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Show EMERY COUNTY "STLE PALE- I""" - VTA- - UTAH BRIEFS of '' i i HOW TO "sm .. VV ' - I m mm LINGER rv IL m Riverton The Riverton Poultry as sociation has filed articles of incorporation, to promote cooperative prod action and marketing. road Snanish Fork Electric-magneti- c speeding machine will be used for om canyon first time on Spanisn road. Rosette Approximately lO.ouu Daby chicks are to be shipped in here durAtJTOMOBIIJnl,..,,, ing March and ApriL as the trmest -- M fieber City A survey or snow con ditions at head of Daniels Canyon And then wom. . ! and Strawberry valley indicated it to of evidence to mLZ be about average for this time ot year for past five years. For example, la C!JS Logan Prof. Alder, poultry specialist of the U. S. A. C. states that for within the ,a the first time in our history Utah shipped out more eggs during a March um,, wnicn were directly ine aver- to the motor car. Z week than did California, age production per ben Io Utah is many Omes that nnm& higher than in any other state in the therefore, be quite piaUtLi United States. American Fork Natural Gas Com can do much damage tinu J a franchise mucn pleasure. . i panies have been granted With the use ot th .- -J to pipe gas to the city. Springville The annual Art Ex ttcally universal growing by leans Ir! hibit here has gamea nauon-wia- e logical to warn the mao promence and is to be further increased. "uiurai mat Dj nmiuf nne niB way the opojJ Hinckley A barbecue of mammotn velop a keen pnthnd- .- j proportions was given in honor of the State Championship Basketball team test and fascination assodu of this city. One thousand pounds of this sort of thine nn potatoes were among the bills of fare dull one's Judgment, which d r if ly rrequently occurs. WW items. PriceA Carbon High School stud- pens, selfishness and ent, Floyd Mclntire has received ap- in and mauy drivers md pJ "SAY, NaBiep uuit. pointment to membership in the W BE A Ann Arbor Band School at It cannot be gainsaid thu tional High erate a car as to make Michigan, this summer. Local sheepmen are or worse of one's self or Ui Panguitch the height of folly. Yet bj satisfied that the National Wool marketing Corporation will be successful trains and In turn by being tw in securing a good portion of the Utah them, by falling to keen i on the steering wheel at all d clip. Ogden The potato acreage in Utah disregarding caution signs ujj for 1930 is expected to exceed last and by permitting Impatience J the car In high when caution year by 5 to 8 per cent. less speed, many thousand! i Provo The first district, Federated Women's Clubs, met here In Spring moblllsts will conclude Mt A rouu convention. adorning a hospital bed or k BEN! Lehl Funds for improving lng business for the cemetery! loop drive have been asked It seems a shame that tilt of the Federal Government by Gover: and highways admirably m iirOCL sor Dern. aid Id careful operation, till jV thai Petersboro Grain marketing ; was supplies In many Jurisdiction lodging discussed at a meeting of farmers. nated safe by health official fewlll tc igthi Cooperative selling was urged. supervision of i adequate and Smithfield May Day child health stands and camping ground! Idthl activities are to be featured. nally, witb all the health and jf mdtrful which may be derived from k Brigham City Women's Civic Imat we a provement Club celebrates 24th anopen spaces, so many driven Of com themielri to an end niversary. untimely Itlsfactit Intrees Removal that of others by careless driving. I Logan liters c terfere with electric lines or gutters Remember, that all the a tstlfied. on. carried is needed lines 1 and other health in the world courted t Hyrum Cache County dairymen are life expectancy of many haprf M utever of If the a will be of no avail whatever considering ' ' right IjCV on the road is thoughtlesslj Dairy Association. loa Is tints: American at ill awav. presents 'Legion Therefore, Logan renmsta scenes of World War. that automobile of ycun wits one of them is operated by the church today. play showing to a clean-u- p on A week is another drive to live And Springville sat! Not only have these projects been encouraged ii to prepare for art exhibition visitors. in the Rocky Mountain area, but In other states that Pleasant Grove City park Is being lit you' as well. Also In Hawaii, the sugar cane and and shrubs and grass plantbeautified blind lint other plantations have benefited by Latter-Da- y the Forcing ed. Saints church assistance. A large part of the oil to grow wants O ONE Mantl Junior Prom at'MantiHlgb It Hawaiian Island population Is Mormon. no one can prevent It school was a brilliant affair. All money spent by the church In Industrial find dies S H lot yo Itvpa hnrn Church' Pleasant Mt. Presbyterian I the sa activity such as here mentioned comes right back In no w report shows all back indebtedness is which the wisest can to members of the church who are the principal o: pi;, Any worrying will not netp It tell beneficiaries, the church Itself