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Show t · he" ried ,..Jt .... ,rrany n- iU'Ound Plot In eemero.r. the 'rymen Were o Ulelr learaell -etabrltuneral pr each umber, calket, IlUtlcaIa.e 4- died In :et No. d rites tribute rtholochurch ~~ ~; of the r holy ,_ _ _ p'Sulllvan of Spokane, Wuh., irrigation anlslant with the Columbia basin comml8ll10n; DlI'. John l.ee Coulter of WaahIngton. con.ultlna economlNt, and W. a .Sloan of BillIng., Mont. . u.I.tant dIrector of region six of the bureau of reclamation . On Friday'. agenda are B. O. Harper of Den\'er, chIef engIneer of lhe bureau of reclamation; WilHam 1£. Warne of WUhlngton , the bu· reau'. al8ll1lant commllllioner; Maj . Gen . I£ugene Rtybold, chltf of army engineers In Washington; Jame. R, Fauver of Exeter, Cal., dlrtctor ot Ule Central Valley Project Alliin ., and Floyd O. Boot', managtr or ' the San Francl.co chapttr of Associate;! General Contract-6rs. Tells Water Plana Bashore . • peaklng Tuuday before the Alan . of Weltem Statu' Engineen, dellcrlbed "one ot the primary objectlvea of postwar development" u extensIon of Irrigation to lOme 22,000,000 additional acres. The reclamation bureau, he laid, already h&ll handed to congre811 a pr.ogram for Irrigating abo u t 6.700,000 acres at a co.t ot approximately $3,000,000,000. He told the englneerl thll would make about 1~,OOO new farma available -"a real contribution If undertaken promptly," but stili far from enough to meet the demands of returning war veteranl. Member ltate. of the reclamation ulOclation are Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kanaaa, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Wuhlngton and Wyoming. • make "B" ad "C" , to buy DeW Grade·l Good· ,~ ~. 8M ua ?odaJ- MOTOR CO. •••• WAIn.. 'OR liI·IEW GRADE·l OJiEAR (Oontlnqed From Pare ODe) I skill In modeling figure. from clay a mining orrlclal encoura,ld the youth to go to Bo.aton fdr further training, and, wltb ,everal (rlenda, contributed young Dal. lin', railroad fare . Arriving In BOlton In 1884, he received Inl\tructlon (rom Truman Bartl e tl~ a noted BOllton ,culptor, In return tor which he cared tor Bartlett's Itudlo and worked In a terra cotta eatablllhment. His rise to fame In BOllton Wu awlft, and ~ n 1888 he received the flrlt of ma.y honor, which ...ere to come to hlI In later lite-the gold medal of t e American Art Aun. Other m data and awardll Mr. Dallin received Included honorable mention at' thl' Parll 1181011, 1890; first c1uR medal, World'lI Columbian expoIIUon, Chicago, 1893; IIIver medal of the Maasac1luaettl Charitable MeChanics' Allan., 1890; Illver medatl, International expoIIUon, Pari II, 1900; silver medal, Pan-Amerl,::an expoaltlon, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901 , gold medal. Louisiana Purchaae lexpoIIUon, St. Loul., 19M, and ~e gold medal ot the Panama-Patlflc exposition, San Franciaco, 1191lS, He condu~ted further art .tudlea at Ecole de~ Beaux Artl and the julian acad~my In Paris In 1899, where he ,.as a pupil of Henri Mlcel Chap~. Many 8oc1tltiee Mr. Dalll was a member of the American cademy of Arts and l-etters, A erlcan Sculptors' aoclety, Natl na) Institute of Art and Letter., National Sculpture loclety, A~hltectural League of New York City, Boston Society of Architects and the Royal 80clety of Arts, Lo\"don. He received a master's degree from Tufts k:ollege, Maasachu.etta, In 1923, an4 In 1937 WAI awarded an honorarY degree of doctor ot arts from Boaton unlveralty, In addition to his famed workl in hla lIatlvF ltate, Mr. DalUn wal noted for many othe~ famoUi ltatuea, which Included The 81g· nal of Pea~e, Lincoln park, Chicago; Sir lauc Newton, Library of Cong'l'ea., Wuhlngton, D. C.; Don Quixote, Apollo and Hyaclnthua and the Medicine Man, Fairmount park, Philadelphia; The Cavalryman, Hanover, Pa,; the IOldler'l monument, S y rae u • e, N . Y.; Ap~al to the Great Spirit, Museum of Fine Artl, BOlton; Indian Hun~er. Arlington, Mau.; the original atatue ot M...uott at Plymout~, M.... ; Signing of the Compact! Provincetown, Mas•. , and the statue of Anne HutchlnlOn In the M~chu.etta stateho~e, Boaton. I . Frequent VIIJIt. : Though lived In Boaton and Arlington Heights, M... , moat of hla Ufe, Mr. ' Dallln wu a lover of Utah, Its mountainl and Its people, and/omade tr~uent visits to hll na· tive ltate, laat tr1~ west wu In 19.2. ' To him I. given much of the credit for the Impetus toward mak· Ing Sprlnl"1ile the art center of ttk ¥I. Utah. ! One of hla three sona, Arthur Dallln, a lIelhenant of French artillery, was killed In June, 1940, In Frarice, where he was a member of the French army. Surviving I are hll widow, Mrs. ~n.u.~~~~ ll.~.~~~~~ 150 Exquisi point ;, bon . 011 (, Colorfully Gay or Fragile 117) HANDKERCH Flaunt them ~aily in the lapel pocket of your besl • or show the.", off gracefully "by hand," A gay cOStl4 at:cent • •• II charming holiday gift. The Pilris Hllndkerchiefs-Aisle, Street ' Floor |