written in the author's hand. Much of the material in Mokler's Letterboxes dates to the 1920s and 1930s.</text>
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    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1485">
                <text>Letterbox 2-G</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1486">
                <text>Alfred J. Mokler</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1487">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/"&gt;http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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          <element elementId="56">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1488">
                <text>1938</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="70">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1489">
                <text>Alfred J. Mokler</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1490">
                <text>The Denver Post (July, 1938)</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1491">
                <text>This letterbox contains a magazine section of the Denver Post from July 17, 1938 with a large article about the celebration of Mormon Day and the Mormons' arrival in Utah.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1492">
                <text>text</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1493">
                <text>PDF</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494">
                <text>ENG</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="63">
            <name>Access Rights</name>
            <description>Information about who can access the resource or an indication of its security status. Access Rights may include information regarding access or restrictions based on privacy, security, or other policies.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495">
                <text>The reformatted text and images in the Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are for personal, not-for profit use of students, researchers, and the public. Any use must provide attribution to the Casper College Archives and Special Collections (Western History Center). While being the property of Casper College, all text, images and other materials are subject to applicable copyright laws. Commercial use, electronic reproduction, or print publication ot text, images, or other materials is strictly prohibited without written permission. All permissions to publish must be obtained from the rights holder and are not the repository's responsibility for securing. The rights holder may or may not be the repository. Users also agree to hold the repository harmless from legal claims arising from their use of material held by the institution and made accessible in this digital repository.</text>
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                <text>Goodstein Foundation Library Archives and Special Collections (Western History Center)&#13;
</text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1497">
                <text>Utah -- History</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1498">
                <text>Mormons -- Utah -- History</text>
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            <description>A related resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1499">
                <text>Alfred J. Mokler Papers</text>
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                    <text>latter fishing in the Big Po
Agie. As they started an Indi;
gave chase until they reached t
Saw Cheyenne as Tent City and Lived at
: covei’ of the river. Mr. Fogg- ca
j ed my husband and he answere
The Mines When Frank Irwin Was Killed
; “What’s up?” Mr. Fogg exclali
ed “Jesus Christ, John, don’t y
By MRS. SARAH KNOTT
' about half way between Port Col! see the Indians .over yonder?”
At Mt. Vernon, Ill., on Jan. 4, linf, and Laporte, Colo.
Mr.
They got their horses and IV
Miner and Tip Trimble started f
1854 there was born to Lorenze Sherman was the name of the
man my father had gone in part. the Agency at Ft. Washakie
and Josephine Davis a daughter
j nership with, and he had been
i arouse the people and my husbai
which they named Sarah Frances. , there to take care of the place
and Charley Fogg as the India
While yet a small child, too while my father was away, and of
moved away went to the Rlchar
small to remember, only in a very j course anxiously awaited our re­
( house. At this time the India:
vague way about playing at our turn.
were about a half mile awi
home in Mt. Vernon, when at the
I driving oft and killing the cattl
Grasshoppers Take CiYrp
death of my Grandfather Davis, j The house was a log cabin with
j Fogg held the saddle horses ai
my father bought out the other
i kept his eyes on the India:
j a.dirt roof. In the spring it
heirs and we moved to the farm,
I while my husband went inside,
: proved to be not so good after a
six miles out from Mt. Vernon, i heavy rain, We
j was a gruesome sight. Both w
had a lovely
There we lived until the summer i garden, oats,
men were lying on the floor. Mr
wheat, barley and
of 1863. My father sold the hay. Everything grew wonder­
Richards was dead with a med
farm and we moved to Spring fully. One day almost harvest
cine pole thrust into her. Mr
Garden which was six rniles from time my mother sent me to the
Hall was pierced with a poisone
the farm. He went to California j garden to gather some peas for No. 134 Oliver Messenger
arrow, still alive but unconsciou
in the gold excitement. He was i dinner. As I was just ready to
I She lived from that morning unt
there three years. He came back return to the house the
grasshop- ed the miners. Frank Irwin was midnight when she passed awa:
as far as Pt. Collins, Colorado.
pers came in a cloud. I had to the stationary engineer. The next :j He removed the medicine ba
There he leased a farm, then
Richard’s body bi
face them and I did not know how spring the mines were closed. We J.
i ---- wrote to mother for us to meet
j when he made the second attemi
I could ever do it. I was so were going to move back to
him at St. Joe, Missouri. He
I to take the arrow from Mrs. Ha
frightened. They were so thick
drove across the plains with a and heavy the sun was darkened. lantic. A man by the name
it came out without the arro
James
Kime
was
to
move
our
mule team to Omaha, Nebraska. They came in such a roar, so in­
point.
things,
to
We
were
just
ready
After writing mother he was tak- tense and heavy. My father was
Mr. and Mrs. James I. Patte
start when one of the men came
en sick, and did not meet us as at Pt. Collins about two and one
and others came from the fort i
in
and
said
“
You
had
better
not
we expected. When we got to St.
soon as they could reach bandf
half miles away. By night there
Joe and did not find my father was not a spear of anything left. go. The Indians are just upon and removed the bodies to the Aj
there, mother wrote a letter to Hay, grain, garden, everything, ev­ the hill there.” We did not start ency.
then.
him and left it at the office there en the onions down into the
After the two men saw that th
Frank Irwin had gone to his
In St. J,oe. Mothei- had a cousin j ground were eaten.
women were given care they star
parents
home
before,
but
he
had
on a farm out from St. Joe. We '
not taken all of his things and ed for Ft. Stambaugh to notify tl
Earl.v Cheyenne Tent Town
Went out there, expecting father
soldiers. As they gained the hl
My father just loaded up and wanted us to bring them on our across the river, across froi
to make inquiry about us. He did
load.
He
was
on
his
way
over
to
not. He went back to Illinois to left for Cheyenne where the Union
where the depot now is, they lool
his sisters and asked where my ! Pacific had laid out a town, Not see us about it, when he met five ed back. The Indians were nt
Indians,
who
met
him
as
friends
,
,
,
,
His sister said i a building, all tents, except one said “How” and shook hands. : .
mother was.
and counting them pla,
shook
“Why they are in St. Joe. We I place where boards were set on
ed the number at 75. It was e’
have had letters from them”, end and battened between, which One got behind him and knocked ident that they had no intentior
him
down
with
his
tomahawk.
Father had supper with his sister was used for a saloon.' My fath­
of doing anything to the men bi
and family, then started back that er leased one large tent and put stripped him of his clothing, made were wrecking their revenge up,o
-pjjg
i
him
run,
and
as
he
ran
they
shot
night. He had had to hire a up a small one in back.
arrows into him. These arrows the women. Had I remained i
horse to go to Spring Garden large one was used for a dining
the valley T might also have bee
room
and
kitchen
for
a
hotel.
The
'were
poisoned. Three of them a victim, for those two wome
where his sister lived and where
struck
and
stuck.
He
ran
to
the
he expected to find us, not having small one was our living and bed
and I were the only women res:
had any other word. He met on room. We did a thriving busi- outside of Atlantic, a bachelor saw dents at that time and the nin
(jp
i
him
and
went
to
his
assistance.
his way my mother’s father and Hess there. I never before
men made up the entire populs
mother and had a little visit with since have seen SiO much money as helped him to his cabin, then ' tion of the valley.
went
for
his
father
Dr.
James
Ir
­
we made there. W stayed just
them.
It was a hard ride to Ft. Stam
My mother in the meantime was one year. After we had been win. Dr. Irwin was not at home. baugh and the soldiers immediate
He
was
in
South
Pass
and,
of
very much worried about my fath­ there for a time, the first building
i ly mounted to take up the pursui
er not meeting us as planned. put up was leased by my father. course not any telephones at that i of the Indians. With 35 mile
time, a messenger was sent for
Having heard about the Indians It was a good sized building two
i him. They got Dr. Harris, anoth- start and several hours to mak
making so many raids on the im­ stories high. In the meantime the
' er doctor of Atlantic. He remov­ their getaway before the soldier
migrants. Mother had a dream. Union Pacific was building and
ed the arrows. Frank lived until (could be notified, the Indian
When she got up the morning af­ would soon be there.
: made good their escape.
A few days before it reached midnight and was able to tell the
ter the dream, she said to my
My husband remained at th
particulars.
The
Indians
played
cousin and family, “Lorenze will Cheyenne one of the boarders and
i mine until my baby was born o
friends
with
and
killed
seven
men
be here today”, and he was. She I bet on the time of day it would
that day. We moved that after­ I July 26, three days after the niui
had dreamed that he had missed reach Cheyenne. I was not a bet­
noon,
Mr. Knott feeling it would der of these two women. I hav
us and had gone back to our ting person, having never bet be­
be
just
as safe as it would be la­ had three children since, Alva wh
home just as he did, but would be fore, but the day they reached
is in Lander with me, Mrs. Alic
ter.
there that day. One thing of in­ Cheyenne, the young man I had
Breitenstein of Paroo and Winni
The
next
spring
on
April
the
terest while at St. Joe was that bet with came in with material for
22nd 1870 my oldest aon was of Cody.
while at play one day we children a new dress. (The bet had been
;
Since coming to Wyoming
born.
were out in a heavy timber a i a new hat against a new dress.)
■ have lived here continuously i:
Early Lander Settlers
bunch of wild turkeys flew down 5 The young man was a clerk in a
Lander and have gone to Denve
In the Spring of 1872 we moved : but once, to Burlington, lowe
and lighted In trees above us. We j dry goods store, I was very much
shooed and shooed, and the little I surprised as I had not thought to the Lander valley, then known I on a visit to my daughter, to Ba
rinp' tbnf wat! with lie harkpd and sPr.ioUSlv Of the bet.
as Big Popo Agie valley. On Ju-

