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Show If V THE DESERET NEWS 4& cuts nn aiL-- , uk air, .itPubliakad dneraeoo Mmbr Wk On of 411 A Clrwlatta. Per mumcjutoom WM. 88C miu , n Out Mnnik oCJ tSr IlYVii liUlt COPlM K4. Mtlt, B- -r T 1 . II.M. Aturrm wrusMlMM tot oabllcatla EHIW. o U wn kniinift itJlr. i tSiww h.-- a k. Uk. cur. gua t. ational dvichtiino rkfrcacntativka MlbA U B New !i Ca.KaU.eWrg ;:;! iI!J!hUr.mvd Eo. Building Patroll Bids.AM 5 uImI .?.T. .V." I t i CO.MCut Col. gjIUJy V letoni H. ....Ill Moody. Cnftr u4 l baa AMk. CdHtoeutd Higgins BolMin.. 47 fck.ran RJ. das- Fran cuu, California - j. a.. sar, Nami ticle. Since the process of vulcanization was accidentally discovered by Goodyear in 1839, the uses to which rubber can be put have become much more numerous. There ere yet thousands of way$ in which rubber could be used to advantage if it were only cheap enough. Rubber is not rare in nature, for it is contained in almost every milky plant juice. A milkweed stalk gives one an excellent mucilage brush and there are various other gums found in nature that can be eubstituted for caoutchouc, or for dhe product of the guayule. Of late yean Great Britain has had a monopoly on rubber. She figures that the United Slates is rich and can afford fa pay good price for drawing so heavily upon the world's rubber eupply.Bunf Edison self-feedi- ng -- yutarad .1 Ik. Beatsrfica at Rail LakaActOtt at aa ww.4 ka miiw eaoardlag la Ikamu Mink I. 147k. Tka Aaeoclatod Ptm la aaetuatvaly ootltla! (a Ik. um ta maabiicailea of all a.v. dia-aradltad ta tc Ml MtwalH crakiuk HttM .04 alaa via aal chia All Iwnla rigkta lor rapaalieatia al ink. disoatchaa kar. are alM MARCH 5. 1&7 SALT LAKE CITY, anii turns-wrioo- s rubber, attentkurlotbe product! wot inj he ni ted Statej the chances ar t make anmher valuable contribution fa the' weatth of the World and inITS inter behind ua and spring under crease Uu dou'wtie supply jo .that the way, throughout the country people United Slates wiir be less dependent upon ere wondering whet the year will briny to Britain for this important article of comthem. The trees will soon be In bud, the merce. , meadows in bloom anji the birds returning to their eld haunts to make their neats OGDEN'S NEW HOTEL. of spring should again. WU the th come a rejuvenation of spirit and endeavor and Ogden business men whose OGEfcfl renewed ambition to attain prosperity and made the erec' . of the Hotel Bigelow possible, are to b. .oogra tohappiness. In Utah, especially, al this time of year taled on ther apiendid achievement. It there should be much rejoicing. The proe-pec- is takes faith and a good deal af it to induce for 1927 are very bright. On every men to put more than a million dollsra into hand optimism prevails! la response, to any undertaking and fa the construction so invitation sept to influential men in ev- and furnishing of the hotel, at a cost of apery part oT Utah, The Deseret hews bet proximately tiS0,000.bese men have given compiled a notable symposium on the prosindieputable evidence of their faith fa the pects for the year in the various communi- future of their borne city and deserve the ties. The Governor f the state, mayors, praise and commendation of all. town board presidents and county eommis- The Bigelow is a monument to the pro' s!on chairmen in Utah were asked to congressive, wide-awaspirit of Ogden cititribute their views Just what they thought zens. As tbs second city of size and import-- a in regard to the outlook of 1927. nee in the state Ogden has long felt the need of a strictly modern, hotel , Governor Dem is much encouraged by the outlook. Mayor fleaiea confidently -- where tourists making the trip from coast .... peels progres and prosperity. The reports to toast could be amply accommodated. from various parts of the lists are almost This it now haa and doubtless visitors wilt invariably optimistic. The abundant water show their appreciation by keeping it well supply, the condition of the ranges, farm filled throughout the year. While the hotel has not yet been formland, cattle and sheep, mines, etc, etc, all attest a prosperous year. Readers of The ally opened, it is ready for the publio and is Deseret flews should find these reports of already enjoying generous patronage. The