OCR Text |
Show I THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH Prominent Western Man Praises Tanlac L LAWMAKERS ASKED FOR APPROPRIATIONS TOTALING SUM OF 14,339,033.18. UTAH Explained That Revenues of State q Next Two Yeare Will Bo Inefficient Unleas Expense of Government Are Reduced. The biennial appropriation hill, the measure which provides the funds on which tho state of Utuh must carry on the varied phuHes of Its sluts government for tlm coming two years, readied the stute legislature January 31. It was Introduced In the senate ly Joseph Qulnney, Jr. The lawmakers are asked to appropriate the totul sum t Of $4,339,035.10. It is estimated that the revenues of the stute In the next two years w be 111 $ 1,120,000. If the legislature wishes to pay ofi the indebtedness of the state of Utuh and to place It on a cash basis during the coming biennium t it will either have to cut the appropriation till be- G. W. Logan, Pealydy, Kansas ' , Tanlnc has completely restored my thing else. My main trouble was In health and I feel finer than In years, digestion. Nothing seemed to agree was the straightforward statement with me. At times I would have dizzy made recently by Mr. George V. spells and at other times my back would ache so bad that I could hardly Logan of Peabody, Kansas, one' of In get up and down in my chair; This the most prominent is just the condition I was In when the Middle West I started to take this medicine. It man new not lius made a It only took just six bottles to make a well of me but I have actually gained man of me. I now have a fine appethirty-fivpounds In weight and feel tite. everything tastes good and my as well as I ever did In my life. I am digestion is perfect. . telling all of my friends about Tanlac, "My wife was also troubled with but they can see for themselves what indigestion at times and it relieved ft has done in my case. her the same way. Tou may pub"When I began taking Tanlac I was lish my statement wherever you like tn an awfully condition.' I and If anyone doubts it, just tell them was away oft In weight felt weak and to see me." Tanlac Is sold by leading druggists nervous all of the time and couldnt take any Interest in my work or any everywhere. stock-deale- rs e run-dow- n ENDORSED BY HORSEMEN UNIVERSALLY - COMPOUND SPOHNS DISTEMPER no other veterinary remedy. For equalled by t reputation year U nan been used and recommended by the enjoy twenty-- ! leading bonemen and stockmen of America. For twenty-- ! years Its use under trying condition has won tor It tb highest esteem of veteran trainers and drivers BPOHN'S ehould be In every stable to prevent contagion, wnether INFLUENZA, PINK EYE, DISTEMPER. COUGH or COLD. Buy of your druggist. at coma and fl.ll per botya, 6POUN MEDICAL CO Ooshen, Ind., U. 8. A. New Rich Society. Whos the loud gent? " "Goes fa for coaching, I believe. Drives a beByhoo." Catty. "She has been asked to act as troness at a cat show." "She is well qualified. pa- 1 Sure Relief 6 Bell-an- s Hot water Sure Relief l&E FOP LL-AN- S INDIGESTION 12G MAMMOTH JACKS 1 bava W. Am . Urgently Needed. Mrs. George Gould, at a New York reception, was praising to a friend the toilet of a beautiful young woman nearby. "Mrs. Clank certainly looks stunning tonight, said Mrs. Gould. "MrsBlank? She Isnt Mrs. Blank now, her friend answered. ' "Dont you remember she divorced Blank In June and she is now Mrs. Brown?" "Oil, dear, yes, Mrs. Gould replied. "I forgot But Id like to know how anyone can keep In mind ail the matrimonial changes nowadays. Why doesnt somebody got out a new reference book to help us, she added, smiling "one entitled Whos Whose? If In looking out of the window the moon shines full In your face will have a bad fall. f you A girl sees nothing wrong tn kissing the right man. , a bargain for yon, eon quick. Money invested tn knowledge pays DeCLOWH JACK FARM the best Interest. Cedar Kaplda, lvea Kill That Cold With CASCARA0 QUININE FOR AND Colds, Coughs Lt Grippo Neglected Colds are Dangerous 1 , Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy bandy for the flnt aneeco. Breaks op a cold In 24 boors Relieves Grippe in 3 days Excellent for Headache ' ( Qainine in this form does not affect tho bead Cascara Is beat Tonic Lasadvo No Opiate in Hills. t . - ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT Many a Pretty Face Spoiled by Pimples Not only are these pimples and splotches disfiguring, but they lead to serious skin diseases that spread and cause the most discomforting irritation ond pain. Sometimes they foretell Eczema, bolls, blisters, scaly eruptions and other annoyances that burn like flames of fire, and make you feel that your skin Is ablaze. If you are afflicted with this form of skin disease do not