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Show wd dm rse.- - TYular. Marrii 20, 1925: TUB. JlTicrercr they sell good candy 02 CITY. CAfTIR COUNTY-,- UTAH ran was the next speaker, he Brother Campbell was a remarkable man and had lived a In Pacific Race To rrennukable life. W hat better heritage could he leave to his family than this? f)ur sorrows at this time were only for the j lost companionship of such a good man. It is right and prop-i- ksA PAGE TT1REH KeenildentallWins jsard,- , PASSENGER JOlT.NI,,foV,AN Buy Lustrous . i Aaoeit4 PrM By er PA Pearl I EETE, Tahiti, Mar. 20. What undoubtedly is the lives of those who have depart-- 1 ed. It is an inspiration to the largest and most valuable pearl ev er Hoovered " til lhe " Sout h ij form It f rrenrt s- -a rut neighbors. EVERV SITES A DEL1QH luifie was brought to Tahiti lie also spoke of the concern and trom the Gambicr Islands in Jan for . of the responsibility u;uy. Its weight is 26 4 cai-atHheir even after they offspring Services The coloring is very brill ,are dead. He said," The word. with ant. green and golden hues for stods suffe,i"8' ' Held at Providence predominating. One hemisphere dships and trials. We.cannot of the ivaifois marked by two realize what it means. Ifoisa JOxKrH m IU M tstmet iridescent bands, which to and our our fathers sin forget PROVIDENCE; Mar. IS. the jewel on that side, give loss m but behind than them, Beautiful indeed were the fu-- mothers. We should honor and somewhat the appearance of the hours mothr twenty-fouJohn's are treat them kindly. Many neral services held on Wednes-- 1 in the grave her elanet Saturn encompassed buried by was er and made hurt hapby neglect day at 1 p. m. over the remains1 for some oth- it rings. of one of our oldest and most py by a kind word and a smile. son had helped dig W hen the news of the finding A mixed quartet consisting of er mother. faithful pioneers. Brother Jos. nt thn pearl leached Tahiti, in com Sait arrived The pane M. A. MathBenona Campbell, Ilyrum Campbell. 18raTHu E&opearTbuyers "TiO make ews, Elaine Hansen, and Lanez Lake City in November ,RaPo'1e their headquarters dur Bishop A. M. TTammond con-- 1 in stayed Farmington Joseph Hoag, sang very sweetly Only dfleted the services. tl,e (ilVlll4r season, chartered I1" moved to and while then a for Remembered Bv What We Have . Opening North Ogden where he lived for ;'I h,,Vnrs H. take them to thl song, Though Deep- Done. Gammers, distant nearly 1,000 two yea i s ening Trials Throng Our Way. President O. II. Rudge felt about to Hnd on their ar 'TT"ttS"bonr here. And every son '"Of RS57 William R. in In Prayer Zollimjer. company thwycar . sure countless other that there mr.l good was the. that pearl A mail quartet consisting of A with John Bovle, Nephi and the West is justly proud of the spurs could have been said of h.zra and Kenneth Campbe n , A. things Sam Campbell. Joseph came to ai sea in the possession of 'a this coffee has won in the capitals of Ghinese trader, who had pur-r- i M. and II. P. Mathews sang verv !the departfd bther' ,fUhcn Cache Valley. They came, to this asod it from the native diver man hve fo'' can. the world. The Recognized Standard Solemn w side of the valley here Provi- and was feelingly, One Sweetlv it to Tahti. years and never have an enemy dence is now situated, bringing Thought sethey ' , . . thats what they call Hills Bros. The price paid to the native is he mtfst have lived Tu first speaker was Broth- - in the world and land , ,, lected their . ploughed i Coffee! sdd to have been 110,000 francs i e H a a. er Jacob Zollinger who had been !n j t the first furrow that was Experts at Papeete who have And do you wonder? J ust pierce thd a friend with the deseased for ploughed on this side of the examined the jewel appraise over sixty years- - He said Bro-- ! ha'.e fhad s ch Due of to the coming valley. seal of a tin of this wonderful vacuum its value at from 500,000 to Campbell had al- - Johnston's tner Campbell had alwavs been returned GOO 000 francs. army they , , ,wavs been willing to leave his western coffee. Set free that rich aroma, El to the other valley but came