particular interest. They will be found new hosteby will give the city added presdiselsewhere fa todays Issue fa two-patige and will prove attractive to organizaplay, the 118th fa the aeries, which, tions far convention purposes. May the with a supplementary editorial, if devoted Bigelow attain a full measure of success. weekly by The Deseret flaws to boosting the interests and welfare of Iiah and 'the A COMMEND ABLE ATTITUDE. Intermouniafa West. cannot afford to be par- -. The reports from practically every secWHILE the stole tion of (bo state indicate that Nature haa fa the matter of salaries, it done her part' fa providing the condition! is b healthy sign of the times wh6n legisfor a successful and a prosperous season, lators "atop, look and listen dunng the flow - it remains for ua ta do our pari. consideration of measures which propose an Wouldnt it bo a good thing for every cili- - increase. Too often, when party interests sen in every community fa consider himself are to be served, such proposal are pushed a committee of one fa see to it that every- through without so much as an interrogation thing possible is done to bring prosperity? and when the work of (he session is comLet our slogan be, r 1927' n Banner Year pleted it is d'seovered, all too late, that the Then let tif all join bands and with a long stole budget haa been considerably swelled. Not so kt this session, however. - Every pull, a strong pull, and n pull ail together, success inevitably wilt come. Prosperity is measure, as we now recall, that has carried created not alone bylhe advent of favorable with it increased salary or an additional apconditions but by the united effoHs of the propriation, has been closely scrutinized citizens of any community. " Tf we ail down and quite thoroughly discussed. ' And the . in n pessimistic mood, how can w,e expect result is that thus far only such increases things to come out right? We must not have been allowed as seemed to be legiti wait like drones for something to turn up. mately necessary for the betterment of pubW must get out and turn things up. We lic service. This watchfulness on the part of legislamust encourage borne industries. lher tors is to be commended. The people of the we our snould equal, being things give pet? ronage to Utah enterprises. If we will do stole are demanding lower toxea and are this, success is sure, and prosperity will not asking that public expenses be reduced be far away. The reports received from wherever possible. If they cannot be reprominent men fa every section of the state duced they can al least be kept within reaIndicate a willingness fa join in such an en- sonable bounds and this is what lawmakers deavor. The optimism expressed not only of the present session seem to be aiming at. gives assurance, that 1927 is going to be a In this altitude they should receive every banner year, but also if an unmistakable encouramenL evidence of the firm .belief fa every loyal THE RADIO COMMISSION. Utahns heart that "This is the Place." CAUSE FOB REJOICING thst he wiH w J -- - rubber out of the shops." gathered The first rubber known from (be nature! forests of the Amazon and the Malay peninsula but during the last quarter eentury the plantation rubber has largely taken the place of the wild rubber. It costs about as much to gather rubber from the forests a$ to produce it on a plantation, and the plantation rubber is cleaner and a more even product than the wild ar- T re-bir- ys. 4 . a $ V ke t ge - -- H i EDISON TO TRY RUBBER PRODUCTION. su named by U. 8. N, retired, President Coolidge on March t, aa chairjnan of the Federal Radio Commission, which was law to created by the recent radio-contr- to reports Thomas A. Edison day and night fa his laboratory at Fort Myers, Fla, on an experiment The other members Which he beiieves wilL revolutionize the regulate broadcaating. world's rubber trade and make the South a of this commission are, Orestes H. CaldwelL great rubber producing region. , Mr. Edison of Bronxville, fl. Y Eugene O. Sykes, of has a three-acr- e tract on his estate where Jackson, Miss; Henry A. Bellows of Minnebe i9 experimenting with a hardy vine from apolis, Minn.; John F. Dillon, of San Franwhich rubbed can ibe made. This vine will cisco. These men were selected under the thrive over