Mrs. Sarah Davis Knott Crossed Plains

�;o be scared away. The men were miles west of Cheyenne to Hazard interest in the Lovell ranch is it ' Cody.
My husband passed on January
iway that day I guess the turkeys Station, where my folks ran a was then known. My husband
road house. We did a good bus­ hired two men who had brought i,24, 1923 and my birthday is Jan{new that.
iness there. Father had leased vegetables from Utah, to bring us i uary 4 and my age is 79 years in
Stfiit Aciuss the Plains
The day following my father’s this place from two young men, down. My husband and one of 1933.
the men rode ahead on horse back SuiXuid quads sum aujuaAa eqj,
arrival we took the steam boat Mr. Knott and Mr. Norton.
as body guards. We came to
’or Omaha, Nebraska. I enjoyed
Romantic Wedding
•ejorapjOM Ptna pun ajouipjoi^
;his part of the trip very much. I
The next year my father began Little Popo Agle where we stop­ Quuajsi JO jouoq ui jqSiu .tupu j Xj
iat ,at the window with the engin­ to be suspicious of these two I ped for lunch and fed the team. -and n aanS Xr.unjv jamja 's-iiv
eer a great deal of the time, young men, my sister and myself. I The mosquitoes were very bad.
—ailOKIFHOM SaSSlK SHO
watching the scenery and talking He was making plans to move. One ! My little son and I suffered a
-KOH AvaauM anKTM salt
o the engineer. I was very much day after he had gone, Mr. Norton great deal from them. It was my
* * *
nterested in him and his machin­ went into Cheyenne to make ar- i first experience with them for I
•Xapsoni
had
never
seen
any
of
them
be
­
ery, as well as the scenery. Fath­ rangements for the justice of the ■'
qxeu eq him Supeaiu jxeu aqj,
We were very heavily -jsoj qjinaq eqj ui sjuiod oatj aqi
er had left his team with a peace to meet us a half mile from : fore.
earmer at Omaha, where he went the house at five o'clock. We did ! loaded and it took all afternoon passed junp ssjia -sjou^ SuiXq
when we arrived at Omaha. We not have to have a marriage li- I to reach this valley. It all seem­ ui pun ssudraoa eqj jo esn aqj ui
rad to wait there for a company of cense at that time, just a witness. ed so wonderful to me. When we uaAiS ojaAV suoijonjjsnj 'uosiun ui
?ilgrims to be made up. This A man by the name of Frank Fisk left Atlantic it was cold and snow­ asTuiojd jnoos ptS aqj pajuadat ip
was required by the governor on was out visiting up from Cheyenne ing and to arrive here in a beau­ uaqjj ’AABj jnoas ■e aAuS piS qant
recount of the raiding of the hos- and we took him as the witness. tiful green valley. There was naa Roj J03;
‘ssauRi jo juno:
;ile Indians. We were three weeks We had planned to go for a walk, some nice gardens. I though I j -au uo juasqu sum uosaqoR unaj
3rosslng the plains arriving in Ft. had talked it over with mother at ' had reached “Paradise”. When • ■Buuv puasajd ajeAt spjS uaj
Jollins on the sixth day of De­ the noon hour, and coaxed her to we arrived here there was one wo­ •uanv T 'a ’S-iIM JO auioq aip jr
cember in a snow storm. I enjoy- let us wear our new dresses. (We man here, Mrs. Richards living in looqas JajjB! Xnpsanj, jam sjnoac
5d the trip all the way across the each had new dresses we had nev- i a house where the Baldwin store jjjO aqj JO z ’ON uoisiAia
tlains. I did not realize the dan­ er worn.) She thought it very now stands, and nine men includ­
•ssajsoq sn uapv T ‘i;
foolish, but we told her that Mr. ing my husband. Mart Hornecker i ■SJI5 qjiAi XupnoM Jxau jaara ijjjv
ger we were in.
All the way across there were Fisk had never seen them. She and brother Ernest on the ranch i sjnoas aqj, •saSp’eq jjjara ujnjqo o:
tilgrim houses, a day’s drive apart was convinced, and we wore the that Mart still owns. Charley ifjOM Jiaqj uuid spjS eqj padiai
with supply stores in case the im- new dresses. We met at the ap- | Fog and Tip Trimble about one uaiiv T "a ’sjpi qjOM ssBia jsji
nigrants would run short. Black­ pointed place at the appointed I mile southwest, now known as the aqj Jo^
‘ajp jo asua uj jnoai
smith shops took care of any time. We were married there i Dora Robertson place. Peter An­ ■B JO joiABqaq puB uoiJuaAaut
derson
was
just
below
where
the
oreaks or losses. We had with standing on the railroad track. I
ajij u{ osjB ‘3bij uBOuarav eq'
Js a big New Foundland dog chat My sister, Cynthia to John Norton i round house is now. Jake Fry JO ajjanbpa puB XJOjsiq ui spp
we children enjoyed very much. and I to John Knott. My sister j lived on what is now known as the aqj pejanjjsui uojXbjo 'Sjj^ qjoA
3ne day we met a band of four­ was 16 years old and I was 14 Experimental farm. Henry Lov­ jnoas ssBja puoaas qjjAi auR u
teen Indians. They had their years old. This was on the 15th ell had the place just this side of •asiraojd jnoas ptS aqj uosjun u
women with them and father said day of Feb. 1868. The justice of Squaw creek known as the Agri- oabS juasaJd spiS uaajuaAas eq,;
IS long as they had their women the peace was Mr. Brown later cultuial site. This place was al­ •AABj jnoas jJiS B oabS piS qoB'i
with them we need not be afraid, Judge Brown who has presided so owned later by my sister, Alice ‘RBa ROJ Oj asuodsaj uj 'Xai
This is -uBjj auRojBD Xq pajuBdracaaB ,,in
there would be no danger. But here in Court many times and Wroe and husband.
we were very much frighcened and who^ many of you have met no where my husband had bought the -ijnBaa aqj Bapamv,, JO SuiSuj
had him draw the wagon sheet doubt. My father had a contract half Interest.
eqj Xq pauado SupaaM 'ssajso
The next spring my sister Alice SB aByapj auiqdasof ’sjpi qjp
close so we could not see out, or to board the men for the rail road
they see inside. When we came graders, and of course as they came down bo visit us. On her jooqas jajjB SuxueAa XBpuopi jei
return I went with her to visit ’ sjnoog pip JO J •OK uoisiAiQ
to the crossing .of the South builded they moved.
with my parents. The weather I
I’latte river, we had left the rest
Came to Atlantic City
—DNiJLaaw axi.
became very bad while I was i
of the train. They were going to
AOfNa SAfioos aim
Mr. Knott and Mr. Norton dis­ there, and continued bad. My i
Denver, we were going to Ft. Col­
solved partnership. We moved mother Insisted on my staying as
lins. The Platte was very treach. -jf uospnH 2lhBJ,
first to Elk Mt. and the next I was expecting another baby.
erouK on account of the quick
pUB
JBSJJ,
"Sjpi
pUB XOO -SJ]
spring, 1869 we moved to Atlan­
Indians Kill Two Women
sand. My father had had this on
Xq paiUBdraoaoB ajeAi. suojAiaK OR
tic City, We made this move
his mind all along but had said
Mrs. Richard’s niece, Mrs. Hall, •UOpBiaOSSB IBpOJipa JBUOpBK at
with an ox team. My parents had
nothing to mother about it. We
moved there before. Atlantic City \ had come to vl^it her the summer Supuasajdau ‘Bjoseuuipi ‘ifaraa
stayed at a ranch that night, on
was a thriving mining town of i before. Three days before the JO iieqajiw: ’Z ’H Po'® nosuqc
the bank of the Platte. Father
10,000 inhabitants at this time. birth of my daughter, to be exact •Aop Xq apura ajoAt sassaupp
iliat night raised the wagon bo.x My father was employing a num­ on the 23rd day of July 1873, qaiqM jb 'op jaAtoa puB jqSi
higher by putting blocks of wood
ber of men in a placer mine. My these two women were both killed opBJOjop aqj Xq janbuBq b ’
on the axels. This was to keep
pajBuimino uopusAuoa aqi ’am
husband went to work for him. by the Indians.
the water out of the wagon box.
The Indians lay down along side jbXoj b UAtoqs puB sajjBaqj ubi
One day I went to the mine with
My father did not give those mules
him. They had dug prospect of their horses as they rode until -jjnH Xjjbh 9ip puB sjaunip pt
any time to rest crossing. He
suoaqounj jb sjsanS aaaAi ajdot
holes ahead to find which way the they were within a half mile of ’
used the black snake whip pretty
jadBdsAiau aqj,
•sjuamiuBdmi
pay streak ran. They struck the the little log cabin which stood
-OB snojauaS qjiAt jauuip Xaqrnj
freely and after we were across
on
the
present
site
of
the
Baldwin
pay streak in one corner of the
father threw up his hands and
paXofua puB satQBj aqj jb pajBi
hole they were on this day I i store. As they raised up they
yelled at the top of his voice, I went out. One of them put a gave their blood curdling war ’ ajaAi oOi uBqj ajopi 'lajoq u
"whoope!” We did not under­
-Rodomsop aqj jb qnjo ajoH Jou
bench down in the hole so I whoop and rode straight for the ’
aqj JO jabuBq aqj jb “op Jaqmn
stand him, he was always so quiet
house.
They
were
out
to
avenge
! could climb down in and out
and not given to make demonstra­
Piau-aiqoK am JO PiajH ’H f sJ
again. They gave me a gold pan the killing of some Indian women.
tions of this kind. He finally ex­
Tip Trimble and Charley Fogg ’ puB 'jRi JO sjsanS araAi Xaqj Sup
and told me I could have all I !1
-Aa XBpsjnqx -aoiAjas SuispjaA!
plained to us the danger we had
could wash out. I suppose I were setting fence posts on the
been in or rather the treacherous­ washed out more gold than I Fogg place and were in plain sight ’ ■ puB uoijBjado jadBds.wau ui s]
ness of the river.
-qjaui JsajBt aqj jo lUBjSojd B
I saved, but I saved $4.80. I i of all that happened. It would j
SutuajsR XBpjnjBg puB XBpwj .r
This day was a hard one on the
have
meant
certain
death
to
them
1
could pick the gold out with my i
-uaa JB Suijaara uoijbwossb ssa.
team, short of feed and snowing,
had
they
gone
to
the
rescue
of
the
fingers. I had never seen a gold i
but my father knew where he was
women as there were 75 Indians. ' opBJOjop aqj papuajjB uoja{i
pan before.
going and felt he could make it
They mounted their horses and &gt; jsaiLia puB uojAiaK •'i 'q JOjipa:
to the ranch he had leased; which Frank Irwin Killed by Indians i rode toward where they knew my