not participating to paid. Unty In the least Intelligent Delta A livestock show sponsored the accumulate profits for Itself. other hand, is of great value pet by local Lions' Club is to be given hto a Proselyting through large missionary system this month. old IP Inevitable the poning H cost has been a feature of the Church of Jesus Christ Richfield Beth Beal of this city tion. of Latter-Dalection Saints ever since Its organization. around rtna hna hnt tn look broke the Utah record for typing at The system as at present carried out Is as folficei B. Y. .U.f Provo lze that young men ana contest. lows : It has nnnsL are niitur an ni Provo wo VI This a CU u'wv. ' tend to city will begin city Young men and women are called by the prestl that wide beatification drive. gaged in habits idency of the church to go to some of the various pgwD li tint consequence The Utah life. held fete Shriners a Ogden missions of the church. These missions are to be ' lnsls nornnn who has actually oalj meeting. Salt Lake temfound in all parts of Europe, In North and South U It ( omit r afrtv vears ple of Shrine band attended. to America, in South Africa. New Zealand, Australia. thi OglCll nhvslo n, Coalville Three shifts are rushing umiau in,, Hawaii, Samoa and other South Sea Islands, in Inngol tti sense is the Palestine, Armenia, and missionary work has been Echo dam completion. Local labor is point Where fit, at of w Continual worry, lack ' ample for the project. carried on in Japan and China. Wish " amount of rest Foods Clubs have Faruiington The time length of missions fulfilled by the men Ptty.i exercise, working, falling to and women called as above mentioned varies been reorganized with full list of sumW the of all kinds, nd to IIWA; from two to five years, although recently a six mer projects. sai that the. body as weutraction.University of Utah Four students months' missionary term has been inaugurated for Urn . s for a quires iniemseui persons naving previously filled a longer term have been selected for put s contestant in the Rocky Mountain orfactors that prematurely m mission. tot atorical contest in Salt Lake May 4. The missionaries for the most part are rig nM young Butlerville Measuring devices for agu' is an established ted it people, ranging in age from eighteen to thirty living. that careful nlri years of age, although there, are a few older men computing Mill Creek water have been fact iroin 8Z . Antnr --and women in most groups. All the missionaries recommended. it aenis, wi ,i u thai Magnfir Granite school district is so conduct your li e pay all of their own expenses for travel, hnnrd in the school levy. and room, and even for the literature which look old you actuaoj they distribute. They receive no salary or for an 1 increase mill of petitioning Why force ue -. any kind of . 129. weaiern financial remuneration from the worth new of $90,000 Murray road church, and give their time and service, ns well as their machinery has been purchasexpense making Put Beau ed by state road department. iuhus, as a rree win offering to the church ilnfavoraW , Salina A Clean When a missionary is called, whether he comes Up campaign has III w been carried out successfully. from some Utah town or from some DutIer Gluenzer city In some Bingham Canyon A new federal other state, or from Canada or Mexico, he comes was taiKing buildiug Is planned' for Bingham acio sail uiKe to receive preliminary instructions .Washing ton George to Senator Smoot and to be ordained as a - , missionary. He then Is cording flatter tue rau U Alpine B. Y. U. will offer two asslunprt tn -men's lives at mere are courses In ...looiuuniji Few leinmrv, seven of these missionary districts or JUM animal search in this "can stand the husbandry "missions" summer m me unuea Mates, one in Canada , year's school. pn,i Gunnison Eight iions have been as VVashlngtons the Calles regime barred missionary work In the tne ain.. N rf wumeru repunne Dy captured by a local hunter in the past turned there was if the poor J , and once, few weeks. mission in Mexico. ell, H way-wbadly mone Mt. Pleasant New city water The missionaries distribute much pipe out badly in ano ner. literature by is a being laid with iron piping to recanvass method, also at meet-Tn,, poor WWlJ ings held In halls, chels and on streets place wood pine formerly used. .