the entire portion of (be United States south of Savannah, Gs, and also in laws requirement that the members of the areas. come from regional Mexico. The vine can be harvested annually commission 1 All are radio experts with the exception of as it grows again after being cut ' Before newspaper men the inventor Judge Sykes, who is the "commissions lawbriefly outlined his plans for a machine that yer. Politically three of the members are will squeeze the Juice from the rubber plants Republicans and two Democrats. As soon as their nominations are conand greatly reduce the cost of extraction, which has been one of the chief stumbling firmed by the Senate, the work of the comblocks to previous domestic rubber projects. mission will begin. Their salaries are fixed Mr. Edison estimates that it will probably at 810,000 a year. During the first year, be two and a balf years before he will be ftey will serve as an executive 4nd adminready with the pressing machine and equip- istrative board, soiling up regulations, issument necessary to make rubber production ing licenses, assigning wave lengths, and fa the South practical doing all things necessary far putting broadHenry' Ford is a sort of partner of casting upon a fair and orderly basis. mine," says Mr. Edison, in this business, After Urs is done, al the expiration of and wq are going to work together on the one year. Secretory, of Commerce. Hoover I hope that I will be able be- will perform the administrative and execexperiment. fore very long, to drive the first Ford utive work and the conimwsonrrs will serve quipped with tires made from the domestic as an appeal board from Mr. Hoover's de- - ACCORDING ; william h. g. bul- - al Rear-admir- t ol a ' LM Angalea Timoa, A on tho "Menaco of tha Lola-u- rl Woman" betwean Viacountaaa 5 1927 plana, demanded tha ciotura sad warned that refusal would mean "disloyalty to prahlMtton kieele-- ' senators lumped those same through the hoop so ordered. They of in mUllono know; that mindo "back home' a glass- - of aav-trla mors beer Important then Boulder dam project. , a o a , ' Where money is men Bill dig. It waa proved in Italy, before architects bed learned how to make great domes Ilka that oa M. Peter, hold themeeltea ap aa they roe in the air. One dome wa built aad filled artth earth to support IV aa it roea. until tho aides mot at tho top. Putting In tho earth would be much less pensive than taking K out. He they mixed with the earth beneath ths dome small coins of a total value much lorn than tha cost f removing tha sank. Whea tha dome waa finish-a- d ths population wa told k eeuid carry away tbo sola boaring dirt. Tha great doma eooa stood empty et od Rhondda and Cilbart K. Chaaterton, by G. Bernard Shaw, waa recently reported by tha NV Tort Ttmea. In Introducing tha apoahara Atr. Bhaw aaid that In hla younger manhood thoro was ifo ouch thins aa a leiaurad woman. Her work waa never dona. "Sha hardly had tima to nag her huaband ca ha ought to bo nagged." . , Having gotten rid of tha heuao and houmkeeper and of children by birth oontroU woman "can now spend her time drinking cooktalla. going to tho night club, dancing tho Charleston, ate." "Ladies first" was observed and tha Viacountaaa aroao and affirmed "that tha existence of tho leisured woman constitutes a grave menace to. civilisation." In replying to tha statement that lher are no leisured woman. Lady Rhondda aska. then how do you account fer tha high heol? It was Invented for Inefficient women who do not hero to a work. Sho belabored Chesterton for Wanting .women to alt like mod eat violets or shrinking snails In tha home with their blinds Sows 0 they could not sea capt- -' , talistic podety outside Chesterton's views that woman should b,tava, .th .. largest, Pbaaib-- JtamiUet. re.