expect to be cured by lotions, ointments, salves and other local remedies, as they can not possibly reach .the source of the trouble, which Is in the blood. Begin taking S.S.S, today, and write a complete history of your case to our chief medical adviser who will give you special Instructions, without charge. Write at once to Medical Director, lift Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. tatlves. If Mr. Monahans resolution goes through, the portrait painter selected to make the portrait may well feel proud over his selection., But few real artists will be envious of him. For Abraham Lincoln was so many kinds of man that his physical body produced widely differing impressions, even upon those accustomed to his s. presence and familiar with the of his character. Moreover, the whole civilized world has now come to revere and love the name of Lincoln and will be satisfied with nothing less than a great achievement by the painter of this portrait This Is the moral of the recent controversy over the statue of Lincoln erected In London. It will be remembered that the British government set apart a site related to the house of parliament and . Westminster Abbey for this statue. A controversy arose over the choice between two statues. The plain truth Is that there was a feeling that one of these statues fell far short of doing Lincoln justice. The British government asked the United States department of state to, settle the controversy. The department of state referred the question to the commission of fine arts. The commission reported to the British government that the "man and site call for a statue representative of the highest achievement of the American sculptor and advised Great Britain that "such Is the statue of Abraham Lincoln executed by Augustus and erected in Lincoln park, Chicago. The British government accepted the report of the commission. The world does not want a handsome Lincoln, but It does Insist upon an imprest ve Lincoln and will tolerate no suggestion of the grotesque or the Inefficient. , Lincoln well knew the wide variation of impressions his appearance and actions produced. No doubt he grieved over lt ' But his philosophy rose superior and his course was set according to bis declaration: , "If I were to try to read, much less answer, all the attacks made on me, this shop might as well be closed to all other business. I do the very best I know how the very best I can ; and I mean to keep oh deing so until the end. If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me wont amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swear-ln-g I was right would make no difference." . x This , variance of Impression produced by Lincoln upon even the same beholder is well Illustrated by what Col. Richard J. Bright, long an offlclal of the United States senate, once many-sidednes- Saint-Gaude- said: "No sculptor has told the story and no artist has recorded the revealed In the features ef that meteor of humanity and spirituality which flashed Its brightest Iridescence on the field of Gettysv burg. "I saw Abraham Lincoln when I believed him to be the homeliest creature in human form ever permitted to cumber this earth by walking and talking with the statesmen of our republic, "I saw Abraham Lincoln on the platform engaged In earnest discussion of Ihen current topics and I believed him jo be the most forceful character ever Had Business Further On Truck Driver Evidently Couldn't Wait to Learn Juet What Mammy Intended to Do. , She was a buxom mammy.' She was crossing Broadway at Reado street moving slowly. Bhe waited for a surface car to pass. Engrossed in her thoughts, she started on again to cross the rest of Broadway and stepped directly In tlur path of a motortruck. the American political arena. up to righteous wrath on the subject of human slavery and I regarded him as s singularly lofty demon of immense proportions, stirring strife beknown "I In saw Abraham Lincoln keyed tween the sections of our sacred union of confederated states. , , "I saw Abraham Lincoln administering Justice In military and naval affairs, when he seemed to be a composite incarnation of Julius Caesar and the hero of Trafalgar. "I saw Abraham Lincoln in the White Ilouse tenderly offering to a mother mercy for her condemned son, sentenced to death by court martial; saw him revoking the doctrine of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, substituting for lt the new command ment That jre love one anotbcV, and I believed his face to be the most beautiful cameo ever cut by Almighty God to demonstrate that Omnipotence had created man In His own Image, and then sent His Son to say concerning mortal man: 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. "Future generations