An unusual number of fine work to help the work of ther herald of a back again in 1859, and here he yet to bemct. church and his neighbors. peat Is have been found in the 'he i his home ever made since. baCk nt has Lift a cup to yovlT, lips . . thatl coffee ' islands duritig the diving season His motto might have been. , again in 186.5 to he p poor immi- - 111 go where you want to go He was married to Miss Eliza- j ust passed.' I Agoons closed for Ask for Hills Bros, byname and look cross the plains. He had beth Mathews January 1 1861. many years had been grants Dear Lord, 111 do what opened i you In 1863 - he returned - to - the rf,-.- been one of the most active mi for thexanr Hills Bros. diving, aiuD it was from ' east to assist poor immigrants them that the most valuable building up the canals roads and is economical to use. Coffee Bishop A. M. Hammond made in crossing the plains. On his irlv public buildings in the were taken. pearls , remarks. few a closing return he brought a small step days of Providence. Plated Many years ago the Gambier Closing song ,0h My FatK- - stove, the first one in Provi- Blands were a center of many experiences that had hapgreat Julia dence. He also brought and pened to them when our town er, by John Spuhler and importance in the South Sean. choir. assisted the Pickett by was still a fort. The deceased From the lagoons came the raised the first apples in Benediction was pronounced had been an active ward teacher were astrachans most valuable shell and the They ri J J ! f r f!A for sixty years and had been so by A. E. Cranney of Logan. In- and measured 17 inches around. choicest pearls. Thai was beProvidence in was the terment lift' He raised one bushel and sold fore the days of restriction on loving, cheerful and kindly that numerous them to Charlie Robbins for 60 pearl diving, The cemetery. and the lagoons he hadnt an enemy on earth. Brother Adolph Baer, also an friends from far and near, the cents a dozen. To Joseph and were stripped year after year old friend of the deceased and lovely floral offerings and all Elizabeth Campbell were born until they became fished out a pioneer of Providence paid a helped to express the esteem in six sons aiM three daughters all rnd trade drifted to other was of whom survive them, glowing tribute to the life of which Brother Campbell they are quarters. held. the good brother and his noble During the last 10 or 15 years-thJoseph, Ilyrum A, llopkin B. la lit anginal Varvum Pad Gambiers have ,been the David M, Ezra T., and Kenneth wife. They had raised to mat- Obituary jhkh I ftft tin toffrt frtth . was Campbell Joseph Ilyrum all of Providence, Mrs. hast visited islands in eastern Campbell urity six stalwart sons and three born Kirt-lanAugust 15th 1837 at Margaret Hammond and Mrs, Pacific. Before the French took daughters, all being still alive. Ohio. He was the seventh Mary A. Bullock of Providence over the islands the Gambiers I.' i Lfu. O He spoke touchingly upon the Leonand Mrs. Nina A. Baer of Lew- were ruled by missionaries of conditions under which Broth- son of Benona and Mary the Church of Rome. Under er Campbell and wife had rear- ard Campbell. The Prophet Jos- iston. He also is survived by one their direction the natives built ed this large family. lie said eph Smith apd his father visited fi cathedral . of. heavy,., masonry, gramB-childrhundred- - and fif t Brot h er'Ca m pbel had a dispo- their home when Joseph was dthe old is inlaid in an few x Prohpets days sixty-siand of sition great the altar of which peace and tranquility, him named and many designs of blessed father never moved to anger but algrandchildren. the figures of, the Virgin for his sons, Joseph Ilyrum. His He endured all the hardships and ways kind and loving. saints .with Benona Campbell, a grandson father left Ohio in 1845 and privations and trials of pioneer the finest being adorned In crown the where pearls. 