- erf hut scant "celv courtesy from her," rV- - . raf-ora- If Nicaragua Came Here. The Ox and Hit Owner. Digging for Money. Deseret News does not osceasaiily endorse or commend condo- nU bf Air. Brisbane's Iona Hla editorials are pub. Jished aa axpraastona of op's- Ion of the worlds blghsat salaried odltar. i ( 1 I BT ARTHUR BRISBANE. (Cop right, UZ7, by tba Bur Co.) Thick snow along tho Union Pa rifle trucks hors in Wyoming and herds of elk In GroevenVa and Snake river dtstrioU are threatened Tha state will with starvation. feed them. Weat of tho Utah bown dory line, a gray wolf slued watching tba train. Standing stiff as a status, vomantio in aolituda, hie purpose waa prosaic. He hoped something to cat might be throws from tho dining car aa it flew past. Mile ewer, on Tba Mojave desert, crows gather along the track to meet the Benia Fe Exponas sag fly for miles behind the train watch car. trr tha dining - - - expert t iTOAikUI-- 0- 1 Gray Wolf Hoping. ebat vtFlA. JIRC1I TODAY Women of Leisure. In this remarkable debate the vena seems to taka tho aids against the wom- "'Th4rwrymfftetu Tribune tettr you Chat "the L'nioa of Central and South America and tha Antilles ordered a boycott against everything produced In the United States. This stems ungrateful. In spits of our occasionally foolish treatment of sister republics, when yon remember that this nation and the Monroe doctrine protect Ihoee neighbors from conquest by Europe. saving Them tho expense of big armies and navies. . tas an. .On the other hand It ta tha man who wants mors babies and tbs homo. Ho gooo not appear to bo so enthusiastic over commerce. Ho wants a place where ha can retiro and think what bo likes, say what bo Ilkea and do what ho Ukao. However, the auditor haa a suspicion .that man haa dona lust this anttl tho woman la nauseated with it Lady Rhondda 1 tho apologist of tha womans utter weariness of hearing tho man think, nap and do eternally what he liken. , Upon tho c!oao of tho diecumion G. Bernard Shaw sums up the arguments In what ha calls aa 'operation." Tho operation proves to be tha beat part of tho debate. Ho aaid that due of tha greatest thinkers of tho race, Socrates, "knew very well that the ene place where be could not call hla soul his own was his own house. Tho record haa if that bo did considerable thinking out on tha doorstep. Lady Rhondda thought bringing up one child Is not n whole-tim- e Job, Shaw, being a man and saver having brought, 'up-anchildren, took the opposite side. "The remedy is to hhva six children." "The children will bring one another HP" Hla final figura may not havs been the most chivalrous; but It Closed tha Inoident. A horse kept for purely ornamental purposes will be a valetudinarian, Tou will always have trouble with It getting Ul. "But if you allow It to take tbo garden roller around for two hours a day it becomes a different sort of a horse." Sheltered woman Is coming to think that bar work Is not as pleasant aa mans and wants to trada. Han does not seem to be willing to trade. And tbo debate wilt continue on into tbo night J osa However, "put yourself la hii place." Tha other day American marines regulating certain natters wera fired upon In Nicaragua, from ambush. Nobody hurt fortunately, but American forcaa wera told to capture, punish and If necaf -tho - atessary shoot those - guilty tack. o a a When wa send man on dangerous errands they must be protected, sug If necessary avenged but what would bo the attitude of people la thd United Blaise if Nicaraguan soldiers were sent here In armored cars ta travel ever our territory and tell us what to do about a presidential election? Should ws be good naturod about it, do you WHEN WORK IS WORSHIP mt GLEAN ntAhfl- - f President' of VaiteTsiiy of AMuatli aad forwter edited of (At - - Century Magaaiae. - Tbo book piato of Edward A. Flien shown tho facade of an a, public building, presumably tbo State Capitol of brawn of flanked by twe work ms a with tba graceful la Greek athletes; about their feet ar piles of building materials; thtlr hands art tba tools af their trade; and abovetheir heade la this old adage, Is worship, V, hen work la for tha common weal, then work r work la prayer." our camIndustrial for our Justice, Beneath all of struggle paigns for decent working condition, and our cries for adequate waxes, there remains tha eternal necessity that tbo individual worker find and follow a satisfying philosophy of work. A man may tend a maohine without a philosophy of work, but ho eaa never become a creative craftsman unless bla work becomes a sort of sacrament aa worship is. To tho man who wants to live la hla work oa well as kahili Gtb- esmmead these lyrlo lines from the gynaa prose-poe- t, r,m to a cure and labor a "Always you base bees told that work For real digging see tho