cannot see Abraham Lincoln In I marble, In bronze, nor on canvas, for no human being can portray Him with chisel nor with brush. , If the time, place and occasion of this proposed portrait of Lincoln were left to a vote of the American people, what would lt choose? There certainly Is a wealth of suggestive occasions. Take, for Instance, the debates of 1858 between Lincoln and Douglas, on which in reality the fate of the nation largely hung. Vice President Marshall, when a boy of four, heard the Freeport debate and was on the platform, lie says: "While Mr. Lincoln was talking I sat on the knees of Senntor Douglas, and he never said, one word to me ; Just held me. When It came his tflrn to talk I sat on the knees of Lincoln. He asked my name, my age, where I lived, whether I knew my A, B Cs, whether I had a puppy dog or not, and all sorts of questions of a kind to interest a little boy, At the Charleston debate Douglas made the mistake of Indirectly accusing Lincoln of disloyalty by referring to the old story that he had voted against appropriations for the soldiers in the war with Mexico. Sitting on the platform as chairman of the Douglas committee was Colonel Orlando B. Ficklin. As soon as it came his turn to speak Mr. Lincoln grabbed him by the shoulders, dragged him to the front of the platform and shouted to the audience: "I am not going to hurt Ficklin, but I am going to make .him tell the truth to this audience about that lie 'Which Judge Douglas has brought up again. Ficklin was a member of congress when I was, he knows the truth, and he must tell lt. And Ficklin did. Take the occasions of Lincolns farewell to his Springfield neighbors when he left for Washington to assume the presidency. Take the evasion of Lincoln's second inaugural, when he uttered the words: With malice toward none, with chnrlty for ail, with firmness for The truck driver emitted a startled yelp of warning and threw on his brakes hard. Mammy had resources of speed. With amazing agility she leaped toward the curb. Just clearing the front wheels of the truck. The truck driver leaned over with a bawling: n(y, you Mammy whirled on him. "lo low down no count trash. Whnffo yo mean tryin to hit me, yo wuffiess white man? Ahll What she would do nobody knows. the right, as God gives us to see the right. But tn all probability Lincoln at Gettysburg touched his highest with the written and spoken word. It was a great assemblage of the wisest and best of the nation. Edward Everett, statesman, patriot and orator, was the speaker of the day. lie delivered a long, eloquent and notable address. Then President Lincoln arose and said Just 257 words. Those 257 words were not appreciated at the time. They were drowned by Everetts flood of eloquence. Today Everett's oration Is known only to students. Today Lincolns 257 words have been committed to memory by the world. Do not think for one minute that Lincolns Gettysburg address was a happy incident His letters, his debates, his speeches all his papers proclaim his mastery of the written and spoken word. Nevertheless, Lincolns Gettysburg address is In a sense the sublimation of all that he wrote and said. It is the utterance of a great soul aroused to expression by a great occasion. It touches the heart ' It satisfies the brain. It Is Abraham Lincoln himself. Lloyd George, tn his tribute to Lincoln at the unveiling of the Lincoln statue last August near Westminster Abbey, used these words: "I am not sure that you In America realize the extent to which he Is also , . our possession and our pride. In his life he was a great American, lie is an American no longer. He Is one of those giant figures, of whom there are very few in history, who lose their nationality tn death. They are no longer Greek or Hebrew or English or American they belong to mankind. I wonder whether I will be forgiven for saying that George Washington was a great American, but Abraham Lincoln belongs to the common people of every land. True, but wordy! The same thing was said better long ago. There was a great lawyer who despised Lincoln, who hud reviled and insulted him. ,But Lincoln knew his uhillty and his patriotism and took him into his cabinet as his war secretary. The man entered tho cabinet, expecting and Intending to run the government Truly had Lincoln said, "with a task before me greater than that which rested upon Washington. That task was to prevent the Union from splitting In twain, to bring back the seceding states by force of arms, and to reunite a divided country half alave and half free. How Lincoln accomplished a part of that task we ail know. In 1865 Lee surrendered at Appomattox and the armed resistance of the Confederacy was at an end. And during those four momentous years this war secretary, who had despised and reviled and Insulted Lincoln, had quickly come to appreciate and love Lincoln and to , obey him. Six days after Lees surrender at Appomattox Lincolns further accomplishment of his task was cut short by the assassins bullet And as Abraham Lincolns eyelids closed In death his great war secretary, Edwin M. Stanton, stepped forward and spoke the proved judgment of humanity: "Now he belongs to the ages. , Nobody will know. She started, but the truck driver started first Mammys big Jump showed him. He shot the truck up Broadway, leaving mammy glaring like an ebony Nemesis.