-where his girl an uu.d Pve Tremonton Road signs are being open air meetigs are conducted. In cases BW where day. She didn't Americans go on missions to foreign on roads in this district placed ana by lands, they Lions' B any too well, ... Clubs. HS quicKiy as store ..,Kua,. possible after department the their arrival In that foreign land, but In Lehi An w eastern on poultry expert was ilea the mean-m- e a Utah tour while here stated thnt been bought. they do much in the line of distribution to exchanff of decided she literature. Utah milk white eggs should soon be to anjw Each territorial district known saying. anything as a "mission-I- s famous throughout the nation. depi Pnd hand, i , presided over by a president, and subdivisions Provo Bill passed In congress alof these missions are presided over by district lows additional annually to store, wem w presidents. In each city or other locality money available for Utah roads as a district branches are said: tt"" tie organized with one o exchange 0PlKrtiined by federal goverument resident members of the church ; -I- 'd Oke to .. . it usually acting as n i, North Salt Lake Hallway officials the presiding officer there. please, for anotner -Bie Pleasure." have In these organized branches "'With ,j ordered new 1,000 and districts within refrigerator stcei w t melons, all 0f the work of the church Is car ears for the 1030 season for hauling man. He was je silbli he'd Utah qbwMJ t on among the members of the church But after crops. there. ry Salt Lake 50,000 visitors are to la he looked Just as it Is carried on in Salt Lake City . he cured for at the 100th the members of the church In . Thls umnreui. that city. SunSSy anniversary d? usv J of chools are organized, mutual the L. D. 8. Chnrch from uS. Church according to bought - 'Oh, yes. n eiatlons (which are young officials. people's societies) and tc Morgan-T- he primary ass.clatlons, which hold new Look, there's yor egg grading weekly MW -- Ah, yes.' day meeting, f0P ttle chHd 7h. Plaut has opened here with a big cel. ST t- rket children r. taught ebration. Mormon?. of ucnei principles Detroit Free Pss- ir1 twS,! r ,5 1 EVEN hundred thousand members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Lat-I- I Saints, commonly known as If the Mormons, will observe the one II hundredth anniversary of the organ-I- I Izatlon of their church In a celebra-ation which Is to begin Sunday, April 6, 1030, at Salt Lake City, and which will last a week. The celebration will be probably the largest religious event ever held In western United States, and will attract more people than any other religious gathering In America, with the possible exception of the recent Eucharlstlc congress of the Roman Catholic church in Chicago. Thousands of visitors will attend the major celebration to be held In Salt Lake that week, com-ln- g from all over the Union, from Canada and from Mexico, while representatives of congregations of tlte church' In foreign lands will also be present. Dally sessions will be held In the great .Salt Lake tabernacle, and every evening a pageant will be given there, depicting the rise and progress of the church. Taking part In this pageant will be a cast of scores, and the tabernacle choir of 850 voices, heard during the winter over national radio broadcast, will sing under the direction of Prof. Anthony C Lund, accompanied by the great tabernacle organ, played by Prof. Tracy Y. Cannon. This pageant will be repeated nightly until ail who desire to see it have seen It The tabernacle will accommodate about 9,000 each night. On the opening day of the celebration, April 6, Saint community In the world, every Latter-Da- y Including those In all European countries, in North end South America, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand. Hawaii, the South Sea Islands, and the Orient, will, .hold simultaneous gatherings celebrating the .event. At each of these gatherings will be heard Vend a message from the presidency the church. In order to accomplish this, the. message will be translated' Into a score of lan; guages. One feature of this world-wid- e celebration will be the Illumination by use of huge flood lights of the seven temples of the church. Most of these structures are situated. on the highest or most prominent parts of the cities in which they stand, and when illuminated thus at night will be visible for miles around. These temples are located at Salt Lake, Logan, Mantj and St George, Utah ; at Mesa, Ariz.; Cardston, Alberta, Canada, and Ile. nawalian islands. President Ileber J. Grant will be In general charge of the celebrations. On April 6 1830, six men assembled on the farm of Peter Whltmer. near Fayette In Seneca county, New York, and there formally organized the Saints. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-DaThe men who signed the paper which legalized the church as a religious body in that state were Joseph Smith, Jr., Oliver Cowdery, Ilyrum Smith, Peter Whltmer, Jr.. Samuel U. Smith and David Whltmer. In December, 1830, the founders of the church decided to move to Ohio and they settled near Klrtland In that state where the first organization of a first presidency took place on March 18. 