Utah misfortune. Pacioao Union to mines Copper "But I say onto you that when yon work --you fulfill a part cific tracks nt Bingham Caayom dream, assigned to yon whea that dream ras Utah. The digging done under army of earth a further engineers, constructing tha PanaAnd In keeping yourself with labor yon ar la truth laving ma Canal, waa aoaaKtered extraordinary. but every day, Utah Cop- life. And to loo Ufa through tabor ia to h Intimate with llfa'a tamove out per mining engineers more tonnage than wag taken nt mest secret. of the Panama Canal la say one "Ten bars been trid a We that Ilf la darkness and ia your wear-day of tha moat intensiva oper- iaese yon eeb wkat ie said by tha weary.. ation. To avoid, making tunnel, -Aad i as y that life is indeed dnrknea oeve when Thoro tho top of a groat capper bearing mountain hna been peeled off "And all urgt I blind aav whea thero la knowledge. , "And Huge electric shovels CWp Off The nit knowledge I vain as v When Thera te work. "capping or overburden" uncovAnd all work Is empty eere when thero in love. out la ore blasted tho that ering . ., As(l . ben, .you, In terrace, 'picked bp" bf khbVetk toon another, and to God. ... , .. and loaded on ears carrying out and "And what is R to wort with (orsr aa much as 14.444.404 pounds af It "It is to weave the cloth with thread draw from your heart, In one day. eves aa If yaur beloved Were to wear that cloth. a U your beloved Is to build a house with affecthm. even Wonderful wealth, yea, but there Were"It to dwell in that house. are la the United (hates many "It is to sow seeds with tenderness and reap the harvest ult-- i brains from which more wealth aa If your beloved were to oat tho frail. oven Joy, wMl aver come has been takes than t "And If yon cannot srork with love but only with out of that mountain of copper. better is that you should leave you r work and ett at tho gate of Explore your own bead, there may the templo sod take alms of tho who work with Joy. bo something la It. "For if yon beke bread with indifference, you bake a bitter broad that feeds but half maa'a hunger. "And If yon grudgs tho crurhlng of tho grapes, your grudg distills a poison in the wine." . Tha Bn froniy of ths poet sounds a bit rhetorical, J know, m tba midst of tho harsh realities of a modern factory, but Ih poet a voice i her a voice wo despise at our danger. (Copyright, list, bf Tho McClure Newspaper Syndicate) Haaaa-rhuaott- Imposing ... (T, -- dislt. . "Tba Poof of Sleep," by Ario Bates. Thlo exquisite sonnet Is by a New England poet and novelist who Is scarcely remembered by this By Andrew Jrwsoa, Aaniataat Char rh Hhdoriaa. generation. Carefully chiselled. It climax reaches g la ths trailing MARCH A last lias which brings tho reader to purchased by Apostle John Taysua state of astonishment as 1844 Ths ship "Glasgow" sailed lor for tho manufacture ofNaw In Utah. It arrived at gar though tha Poet had written it from Liverpool, England, with Orleans after seven weeks pasJust before reaching that peace HI Faints, led by Hiram Clark, se which comes with dreamless slumge. where bound for Kaovoo, they Salt Lake Theater, IMi Th ber, and aa though ha longed to Sflh. arrived April which had been erected the pretake on with him to thorn cool 114! The ship "Hartley" sailed think? unwas dedtraled. era so vious eon, and mysterious precincts from Liverpool. England, with 187 Thomas Fitch, Georgs Q It takes tha greatest Gov. Emerson of Wyoming In- fathomable. 21 Lake Salt for bound Saints, Cannon and Frank Fuller left this: I vites President Coolidge to coma art to get sa effect like Valfty, under tbs dlrecthm of Salt Lake City for Washington, thought it one of tha bars and fish on hie vacation next have alwayssonnets in arrived William Hulm. It D. C., as delegates from the our of tima. memorabld summer.