In the fall of 1869 we moved] husband and Mr. Miner were, the
we did after dark. This ranch
vas on the Cache la Poudre river. to Miners Delight where I board­ former piclting berries and the

�‘i&gt;-i‘«i’*4'******M&gt;****+**M&gt;«4'*4'****4^***^^&gt;***^* ’5^+***
❖
«
Extreme Measures Were Used to Rid
*

Rangeland of Rustlers bv the Cattle Outfits

**
*
Dab Burch and Jack Bedford Had No Chance

*
**

For Their Lives in Tragedy of the Nowood

+
*

(By J. W. Morrow of Claresholm, Alberta)

In order that the readers of this) invaders took refuge in the wil­
story may know how I came to) lows and sagebrush and gulches,
and a regular siege began. Mr.
know the details of this affair, ij F’oot offered one thousand dollars
will state that I lived with my I for any one who could produce a
stepfather, J. R. McKinnie, and) cannon. The seige did not last
family, on the Greybull river, two ! long, as the invaders seeing the
miles below the old townsite of; helplessness of their position sur­
Otto, at a place called in those rendered, were taken to Cheyenne
' days. The Bridser crossing of; and tried lor murder but were not
Whoozit No. 136
Greybull being the place where convicted.
Jim Bridger crossed the river
As his plan did not work out as
when he piloted a large immigrant; expected, a new plan was put in be cut out and left behind, bu
train through the country in the force, which was to send detec­ Bedford and Burch were stroni
early days. Mr. Bedford spent tives out among the ranchers, in their desire to take the horse
considerable time at our house, i whose business was to spy on sus­ along, and then advertize them a
and as Mr. McKinme was a wit-; picious ranchers, and if anything strays, the advertizing to be don*
ness in the famous trial, which was found wrong to shoot them in “The Rustler,” a paper print
will be mentioned l iter in this ' down from ambush. Northern ed at Bonanza, and edited by Tor
story, I had a change to know all) Wyoming was full of these cattle Daggett. A lot of argument too:
the details connected with the af- detectives when the year of 1892 place in regard to the matter an;
fair.
came around. I will now go di­ it was finally agreed to let ther
Before going in to this story, I) rectly into the story of Jack Bed­ take the horses along, providing
they would assume all responsibil
will write brieflj a picture of the ford and Dab Burch.
conditions of thiugs as they were;
Jack Bedford was a man of Ity in connection with drivin
at this time, in order to show how about 2 6 years of age, light com­ them off the range.
it was possible for circumstances plection and had rather an attrac­
After the finish of the roundu
to happen that would lead up to ! tive personal appearance.
t
He Bedford asked permission
the killing of these two men in the ; was born near Dallas, Texas, and place the stray horses in our pas
manner in which it happened.
came up the trail into Wyoming ture, which was granted, and the;
At this time the most of the with a bunch of Texas cattle in remained there until Septembe
, state of Wyoming was used as a the year of 1890. He went to 2 9. On the evening of this day
large grazing area, where vast work for the ML of Lovell Cattle; John Seaman a rancher from th
herds of cattle ran at large, and Cd., which had their headquar-1 Nowood, and who lived at Bon
were owned by large cattle com­ ters on the Shoshone river at or) anza, arrived at our house, in
panies, who had their cattle ranch­ near the present town of Lovell.! formed Mr. McKinnie that th
es located on the rivers, which at
While on the roundup in the I horses he had in the pasture, wer
this time were mostly open, and spring of 1891 he met a young I his property, and that he ha
gave the stock plenty of chance for man by the name of Ira Walker,; warrants for the arrest of Jac
water; and especially was this true who had his headquarters on Shell Bedford and Dab Burch for steal
of the Big Horn Basin, as there creek, and was running a small Ing them; also that he, Mr. M(
were only about six settlers on the bunch of cattle which he was ad­ Kinnie, and some of the other
Big Horn river between the can­ ding to in the usual way at that who were on the roundup woul
yon on the north side of the basin. time. He persuaded Mr. Bedford have; to appear as witnesses. Th
The Shoshone river (Stinking to quit his job and join him as a) trial was to take place on Septen
•Water river) was almost complete­ partner, which he did, and the; ber 30, at Walter Peay’s farm o
ly open. The Greybull was more two started up ranching on Shell the Big Horn river, in Johnso
thickly settled, although the big creek.
i Co., Mr. Peay being justice c
flat known as the Burlington
In the summer of 1891 a big; peace.
Flat, was not settled and was Fourth of July celebration was
The threshing outfit had jus
roamed over by bands of antelope, held at Otto and people came pulled into our field, with the ir
cattle and wild horses. The first from all over the Basin to attend tention .of threshing for up th
settlemen was made on this flat this affair. Jack Bedford was next day, and my step-father re
the following year, 1893, by the j among the visitors from Shell. It fused to appear as a witness o
Mormon people.
! was at this affair that he got ac- that day. Mr. Seaman strongl
On account of the rough nature) quainted with the young people protested, but finally gave in, an
of the country, it was not possible j of otto and vicinity. From this it was agreed that the trial woul
for the large cattle companies in i ti„ie on he spent most of his time take place on October 1.
their big roundups to find all of j in this neighborhood and in the
Saturday, Oct, 1st, 1892, oper
the cattle on the range each I spring of 1892 met Dab Burch, ed up as a beautiful day, as onl
pring, and went unbranded until; and the • two formed a warm the Big Horn Basin can product
ley were weaned from their friendship.
The threshers were just finishin
David A. Burch, commonly our job. I well remember seein
others. and then became what
s called mavericks. It was the known as “Dab”, was about 30 Jack Bedford standing on th
‘'ey of the cattle companies to j years old, tall and slender, and horse power, talking to the drii
-Xivi
t! ,
---- J-de these mavericks among, was born in the state of Miss,ouri.