1888, with Joseph Smith as president and Sidney Itlgden and Frederick C. Williams as counselors. In June of that year the first temple of the church was bpgun at Klrtland. The history of the church has been one of steaMy growth and repeated moves westward. Soon after building the temple at Kirtland and the body of the church was moved to the Missouri-Illinoi- s region wllh headquarters in the town of I'nuvoo. III., a city which the Mormons practfc-tallbuilt up themselves and In which they erected their second temple. But religious persecution forced them to move westward again and in 146 the movement to the Rocky mouutalns was projected. In the spring of 1847 the Mormon Pioneer company was organized by Brlghara Young and on April 14 of that year set out for the Rocky mountains. The party consisted of 73 wagons, 143 men, three women and two children; 148 persons in all. After a trying Journey of three months across the great plains this party arrived in Salt Lake valley on July 24, 1847, and camped ot the present site of Salt Lake City. Word was sent back to the other traveling camps that a resting place had been found and the site for a new temple selected. ,, During the next few years the work of colonization went forward rapidly.. In 1855 and 18o6 hundreds of Europeans were fleeing from their native lands because of the Crimean war and the high cost of food. Among them were many who had Joined the Mormon church and who wanted to reach the "Zion" which had been established In the western wilderness. It soon became a serious problem for Brigham Young hw to get these people from the Missouri river to Utah. Most of them were poor and had no money with which to buy wagons and oxen. So he devised the plan of and use these to tmvlng them build hand-cart- s transport their belongings across the plains. The "Hand-car- t s result was the emlgra- - JL JUh N' Ik x,,evL if iW5' " ln now-famou- LTS S J rnJ J hJ III W y . N ter-Da- y ,f 'Mil I f--, Tiffi-panog- as I i 4 tf aas gmgg . This it a view of the famous Salt Lakt tern-which Is in the grounds whers the centennial celebration of ths Latter-DaSalnte church will bs held. This structure was built in pioneer days and required 40 years In the construction. It was built at a cost of $4,000,000. 2. This Is ths Interior of the Salt Lake tabernacle. Its seating capacity is 9,000. At the far end is shown the great organ, one of the most famous organs of the world; an Instrument that has been frequently heard on national radio broadcasts. 3. This exterior view shows the tabernacle at Salt Lake City, the building In which the principal gatherings of the centennial celebration of the Mormon church will be held. This structure is 250 feet long and 150 feet wide, and has a 1. pl y dome-shape- d roof. . . u N i ; I I y DM tton," an epic in American history of heroism, pathos and loyalty to an Ideal. If this migration is an epic, no less a one is the story of the colonization of the Intermountaln region by these people In a wilderness filled with savage tribes of Indians of uncertain temper, and carried on amid all the hardships and privations of pioneer life. But their triumph over, all difficulties Is written in the history of the state of Utah and It was aptly summed up by Theodore Roosevelt when he once said: "Here in this state the pioneers and those who came after them took "not the land that would ordinarily be chosen as land that yields return for little effort. You took a territory which at the outset was called after the desert, and you literally not figuratively made the desert blossom as the rose." So it is this achievement, as well as the anniversary of the founding of a religion, that Is being celebrated In Salt Lake City In April. There is also being celebrated a social order which is, perhaps, unique In the history of mankind. The Mormon church has always held the principle that people who are contented vocationally make better citizens and church members. In order to assist Its membership to be contented In Its various vocations, trades and industries, the church has fostered several Industries, and promoted agriculture and manufacturing as a means of Insuring profitable employment for its members, and to help build up Industrially the localities whre the church members settle. This policy has resulted In occasional charges being hurled at the church that It Is being "commercialized," but the church. In carrying out the above mentioned policy, has had only the welfare of Its members at heart. As a result of this "business policy" of the church, the leaders of the church have assisted Its members In the construction of many miles of Irrigation canals, in the building of railroad lines, and In the establishment of factories. Before telegraph lines were well established In the mountain districts by commercial companies, the church built Its own telegraph lines to serve Its members and other pioneers of the region. Among the kinds of factories established by the church are several woolen mills ; it has assisted In opening up the sugar beet business In the mountain regions, and assisting In the financing of construction of several large sugar factories and beet grinding plants. Flour mills were established with church assistance even In pioneer days, and at least one ralroad line was partially financed with church funds because It was being built through a region where members of the church would be greatly benefited by such construction. Two of the largest and finest hotels In Salt Lake City were built by the church, nnl a. over-piaj'- 4-- - h try-out- r- n. criti Wj J s, house-to-hous- "3j e J . .pt pi gfsj |