111., to moved Nauvoo, Somelife. He superintended the build- of the of the deceased sang, ' Virgin is a priceless p they stayed one winter, then ing of the Providence , time, Somewhere. said to be the mostbeauti jewel, call west. When the store and grainery( He was also ful jewel ever found John Campbell, a cousin re- started Battalion Mormon j in i the the came for of the saw mill South Seas, But lated some of the family history superintendent ps it rumfof and told of the work being done they went into Holt county, for 27 years.. lie lived) to , the that h!ng Jeal thQ pear! agf for Misouri where they stayed good old age of- 88 years-- - nd was taken to Europe and that along the line of genealogy. Brother Newel Kimball of Lo- - four years.' They started for died peacefully surrounded1! the pearl now in the crown Is Utah in the Spring of 1850. Jos- loving children and.ffihds. an imitation. loss of ebusiness, in maintaining eph was then between 12 and Since the death of hissMiife some only .About the tcathedral are other so much passenger service? 13 years of age. His job was years ago- he has been buildings of massive masonry, eight to lost business the have They cared for by his son a driving cows and a few sheep, seminary, where all the young automobile largely because it this caused hi.m to walk all the tenderlyA. and his wife. Hyrum women were segregated when can be used at any time, and on way and when the shoes he had His life and death were both ever a ship came to the islands, For over a third a century it has most lines if the railways had on at the beginning gave out he typical of the angels song at the and other ecclesiastical strucreduced their service they would went barefooted the rest of the birth of Christ, made Peace on tures. good every known test have lost still more business to way. Men. Good Will to Earth SALES ay, TIMES THOSE OF ANT OTHER ERAN2) But of late years evil days the automobile. Furthermore, of In June the company in which Gambiers. befallen The have the course, on many lines they have they were traveling were strickUrban Shocker, former star encountered strong opposition en with cholera and eleven of pitcher of the St. Louis Browns population, which was numerfrom the public and regulating then! were Josephs father, mo- and now on the hiding staff of ous. has been .wasted away by of ther, and little brother Heber a the New York Yankees, began tuberculosis and other Euroauthhritiesf to reductions diseases until a bare handservice. The his professional baseball career pean cousin and a brother-in-laful natives remains. The fine of "What appears to be most mother was the first to go. A as a catcher. , down to are roofless and fall- presentable or happy. advertising which buildings . needed now is the more gener- very pathetic incident in rela- lightweight into ruin, and sthe whole store which is big does not measure up to the a If ing al introduction on lines of thin tion to her death occurred. Her group has an air of desolation. enough to indulge in whole page store. Kheuntatism Prescription traffic of means of rendering son John was travelling in a ads. uses only column ads., or i the service still required which company ahead of them; and a A STORES MEASUREMENTS Refilled Million a Times less-B'g wolves cross the internaor even half-pagads. it will be less expensive than the woman in that company wasso SHOULD BE INDICATED BY PrtwrtlM A2$lt for fbcutnattan will not prosper fully nor ade- tional boundary fiom Canada local train pulled by a steam lo- sick that expecting her death ITS ADVERTISEMENTS filled in 1964 and b been re and" Mexico and raid American Ml int Hewed ever a million time. A teaspoon At present the they set some of the men to dig comotive. quately, nor be looked upon as ranches. three o time lakan M one of day A2II1 was chances seem better of devising a graye and John --A If a man with a chest meas- enterprising or aggressive. Runlop rhea marie pern end quickly relieve meeans of handling passenger these men. The woman did not urement of 44 inches should ning a big store, yet advertising The United States Weather painful muscle and stiff iwoUta joints. Bay a boat from tout druggist, er tend wear a 34 inch coat, he would it as though it were a small one prfot"ibaltooTl station for aerolo- -' business more cheaply than of die but recovered enough to, go , $1.00 