�weie a lew the year of 1888, and settled on
small ranchers and a good many Owl creek, where he ran a bunch
It had been arranged that al
^cowboys who took up claims of of horses until the spring of 1892, parties concerned with the tria
their own, bought a few head of when he moved to Otto.
would meet at our house, havt
stock, and started branding all the
He became well known over the early dinner, and then proceed to­
mavericks they could find in or­ Basin in the year of 188 9, for gether to the Walter Peay ranch
der to add to their herds. This having fought a fierce six-shooter on the Big Horn, which was situ­
finally became known as rustling duel with Pistol Billy, a cowboy ated about a quarter of a mile
and it would not have been so bad working for the Pitchfork Cattle south and east from the present
if this class of ranchers had con­ Co. This duel took place on the J site ot Manderson.
fined themselves to branding only farm of Angus AjcDonald, twenty-!
The party, consisting of Jacii
mavericks, but a good many lof the five miles south ot Meeteetse, on ! Bedford and Dab Burch, as detenso-called rustlers branched out Gooseberry creek. The young j dants, John A.. Thorne, Johnnie
and branded calves that were fol­ men put their backs together Kerkins,
'J—J.
’
K. McKinnie, Joe
lowing mothers, and sometimes walked ten paces, turned and! Brown and MoiTroe Johnson as
killed the mothers, and committed filled one another full ot lead at j witnesses, arrived at the scene of
other deeds of a similar nature. a distance of twenty paces. Both the trial, about 2 o'clock and were
The business of rustling became men recovered, having been put surprised to find Joe Kogers, Mr.
so bad in Wyoming that the large into a democrat wagon and taken Heavier and Mr. Klckets, all three
stock owners became furious. It to Owl creek, where they were cattle detectives, standing around
seemed impossible to stop this met by Dr. Scheuelkie- from Lan- j In the yard at Mr. Peay s farm.
kind of work by the law of the der.
The trial was immediately pro­
land, so in the spring of 1891a
During "the summer of 1892 ceeded with, and alter all the wit­
large posse of men, consisting ot Bedford and Burch rode the range ! nesses had testified, John Sea­
drifters, gunmen and gamblers, in and around the Greybull coun-! man asked Mr. Peay to dismiss the
were hired and armed and given try, and were constantly watched case, as he was satisfied that the
instructions to kill every cattle by three cattle detectives, whose horses had not been stolen, and
justiei who happened to have his i names were as follows: Joe Rog- that he uid not wish to prosecute
name on the blacklist. This ers, a red faced, unattractive look­ any further.
Accordingly the
bunch ot men were organized at or ing man, who had known Jack two defendants were turneu loose,
near Cheyenne, and were put un­ Bedford when he worked for the and prearations were niade to re­
der a leader and the posse started Lovell Cattle Co., and whom Mr. turn to Otto, when a quarrel denorth toward Buffalo. The first Bedford thought was a good veioped between Beulord and
victims to come in contact with friends of his; a Mr. Peavier, who Peavier. 'the latter had testified
this bunch were Nate Champion came from nowhere as far as that he had seen Bedford and
and Nick Ray, who lived at the anyone knew, and was a kind of Burch drive the horses off the
KC (Kaycee) ranch on Powder a mystery man; and Mr. Rickets, range on the Nowood. Bedford
river. These two men bached in a man who worked for the Pitch­ took hold of Peavier s ■Whiskers
h small log cabin, and as they fork Cattle Co., at one time. (I and pulled him around the yard.
were on the blacklist, the posse am not sure of the name of this and threatened to horsewhip him
surrounded the cabin during the last man, but I will call him Rick­ with a quin which he held in his
night and waited for daylight. ets in this story.)
hand, however, the men were
Early in the morning Nick Ray
These three men were often parted, auu alter a lot of quarrel­
opened the door with the inten­ seen lurking around through the ing and ai gument, tne party,
tion of going to the creek for wa­ country all summer, and were leaving the tiiree detectives stand­
ter, when he was shot down in the thought by most everyone to be ing in the yard, started lor home.
doorway. Nate Champion pulled spotters, but Air. Bedford would
When luey .arrived at the cross­
his friend’s body into the cabin always say Rogers was his friend, ing Of the Big Morn, tuey were
and barricaded the door, and then
On the 1st of September of this burpnseu to see Air. Peavier and
started as game a battle as was year, the small stockmen lof the Mr. rticKeis nding flown lo . cue
ever put up by one man against a district around Otto decided to iioad towaiu them, Mr. Kogers'
mob. Mr, Champion kept a diary put on a roundup for the purpose following oeniiid. W lien the irio
of the affair which was after­ of gathering in their stock which got to within fifty yarns ot them
wards found on his body. He ranged in the badlands to the they dismouuteu, drew their Vvinsaid that the mob kept up a steady south of the river. Accordingly, cnesters and taKiUg aim across
fire, sending bullets through the an organization was formed, con­ their saddles called on the party
door and window, and that he re­ sisting of John A. Thorne, John­ to surienuer, as they had a war­
turned the fire until nearly noon, nie Perkins, J. R. McKinnie, Joe rant tor iiieir arrest. Bedford
when his ammunition gave out. Brown, L. Guynup, Albert Guy- ana Burch puiled their guns ana
The mob then loaded a wagon nup, J. V. Gould iand Monroe tooK protection bemud tueir sauwith dry willows, and backed it Johnston. Bedford and Burch ale horses, 'me rest ot tne parry
up against the cabin and set fire asked permission to&gt; join this drew guns anu got betiiud trees.
to it. As soon as the cabin was roundup and it was granted them. and 11 ioOKed lire a Oartle wouiu
well afire he opened the door and
The route laid out was to leave De fought, wnen Joe frogers can­
made a run for his life, but was the Greybull at the McKinnie ed on everyone to put up their
Immediately shot down.
ranch and cross the badlands to guns, that tnere was no use in
, The news of this killing soon the Big Horn river, follow up this iiaviiig trouoie, as ne just nad a
reached Buffalo and Sheridan, stream to Fifteen Mile creek, and warrant tor jack Beuiord and
and the citizens of these two towns follow that creek to Buffalo Ba­ Hao Buren for causing a distur­
became alarmed at the invasion sin, traveling east of Tatman bance on the court grounds. Jack
ot the country by a gang of killers, mountain and home.
Bedford said that he knew Joe
and a large army of nearly one
On the first night out on the Kogers was a friend of his, and
thousand men was quickly gath­ Big Horn river, an incident hap­ told Dab to put up his gun, as
ered together at Buffalo, and put pened which ultimately led to the "Old Joe” would see them througn
under the command of Mr. Fioote killing of Jack Bedford and all right.
of Buffalo. This army of men Dab Burch. On the morning fol-.
They both finally haiided their
marched south from Buffalo and towing the first night out, three ' Suns pver to Joe Kogers, and
surrounded the invaders' at a stray saddle horses came into the »iaried back up to Pea 8 to oe