-Th- e New Orleans April 21. president replies that late convention, to present to h srunts to come, but can not IMS A branch of the Church waa Congress ths claims of th promake his vacation plans "for some I dragged my body to the pool of organised at Ogden with Lorln posed State of Deseret. tima yet." But be ought to accept sleep. aa president. Farr Apostle Erast us Snow and Gov. Emerson's Invitation, get a Longing to drink; but ere my IS&d Tho ship "Old England" (SIS , others left Belt Lake City for big car and gravel, over a few throbbing Up sailed from Liverpool, England, Europe. They arrived ia Liverthousand miles of this westers From tho cool flood one Dlvta-dro- p with 4 Salma, under the direcnorthwest to Seattle pool, England. April 1, country, might sip, tion of John O. Angus. It arrived 1877 A company of Latter-da- y south to 8aa Diego; back to the Tha ware sank fluctuant to some at the tha mouth of Mississippi Saiola from Utah, under the high Sierras; where they fish tor unknown deep. -river 24th. April direction of Daniel W. Jones, trout without barbs on hooks, to With aching eyes that could not I$7 The Palestine party left on eavo time taking off- - tho fish at Arlxo. Sait River. even weep, Jerusalem and Journtyed north- i arrived as colonists, and enamped near a mlnuta. This the rate of 1A er I saw tha dark, deluding water ward. visiting tho ancient aites of site th Lehi, Maricopa part of tho country Ukes President present slip. l, ob Shiloh, Bhacbem (now Cootldge. and ha would lika this county. Slow eddying down; ths weeds Bamarla, Naxareth, Cana, 188! The Salt country. city council of and mosses drip Tiberias by the sea of Galilee). a a a lake City derided to offer tha With maddening create. 1 watchBeth said. Capernaum. Dan and Tenth ward aquare to tha terriIn his advice to ed the aweet tide creep Ceaarea Philippic at ths (oot of tory for fair grounds. Tho terripriests, in ths parish of Rome, A little highen but to fall more - Mount Harmon.) - Pope Pius expresses vigorously hla tory accepted of it on th th. fast. 1M! Senator Reed 8moot of 185 tack of sympathy with tho Fascist Abraham O. Smoot, a pionFevered and wounded la the Utah was aworn in as United eer of 1847 and president of ih without mentioning strife of men N government; States senator without oppositha word "Fascism" be disap- X burned with anguish. Git, endurUtah Stake of Zion, died at tion, at a special aeaalon of the prove the idea that man Is made Senator Reed Provo, Utah. ance past, United States senate at Washfor the state, not the state for Is hi son. Smoot Tho fount crept upward; tank, D. C., man. "Man," aays Pope Plus, "la ington, 1888 Th FreArcadia branch. rose aad President Woodrow Wilson I1I not and never can be a moans. Ha Swelled slowly, again mont county, Idaho, waa orFhm tbo Files of tho Deseret flews. .slowly, atowty, was again Inaugurated presla ths end. Not of course tho aa Ora ward with tbs ganised till at last ident of th United States - at ultimata supremo end which is God J Joseph Kerr a bishop. MARCH A, ie0T. My seared lips met the sooth but in tho creation, man la really Washington. D. C. President IOA Mrs. Ann Bolton . . Smith, a , then. , wave; A majority of tha member of tha and lng Wilson took the oath of office tha end and center dbout whlcn Utah pioneer, of 1847, died at TCopyrlgbt, 117.) on Sunday. March 4th. but re- legislators visited tha University of Utah everything is organ. xed." i Provo. Utah. where they Impeded the various departnested it again on March 5th. I to Joseph A. Parrish was or That reminder is needed in this ments and witnessed class work. They Announcement was made dained a bishop and set apart to of the organisation of a branch country, where some industrial wars servrl with a luncheon and a numover the Peterson ward, preaid havs .corns to look upof th Church at Green River. ber of addresses wera delivered by promMorgan count;. Utah. on man as mere cogs in great maWyoming, with Albert Manwar-ln- g It 10 James 8. Poulson wa inent man. orarc as presiding Elder. chinery, and where tho men dained a bishop and set apart to to accept that view, if yon willing - Col. N. W. preside over the Paris . Second VBT ROBERT QUILLET. , give A hem IS a day and up. Clayton. Airs. Clayton and MARCH i. , ward, Idaho. a a o two tons returned to Balt Lake City from ! Announcement was 1848 mad The Salt Lake City fort con- an i -- tended European trip. They trav"Tba ox knoweth hla owner, and In ths "Deseret New" of this . tuined 42! house nhd 1.871 soul tho ass hla mooter a crib." as Isaiah eled over a large part of the continent Tbs worm may turn but the data that explorations in ths Tbo adjoining field farming remarks, and what he aays about pedestrian haa no chance. by automobile and visited