-N- ew York Evening Sun. Atikeness In Unllks Things. Watches and rivers seldom run long without winding. ' Genlua Blazed In Age. Goethe was more than eighty when he wrote the second purt of "Faust low the amount determined by the governor in the budget or It will have to Increase the revenues of the state In some manner. The Utah senate completed the work before it in ubout forty-fiv- e minutes jon January 31. Three new bills were placed on the calendar during the day. The governors budget was received In the house on MondpJ and given to the appropriations committee, but the chairman of tills committee failed, to Introduce lt during the period when Introduction of bills was In order, so R had to go over until Tuesday. Seven new bills ami one memorial were Introduced In the house on January 81, five of the new bills relating to the juvenile court, one to airplane landing fields and one an appropriation bill for relief for Ablnadl Olson, who was injured In a road construction camp and who cannot secure relief by court action. The memorial provides for a request to congress to withdraw certain Indlua grazing lands as such and open them to homestead entry. . The reapportionment bill ptroduced by Senator Ietors now Iras a chance of becoming a law. This measure Is to agnin come before the senate. In the form In which the bill will reach the senate, lt la promised ttmt the state senate of ,19:51 and thereafter shall consist oftwenty members, instead of the present eighteen, and the hor-- e of fifty-fivrepresentatives, inf stead of the present foriy-seeAt the close of the twenty-firs- t day of the present session there had been bills presented In the senate fifty-on- e and six resolutions or memorials, makmeasures to ing a total of fifty-sevebe presented by senate members or committees. The house hud sent over in the three weeks of the session nineteen bills and four resolutions, which brought the totul number of measures to he formally before the senate up to eighty. While the house had passed twenty-on- e house bills and three house resolutions, lt had also passed three senate bills and two senate resolutions, or a measures in all. total of twenty-nin- e The senate bad. In the same three weeks, passed a total of six senate bills and four senate resolutions, but treated bouse measures about as well as those Introduced In the senate, having returned to the house seven tills and two resolutions. There Is at lens, one member of the Utah legislature who believes the lawmaker Is worthy'of bis hire. Senator Dern on January 28 introduced a proposed constitutional amendment raising the wage of the legislators from $4 to $8 per day, or just double their present salary. The amendment would not, If It were ratified by the people in November, 1922, affect the salaries received by any of the present members of the legislature for tho terms for which they were elected. Ferhaps the feature of the senate session of January 28 was the unanimous decision to send back, to the senate agricultural committee Ilouse bill No. 13, by Day, which provides that the state board of health, shall be the state dairy and food bureau, and that the stale health commissioner shall be state dairy and food , commissioner. . ,t Senator Rnfus Adams of Layton says that the cost of living Is coming down, end for that reason he believes that the state bank examiner can manage to get along now on $3000 a year. He Introduced a bill In the onate to fix the salary of the office at $3000 a year Instead of EVXX). The bill of Representative Thorne, to authorize the state engineer to designate roads for the movoment of livestock to and from winter ranges was ' . defeated. measures1 Introseven new Of the duced in the house on January 28. Soegmlllers measure providing 'for a reorganization of tho state road commission onl dividing the twenty-nin- e counties of the stnte into five road districts, is expected to become one of the most Important bills, on the subject of roads which wilt he brought np at the present session. e n The governor has signed two senate resolutions ond one senate bill, the latter being the legislative appropriation measure. 1 |