point some where between the roundup. Air. Thorne, who was (tried for assault.. Mr. McKinnie i
Kaycee ranch and Buffalo. The foreman, insisted that the horsesI' anr
Mr ThnrnB
ci
anc Air.
Thome started
back with i

�tnem, out Joe
byuxvc
and said that it would not be J
necessary for them bo go back, as
he would see that the boys were
well protected, and Jack Bedford
spoke up and said: “Yes, Jim, you
and Thorne go on home, ‘Old Joe’
is a good friend of mine and we
will not need you.’’ Accordingly, ■
McKinnie and Thorne turned and ,
went toward home, and Jack Bed­
ford and Dab Burch accompanied
by Joe Rogers, and Peavler and ‘
Rickets, proceeded to the Peay ''
ranch, where they were given a
hearing before Peay, who ordered ,
them to be taken to Buffalo for ‘
trial, and appointed Joe Rogers to
take them there.
After the trial, Rogers necked ,
Bedford’s and Burch’s horses to- ,
gether with a small rope, and ,
started to tie the men’t feet to-'
gether under their horses. Burch
objected to this, but again Bed­
ford spoke up and said that Rog­
ers was his friend, and it would 5
be all right, so both men were
tied on their horses. Rogers
asked permission from Mr. Sea-i
man to stop at his place at Bon­
anza for the night, and this was i
granted.
i
The four men then started for
Bonanza. After their departuie,
Mr. Peavler and Mr. Rickets,
mounted their horses, rode north
and crossed the No wood, circled
around by the Jordon flour mill
and recrossed the No wood, just
! east of the O. C. Morgan farm.
I They then took the Morgan road
for Bonanza, which followed up
the bottom of a deep gulch, and
joined with the Peay road right in;
the bottom of a deep gulch. Herei
they waited lor the other party tos
arrive.
When the party of four arrived:
within about twenty yards of the!
forks in the road, Peavler andl
Rickets rode out of the gulch and
confronted them. They told Mr.i
Seaman that they had decided toi
take the boys back bo Peay’s and:
withdraw charge and turn them^
loose, and that he, Mr. Seaman,)
could go home, which he immed-'
lately did.
Alter the departure of Mr. Sea-i
man, the two men, Mr. Bedfordl
and Dab Burch, and their twof
horses were shot down by thts
three detectives, Robers, Peavle)and Rickets. The two men, witltheir legs tied under the horses
and the horses necked together
could offer no resistance. In vis­
iting the spot after the shooting
everything indicated that Rogers
had shot Bedford through the)
head with a Colts 45, as he wa&amp;
the only one of the three carry-.
Ing that kind of a gun, and Burclk
at once took his knife from hisi
pocket and cut the rope holdingf
the horses together and made an.
effort to escape, but Peavler and
Rickets with their Winchesters
caused his horse to run a circle

and horse.
The next morning, Mr. Town­
send, a threshing machine man,
who had been threshing on the
upper Nowood country, was on his
way to spend Sunday at his ranch
on the Big Horn, and came upon
the bodies of the dead men.
He hastened to Mr. Peay’s place
and notified him of the tragedy.
Mr. Peay ordered him to make
rough boxes and bury the two men
— at once.
Mr. Townsend buried the men
on the bluffs opposite his farm,
and they remained burled there
until the following March, when a
I party consisting of John A.
I Thorne, Johnny Perkins and J. R.
I McKinnie went to the place of
I burial and took up the bodies and
I brought them to Otto, where fun■ eral services were held, the serI vices being under the direction of
I the Rev. I.. C. Thompson. The
I remains were then buried in the
Otto cemetery.
The three murderers made good
their escape, and were never heard
of after, with exception of Joe
Rogers, who camped one night in
Pryor’s Gap with an old friend ol
him, while on his way out of the
country, and to whom he confess­
ed the deed, and boasted of having
killed Jack Bedford.
His story of the affair was al
most precisely as narrated here
This man’s name was John Sneid
er, and he did not tell of meetinf
i Rogers for about five years aftei
the affair took place.
The writer met this Mr. Sneide:
in the spring ol 1897, while camp
ing one night on the Crow India]
reservation, on Lodge Grass creek
and he asked me many question
I concerning this affair, after whicl
he bold me what Joe Rogers haI told him.

�&lt; page 4

' wed., Aug. 11. 1948 JP

'HOOVER BLASTS
iWEAOFMANAS *
! SLAVE OF STATEj
a

i

T

0

0!
B'

S'
a,
s;
P
I V
u” West Branch, la,, Aug. 10 (Spe- | s;
It
« clal)-The text of former President

iContrasts America withl
■ Foreign Countries.

Hoover’s birthday speech here
p;
today follows:
x»
C "I am glad to have your inyltaJO
I tion to come again to this Iowa W
1 1 village where I was bom. Here i
Pl
1 ’ spent the first 10 years of my toyt hood. My parents and grandparents
' 'i came to this vlUagp in the covered
; ! wagon-pioneers in this commum^.
1 They lie buried over the hill. They
i broke the prairie into homes of
independent living. 'Ihey wor’ shipped God; they did the^ duty
•to their nel^bors. They toiled to
•bring to their children greater
&gt; comfort, better education and to
'open to them wider opportunity
i than had been theirs,
&lt; ‘T am proud to have been bom
• in Iowa, As I have said befom.
' thru the eyes of a 10 year old boy
‘ i it was a place of adventure and
'daily discoveries. The wonder of
the growing crops, the excitements
of the harvest, the journeys to the
(woods for nuts and hunting, the
(joys of snowy winters, the comrfort of the family fireside, of good
(food and tender care. Md out of
Ithe excessive energy of all small
I boys, the evenings were filled
with accounts of defeat and vic- ,
IfOTy over animate and inanimate j
'things—so far as they were per- |
‘mitted in a Quaker community.
•

W(Wk On Farm Told

»

••Indelible in those recollec­
tions was a widowed mother, sit­
ting with her needle, cheerMly
supporting three children and at
the same time ministering to her
■nei^bors. After that came life
with Uncle Allan on his farm near
this village, with the joys and
sorrows which come to every small
■ boy en route to life’s disciplines
1 by way of farm chores. And Mong
them was the unending making of
provisions for the next winter. But
'in -those primitive days, social
' security was had from the cellar,
'not from the federal government.
"You may be surpnsed if I tell
: you that at an age somewhat under
■ 10 I began here my first national
i - service. By my own efforts I f^
i nished firecrackers required
‘ the adequate celebration of the
&gt; Independence of the United States ]
on July 4.1882. To get those fir^ ;
J crackers, I entered into collective
1 bargaining by which it was settled
rthat I should receive one cent per
I hundred for picking potato bugs i^n
' a field in sight of this stMd. W
^impression then, and now.is, that
it was an oppressive wage rate.