for a week tupply EIMR yAMEND 20$ Third Avenue New York. a her compan- thw next attract attention but he would is not competing successfully with for the gical investigation at Curacao, not prosper, be comfortable, store will come to measure Dutch West Indies. automobile for it." morning, leaving an open grave that we should eulogize the . The Railway Age in its current issue calls attention to the fact that since 1920 the railways, prrcipally owing to increased use of the automobile, of have lost about orie-four- th their total passenger business ana that this, although seldom mentioned as such, is one of the principal reasons . why present frieght and passenger rates continue to be necessary. If, the railways, the Railway Age says," with the average rate in effect in 1924, which was only 8 2 per cent greater than in 1920, had handled as much passenger business as in 1920, their total revenues from it would have been 317 million dollars larger than they were. This exceeds the total cash dividends paid in any years since 1917. The use of autmobiles seems likely to continue to increase and therefore there is apparently no remedy for this loss of bu siness. The railways must have sufficient revenues to pay their and a resonable net return. They must continue to provide passenger service for those who want it even if there is a decrease in travel by railroad. Sine the earfting from passenger business have greatly de1-- the roads must get clined high- er rates for rendering both freight and passenger service than otherwise would be necessary. N The number of passengers carried in 1924 was 24 per cent less, and passengers carried one mile 23 per cent less, than 4 192(). Meantime, the railways rendered practically the same pasenger service as before. In 1924 the number of passenger train miles was only about of one per cent less than in 1920 and the number of ger car miles was actually greater. This resulted in sharp reductions in the average number of passengers per train and per car. The average per train in 1920 was 84 and in 1924 only 65. The average per car in 1920 was almost 20 and-i1924" only about 15. It is entirely logical to assume that in the absence of new influences causing an interruption of the growth of passenger busines it would have been larger in 1924 than in 1920. Never but once before in the history of American railroads did their v passenger business show a decline after the passage of four, years, and in that instance the decline was Very samll. It would appear that as hard surface highways have been built over the country the losses of short distance and long distance business have about relatively equal. Have the railways been justified, in the face of this one-ha- lf , Can I Keep Young ? - 1 funeral 8-- s. -- " 1 -- , ' Hills Bros Coffee belongs to the West - .. ! l - j i T Tr ? W up-flav- - i -- ' c - or the-Arab'- r HILLS BROS COFFEE Provi-idenc- e. 5 J ?lBs e d, a -- I en ur mother-of-pear- l, food Value of Wheat Flour Always Retained Co-o- if you use maocmt - THE WORLD'S GREATEST Qmnu&mvMizn of - in - . e VvV"'' tv,vA! ? - sky y A viT j4 1 v "tii the-wit- h store-wisdo- . WHATS THE USE v WHEN To I SEAT I mix, -- This is what every woman wants to- knowrtxr or ad- sheyoung ' vanced in years. i ) our neiglijjors will tell yo- ud you have not experienced its effect yourself---th- at WEE P MY ' ILL MY vwiFE Gift INTECESTeD 750 r FELIX ifcOC PU22LE To mevec hea? fo-QU-T OF A AND Veep HEg X y ILL GET SOME j peace to take for failing health, poor appetite, languid feeling is Zelm mp (MW Them too FELIX GOT FANffY INTERESTED, , uHATS WHAT'S And vhat'-- and New r BU- T- WELl, IT AND , ing the tonic L F. Van ttWfm 6 WANT WiFE QUIET By whaT IN A 4 LETTe Q 'oRD-Fo- A a 5 letteg 'subtraction Wf ANt ; 17 - VWORD FOR ADONIS? wocd fog, me endin z ETC. tTC. letter ? -- - More Than One Kind of HOWS OOns' FELIX- -- Cross-wota- ? You Bum She HOW Talks-A- ll The Time ff j-- DR. PIERCES Golden Medical DISCOVERY IN LIQUID OR TABIETS-- Al l05 fo Tr..l pvu. tag to Dr. Hom. BuHrlo. N. Y. ACE answers Plczles which SOV'E Starts 1b APPEARED IWl X IN' LAST ISSUE Of'ThiS PAVER.. 1 i |