•

�^so, I took part in the politi-i
seal Issues of the day by walking
® beside
Garfield torchlight proScession in the Presidential camFbalgn of 1884. And by the village
flags at half mast, I learned of
•Bthe assassination of Garfield
jswith some dim understanding that
jc somewhere in the nation great men
&lt;n guarded its future,
}| “One of tijg infjeiibjg impres*'sions of memory was the original
J Quaker meeting house. Those rec"ollections chiefly revolve around
the stiff repression of the explo­
sive energies of a small boy sit­
ting during the long silences. One
JI time, however, the silence was
H broken by the shrill voice of Aunt
u*Hannah who was movedin meeting
bitterly to denounce the modem-'
Istic tendencies of those times.
She had firm views on any form of
recreation, which included singing
in Sunday school. She closed with l i
a peroration to the effect that if
these tendencies persisted that s.
edifice dedicated to God would &gt;g
some day become in fact that s—place of abomination—a "theatre.’* And truly, the old meeting !•
. house in its decadent years, hav- le
I ing made way for a better edifice, -td |
became a movie house. My view te ;
is that the abomination part de- id ■
to’
pends on the choice of the film.
is
Recalls School Teacher
“And among these recollections ed
was that of a great lady who first ;etaught me in school and remained ;h,
my friend during her whole long and ed
ee
useful life, Mrs. Mollie Carran.
“It was from her that I first
heard something about the word
’
American. Many great writers and
statesmen have attempted to express what we mean by that word, not
But there is an Imponderable feel■
ing within it which reaches to the
i
soulofourpeople and defies measure.
the I
“America means far more than a
continent bounded by two oceans. ireg
It is more than pride of military iad|
power, glory in war, or in victory. .'oM
It means more than vast expanse of itha
farms, of great factories or mines, iro-ffl
magnificent cities, or millions of arlB
•automobiles and radios. Jt is more obJ
even than the traditions of the great ; o^
tide westward from Europe wliicli rh®S
pioneered the conquest of a con- mes;q
tinent. It Is more than our literature, r o( j
our music, our poetry. Other na­
tions have these things also.
6
!
“Maybe the intangible we can-&gt;ded
not describe lies in the personal ould
experience and the living of each
•I of us rather than in phrases, how- oese
ever
ever inspiring.
K
will
Experience As American
IS
“Perhaps without immodesty I irica
can claim to have had some ex­ hese
IC perience in what American means, ;here
fl I have lived many kinds of Amer- ■nd a
|&gt;-Jcan life. After my early boyhood that
in this Iowa village, I lived as~
) the ward of a country doctor in
Oregon. -1 lived among those to
; whom hard work was the price of pn ail
existence. The open opportunities I wiU
of America opened out to me the r men
i public schools. They carried me f free
I; to the professional training of
j an American university. I began tritual &gt;
I by working with my own hands fulfill
I for my daily bread., i have tasted Tican.
the despair of fruitless search ituries i
for a Job. I know the kindly en-. coun*
couragement of a humble boari
Inghouse keeper. , I know now

�economic depression either com­
ing or going. But nobody told me
of it. So I did not have the mod­
em worry of what the federal
government would do about it.
“I have conducted the admin­
istration of great Industries with
their problems of production and
the well-being of their employes.
Sees Contrasts Abroad
"I have seen America in con­
trast with many nations and
races. My profession took me into ?
:many .foreign lands under many
kinds of government. I have
worked with their great spiritual
leaders and their great statesmen,
I have worked in governments of
free men, of tyrannies, of Social­
ists and of Communists. I have
met with princes, kings, despots
and desperados.
"I have seen the squalor of ‘
Asia, the frozen class barriers ■
of Europe, I was not a tourist,
I was associated in their working
lives and problems. I had to deal
Mtn their social systems and
I their governments. And outstandj mg everywhere to these great
; masses of people there was a
; hallowed word—America. To them,
( it was the hope of the world.
“My every frequent homecoming
was a reaffirmation of the glory
of America. Each time my soul
was washed by the relief from
finding poverty of other nations. :
by the greater kindliness and
frankness which comes from ac­
ceptance of equality apd the
wide/open opportunity to all who
wnt a chance, It is more than
that. It is a land of self-respect
born alone of free men.
Slavery On March

nn
participated
on behalf of America in a great
war. I saw untold misery and
revolution. 1 have seen liberty
die and tyranny rise. I have seen
human slavery again on the
: march.
, "I iiave been repeatedly placed
by my counhymen where I had
need to deal with the hurricanes
of social and economic destruc­
tion which have swept the world.
I have seen bitter famine and the
worst misery that the brutality
of war can produce.
“I have had every honor to
which any man could aspire.
There is no place on the whole
CMth except here in America
where ^1 toe sons of man could
have this chance in life.
7 .’■ecount all this in order
that, in Quaker terms, I can give
my own testimony,
“The meaning of our word
America flows from one pure
spring. The soul of our America
is Its freedom of mind and spirit
“e the open
Mndows thru which pours toe
sunUght of the human spirit.
Here alone is human dignity not
: A dream, but an accomplishment. ,
,,

!

Qtes Quaker H^tage

Perhaps another etching of
Mrther meaning of America Ues
Jn tnis community, it was largely
settled by Quakers over 90 years
small religious seet
J” Eng land had declared that cert^n freedoms of man came from
the Creator and not from thestate 150 years before toe Dec- I
laration of Independence. They '
spent much time in British stocks .
this first outburst

l?2f7^hTn toe dignity of toe ind^
vidual man.
;
“They first came in refuge to i
New EiglMd. But the Puritans '

�( 01 roun in me
oi uib iuuj.! vidual man.
,
:
“They first came In refuge to 1
I New England. But the Puritans
cut -off their ears by way of dis­
approval of their religious indi­
vidualism. Then came the great
refuge which William Penn se­
cured for them. Prom New Eng­
land and Pennsylvania some of
the ancestors of this community,
before the Revolution, migrated
first to Maryland, and after a
generation they moved to the
Piedmont of North Carolina.
Then early in the last century
slavery . began to encroach upon
them. Most of that community5,000 of them-organized a con­
certed trek to Ohio and Indiana.
This time they were seeking
freedom from that great stain on
human liberty. Again after a gen­
eration they hitched their covered
wagons and settled on these
'■®^‘Everywhere along these treksj
. there sprang np hemes and farms.

But more vital was the meeting
house with its deep roots in re­
ligious faith, its tolerance and de­
votion to liberty of the individual.
And in these people there was the
will to serve their community and
their country. Even this village
was a station on the underground
thru which Negroes were aided to
the freedom of Canada. Sons of this
community were in the then Red
Cross of the Civil war. And de­
spite their peace loving faith,
many of their sons were enrolled
in the Union army to battle for free
men
"That imbedded individualism,'
that self-reliance, that sense of
service, and above all those moral
and spiritual foundations were not
confined to the Quakers. They were ;
but one atom in the mighty tide of
these qualities of any larger re­
ligious bodies which make up the
Intangible of the word American.
“At the time our ancestors were
proclaiming that the Creator had
endowed all mankind with rights of
freedom as the child of God, with
a free will, there was being pro­
claimed by Hegel and later by Karl
Marx a satanic philosophy of
agnosticism and that the rights of
man came from the state. The
greatness of America today comes
. from one philosphy, the despair of
Europe from the other.
Scoffers Lack Understanding
"There are today fuzzy-minded
people in our country who would
compromise in these fundamental
concepts. They scoff at these
tested qualities in men. They never
have understood and never will
I understand what the word America
means. They explain that these
qualities were good while there
was a continent to conquer, and a
nation to. build. They say that
time has passed.. No doubt the
land frontier has passed. But the
frontiers of science are barely
opening. This new land with all
its high promise cannot and will
not be conquered except by men
inspired from the concepts of free
spirit.
"It is those moral and spiritual
qualities in free men which fulfill
the meaning of the word American.
And with them will come centuries
of further greatness to our coun­
try.”

�Powder River Mission
Has Interesting History
(By H. B .Lott/"J j
led for me, these and many other
—— accounts of the German Lutheran
Volume upon volume has been ^Mission among the Crowj(, Cheywritten on the Fur trade and the ennel|( and Arapahoe^- I am In­
Indian wars of- our great West. debted to him also for the photo­
A few of these have much, most graph used with this sketch.
fa
of them have little to say insofar
The Powder River Xis
'
as these subjects occur with re­
'ission
was
ference to the Powder River coun- the fourth attempt by the Iowa

The Mission Station on Powder River, 1860
’

'

Synod to establish Indian Missions
in the far west. Organized at @)
Sebald, Iowa, August 24, 1864, by
German Lutherans from Bavaria,
it began to think of
among the Indians two years lat­
er. Two attempts were made to
establish such missions among the
Canadian Indians, but both fail­
ed. Pastor Schmidt, however, was
not to be discouraged by failure,
and in 1858, while in Detroit, he
became acquainted with a Mr.
Redfield, then Indian agent of the
Crow Indians along the Yellow­
stone and Big Horn rivers. Mr.
Redfield gave his consent to per­
mit two missionaries to accom­
pany him upon his next trip
among the Crow|l(. Moritz Braeuninger and Schmidt were chosen by
the ,^nod for this service. They
lived with the Crowlrall that sum­
mer of 1858, returning to^p Se­
bald in November. Their report
was encouraging and it was decided to found a colony in the land
of the Crow^
Ten men were orglnally chosen
for this service but owing to a
lack of sufficient funds, this num­
ber was reduced to six. Missionfessor George J-^Jliitschel uf-Du-arlos-Braeunlngor, Schmidt and
buque, Iowa, at one time curator Doederlein, with Seyler as helper,
of the J3hurch -Records of the and two colonists. Beck and
Iowa Synod. He has very kindly Bunge, were the ones chosen. Aftranslated from the German text ter travelj^ng all the summer of
1859, they
of the Kirchenblatt, and also cop- 12-?,
" . arrived
' ? late in the fall

try. But little, on the other hand,
has been written of the efforts to
christianize the Indians, who, in
years gone by, made their homes
in the valleys of Powder River
and its tributaries. Let us deviate,
therefore, from the usual practice
of writing and rewriting the story
of the Indian wars and consider
something little touched upon in
the annals of Wyoming history.
With the possible exception of
the teachings of Father P. J. De­
Smet, while on, his journey from
the Missouri ^iver in Montana,
through the Powder River coun­
try to a treaty council at Fort
Laramie in 1851, the first attempt
to teach these Indians was made
in the summer of 1860. To the
writer’s knowledge, the following
account of the Powder River In' dTan Mission has never ifore appeered outside of the^hurch publications.
It was printed years
ago in the “Kirchenblatt,” a
church paper published / by the
Evangelical Lutheran ,Synod of
Iowa, in which the language used
was entirely German. For the
details of the story here present­
ed, the writer is indebted to Pro­

dt ijcoi

Ills, prooamy tne first time that
a plow had ever turned the sod of
the Powder River valley, and sow­
ed the seed of the fall harvest.
They then erected a better house
of logs, thO/Mlssion Ration. Next,
a well was sunk which produced
tolerable drinking water. They
then constructed an addition to
the JMlssion station to serve the
purpose of a kitchen. All this
being done. Missionary Braeunliv
ger wrote a report to the jfirnod
of all that had been accomriiehed.
In this report to the fission
Jroard, he stated that the crow^
could not be very far distant and
we “will see and converse with
our dear Crow|(, which will take
place shortly, as they are to re­
ceive their annuities at Oil'll
Xreek this year and their rovh.
(there) leads directly by our stto'
tion.” But Braeuninger did lyt
know that the Crowj^ to go (*’
Deer 0reok had to travel throng
this Powder River battle ground
against ,the opposition of the
Sioux and Cheyenne/. The result
was that because of fear of this
the Crowy did not attempt to go
to Deer ^freek for their cnnuities
this year, Braeuninger, In his
report, also asked that two more
missionaries be sent out for ser­
vice at Powder jdver as Bunge
had deserted the cause and it was
with the greatest reluctance that
Braeuiunger would take him to
Deer ^reek. This report, togethe^ with a ,pencil-- --------sketch of the
_Xission and some other scenes,
was forv^'rded from Deer ^reek
to the yiSodrd In Iowa.
The letter arrived during the
harvest and was read with great
joy. A call went out for more
missionaries, Prof. S. Ftitschel
approached
Flachenecker
and
Krebs upon going into the Indian
country and both readily accept­
ed the call. They were instructed
to make preparations for the jour­
ney at once. To an account of
this trip, written by Krebs, we
are indebted for ipuch information
concerning the fission after the
return of Braeuninger from Deer
-0-eek in July of 1860.
! The three remaining workers at
Powder ^iver, Braeuninger, Beck
Serving the Best - and Seyler. were ouce, niore to•
X gather at the fission Xlation. Ev2 Tying ^ arything seemed to be working
---------------------- out according to their plans. But,
R A W I T N —they were in Sioux and Cheyenne territory ip place of that of
Loren Denitjjgjj. friends, the Grow/. This
wixtiic It cixipLieo

into the North Platte (vicinity of
the present Glenrock, Wyoming)
Here they decided to winter, and
in the following spring strike out
for jQJjsaroka, the land of the
Crowji, Times that winter of 1859
and ’60 were extremely hard for
these poor missionaries striving to
serve their God in the western
wilderness. Funds became ex­
hausted and food was scarce and
therefore high in price. They were
however, aided by a Captain Raynolds of the United States /Army
who was that year in winter quar­
ters. It was decided that Schmidt
and Doederlein should return at
once to Iowa and in the spring
equip a second train and with it
return to the Indian country.
These two missionaries therefore
returned to Iowa late in the fall,
much to the dissatisfaction of the
JVTission /Board. Schmidt later be­
came ill and Doederlein joined the
Missouri/^ynod.
But back to Deer Creek where
now remained but four of the ori^al company. The /Mission
Xoard in Bavaria had sent funds
for the continuance of the journey
into the land of the CrowJ|, and
the establishment there of an In­
ti iaii ^JMfssion. The spring of 1860
found them on their lonely way
northward.
A hundred miles
brought them to the banks of
Powder/River. It seemed to them
that the opposite shore was the
long sought jj^saroka, Delusion
of,Death? They were, in reality,
on the very battleground where
the Sioux and Cheyenne^ waged a
continuous war for possession
against their longsought friends,
the Crow)(. They crossed the river
and selected a site Suitable for
the mission Station, where the
ground was level on the river bottom and where the grass was
thick and luxuriant for the tired
oxen and the soil adaptable to ag­
riculture.
Here they constructed an emer­
gency hut for shelter at night and
ii protectton against the weather.
They broke the land for the plant-

RAWLINS NEWESI^T*

to them as time went on, and
------------------- Braeuninger one day remarked
AMERICA!^ - - S'could not remain there
without additional men in case
QUALITY FOODS — Ti flie^lndians should. honnm,-* hostile
Slid rttack them. He bec.-.me conf) N T H F fl--------------- must spend the
U iM
i fl L ti fojio^ving winter at Deer Xreek
if the desired help at the station
212 Fifth Street
was not forthcoming.
“
The Sioux visited them fre­
quently and at first seemed to be
quite friendly. But as time went
on they became more independJ jspt and one day when the mlsj sionaries did not comply with.
' their wishes, they threatened to
' shoot. Nothing camo of this
threat, however, excepting a decid_ _ ed change In the attitude of the
Indians, who now became openly
insolent and mean. Soon after, a
W fl
large war-party arrived at the
mission and these Indians were
2 q ulte hostile in both manner and

�wornout blanket which he wished
to trade for a new one. and was
refused by Braeuninger. After a
heated argument, the
Indian
matched up a new blanket, tore
old blanket on the ground, at the
same time asking if this was not
ail trade. Braeuninger did not

reply, but placed his
^ -mnd over his mouth, meaning, m
wteh ?
‘bat he did not

the missionaries were
numbered and that

that
far outresistance

Braeuninger at last reluctantly
told the Indians that they might
SrL
They then deth
, T
«P°»- As soon as
______‘Ite band heard at the
,?bbT^
Indians haS
------------ t?th
missionaries, he came
to the Mission Station and returnd the blanket, saylncr that Ha
so.ppns wanted his people to tt decency

oward the

whites.

T

1«

party

®br arrived

t?

!

This

on foot. The story
best told by Seyler and subsZ

“a three times-

M.k

With the Snake
jOd -warT^ evlLn^

Indians.

Very

-

,3 S' 'S-'x-'.’:'

oe not hGFA?
six^i^
f

*epnea,
is
‘here
are the

r\

bim he returned
«“&lt;!
------“c returned and took '
Seyler
^'vith him and both looked
.^3,«^rched. until night
"! and
came on
seek shelI’l^fT
lays
,, -, '- Bfaeuninger.
®’--uninger, \7r
b„e ,Xn-l
even find a trace of
couldn’t
end they had to h &lt;•&lt; u«.
“•
01 . tbe Indians
,':°“‘^‘“ced that
W ’
'must have hldd
1 ®aerbts body in a

»
I

that they cou^r“'“®®’’
Powder ii7er “?
‘here were

e^bankmenS\
’I®themseives««!
I’ they would T

"“h"' ‘’®'end

-the\ZeW“- ‘V‘

^ISlnce this teShto d
^^uninger tha +
'Pto go to

“lor relief fn Th f’

attacks.

\

Brae-, \
‘’cclded \

'ook

'

�Luuu, ana bur­
ied the rest, to get later on »
Let us now join the two mis­
sionaries, Flachenecker and Krebs
are on their way from the
^ssion headquarters In Iowa to
Join their brothers in the mission
work on Powder jflver. Mission­
ary Krebs. In a letter which be
sent back to Iowa, told of this
trip westward, and from the let.ter we learn further of the death
of Braeunlnger. We find the two
“e’tr Scott’s Bluff, 150 miles east
of old Fort Laramie. Here Is the
account by Krebs.
“At Scott’s Bluff a man
called
us by name and Invited us as „„
his,
guests for a ‘free meal.’ ‘Get off
and come inside, I’m the station
cook,’ he said. ‘i know you do
not know; me, but I’m Bunge.’ No
wonder we did not recognize him
for he had grown a beard during
the year. ‘Don’t you remember
thal I started out with the mis­
sionaries, but stayed here over
the winter at^r jefreck and went
tuvassisted j
with the building there? I resign­
ed as missionary and am now
liere as cook at this (stage) sta­
tion, until I can travel further.'
Scott’s
Bluffs: the former colonist of the
Mission, told us the following
things, which I am relaUng to
you. now.”
I
The stage driver coming from |
the west had brought the sad I
message that at Powder .niver the I
Indians had murdered one of the I
Missionaries w^ had settled near ’
the Powder ^iver. If this be
true It must be one of our men. ’
For he (Bunge) had not heard of
any settlement of missionaries on
the Powder Hlver besides ours.
But he added that 150 miles west
there was an Alsatian who spoke
as good German as French, and he
would be able to give us parti­
culars. There was a great deal
of travel through this station to­
ward the West.
“You can Imagine how we felt,
how our hearts were filled with
fear for our Missionaries and how
eager we were to travel to the
next station 150 (miles) further
on; for the news was not confirm­
ed. At the designated station we
met this Alsatian, whose name
was ‘Henry.’ also a number of
Frenchmen playing cards, and a
man who had just arrived from
Deer ^eek. Henry. In French,
asked these gentlemen what they
had heard about the murder at
Powder Mver. He then inter­
preted in German to us what they
told him. about the DeerM-eek
station^
The murdered one
had been a German and among
the three that lived them

�Powder fliver. He then inter­
preted in German to us what they
told him, about the Deer^/fireek
station^
The murdered one
had been a German and among
the three that lived there. The'
chief, he said, was murdered. The
two remaining were alive, and
had returned a short time ago to
Deer jbreek,
“This all fitted our people. So
the chief of the three was Braeunjnger, but they did not know the
?ame; our missionary was dead.
he other two, his helpers, Sey­
ler and the colonist Beck, were
still alive and we shall find them
at Deer ^£!reek. . . . The stage
went on towards Deer Creek,
where we arrived about noon. , . .
At this station. Major Twiss’, of
whom I told above, the mission­
aries found refuge after Braeun­
inger’s murder, when they return­
ed to Deer Creek, where they had
winter quarters Jlefore they mov­
ed to Powder ^ver (the previous
year). Here at Major Twiss’ we
found our quarters in the same
house that Seyler and Beck (had)
occupied, for it was already Sept­
ember. We went to the fort of
the JMfajor, and there found the
brethren, Seyler and Beck. IVhat
a sad meeting after the death of
Br. Braeuninger. They had ex­
pected to be called back, and here
instead came two new helpers
into the field, who did not know
of the death of Braeuninger when
sent. The cruel deed had been
done only a short time befor^they
had started, or before the^|inssion
^ard had heard about it. Braeun'ger had begged so hard for more
help.”
When the/Mission/Board receiv­
ed the news of Braeuninger’s
death, It directed the four
mainlng workers to remain at
Deer Creek, and tl^ere erect
‘ maintain a new Jtiisslon, all the
while being on the alert for the
friendly Cro-^, should they appear, but to carry on the work
within the first tribe who should
be willing to receive them. This
was accomplished mainly among
the CheyenneJ(. The missionaries
travelled from place to place with
the different villages of the tribe,
learned the language, and taught
them the Word of God. Of the
several accounts of these trips
among the Cheyenn^, one or two
are of special value as they relate
the travels of the missionaries
through the Powder 'itiver coun­

try, at times. In the very neigh­
borhood of the first fission Sta­
tion erected there and burned by
the Sioux Immediately after its
abandonment by Beck and Seyler,
tor the reason that, as the Sioux
later stated, “They did not want
_a TOttlement of whites on Powder
, Enver.”
nai
A
-non nm

�</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
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                  <text>Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes</text>
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                  <text>Local authors -- Wyoming -- Natrona County -- Casper</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1222">
                  <text>Casper (Wyo.) -- History</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1223">
                  <text>Frontier and pioneer life -- West (U.S.)</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1225">
                  <text>The Alfred J. Mokler Letterboxes are a series of the larger archival collection that are his papers. Both his Letterboxes and his Notebooks available in this digital repository include holograph manuscripts, which is to say, manuscripts written in the author's hand. Much of the material in Mokler's Letterboxes dates to the 1920s and 1930s.</text>
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      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1501">
                <text>Letterbox 2-H</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1502">
                <text>Alfred J. Mokler</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1503">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/"&gt;http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="56">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1504">
                <text>1937</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1505">
                <text>1948</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="70">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1506">
                <text>Alfred J. Mokler</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1507">
                <text>Mrs. Sarah Knott</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1508">
                <text>H. B. Lott</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1509">
                <text>J. W. Morrow</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1510">
                <text>This letterbox contains newspaper clippings which include: an article by Mrs. Sarah Knott and her experience living at the mines of Cheyenne when Frank Irwin was killed, a story by J. W. Morrow titled "Two Men Murdered," an article of President Hoover's birthday speech in August of 1948, and an article about the history of the Powder River Mission by H. B. Lott in 1937.</text>
              </elementText>
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