virtually all Muddy and Virgen river valleju consisted of 5.138 acres of land, tha ox and tho m applies to some had of the noted centet. to light the remains brought of which ltd acres wera sown senate members. When Hiram - A good book ia better brain hood of a largo city, which it la thought with winter wheat. Johnson demanded cloture to force than fish. I waa . A telegram waa received In this dty inhabited by an unusually 15J The ship "Rockaway" tailthrough the Boulder darn project powerful race of people, skeleed from Liverpool. England. from Goldfield, NeV-- , stating that Alaa which would ho worth many bilof he muckraking, In spit ton 39 Wilb measuring over seven feet and 'Ealnto and machinery lions n year to this nation and ben- fleorge Washington Is still , good Lovey, famous western cartoonist having been found. jlnlength efit tens of millions of Americans, for a holiday. for many years associated with the old and Eve were very Interesting peo. solemn senators said they couldnt Balt Lake Herald, waa critically 111 In that oI obbl"f begins to think of applying tbo cloturo. It More money is paid out for aliCity of pneumonia and waa not expected was against their deepest convic- mony than for broken hearts. to live. tions Therefore a very great enJ?. It Pdupld began to Correct this sentence; "All right terprise is postponed. talk b5t abolishfnc Huaes. trouble Word waa received from Washington. mamme.' 'said she, "I'll be in by brokeout in Mexico. Nicaragua But when prohibition authorities II o'clock. D. C., that a group of Utahns composed nJ Chin. In the state, needing extra supplies of G. E. Abbott, E. A. Congriff. 8. C. of public money to carry out tbeir trio beginning to ago n little if Unfortunately there Is Park, C. W. Cook and 3. E. Hlggind had ho won't read anything marked that can b done for th nothing the Thertnopolts National college organised be continued To Happy is thd man who is loo boys who ora committing sul- -f le. bank- - of" Thermopoiia Wyo. darned busy to feel sorry for him-- It Aa a fad it is the worst they have " wars of If all tho filling stations so fur adopted. u d a placed and to and. they'd remind ri cision, receiving 130 day for each day they us of how many grocers ar unpaid. Correct thla sentence: "Fdrm reFree speech is n blessing people devote to radio. much use tor during lief I more important to mo " Tba proper way to judgs a. maa dont have times. aaid the statesman, "than my own , Radio is developing rapidly. The broadIs by tha siza of tbo things b is prosperous politics; welfare. prejudiced about. For an example of register I (Copyright 1827. Publisher SynB- -. casting of the Washington'! Birthday speech a ate ) watch th turkey hen Disarmament Is something like disgust, of President Coolidge was an interesting feat the Golden Rule. Ore fellow hesiof distribution and drew excited attention. tates about trying it for fear the o'hcr won't. w On this occasion etoDons over the entire world were reachnig out for the President's PROTECT voice and the marvel of it ail startled the Your Doctor world into conscious admiration. When a and Yourself human voice is heard throughout the world is reason to be impressed with the (hero A hick town is a place where tho wonders of human invention. store keeper remembers who gars that bum bin quarter. , sf "get rM quick" schemes It Ikies. never any anrSedy The electric button I tho best THE ROAD. eeeseee reel to want attele yea Tho alarm in Ufr, yeu've get te BOSK and thing iayet invented. e clock the worst. SAT EL Each of us ddily walks along-Th- e -winding road of life. It is written that "Henry Ford We have assisted tkeasanda of Some happiness, some strife. people In taking ndvngtngn nf has had his ups andadowns. So Some dark, some sunny spots we find. npBortnntttcn tkrengk onr hi- - have hit customers. Shneen. Let ns exylnin vestment We know not. as it winds along nne plnn to yeo. , Americanism; Breaking a hunJust what each turn will bring. dred old laws; enacting two hunll . we find But all along the road, . now lavra. dred - That if we laugh end eing , And to another traveler call Women now have equal Tights Society. ' . In happy tones and cheery,' plus tha deference bestowed upon SAY PHILLIPS" to your druggist, or you may not get genuine 44 kith Mala Bait Ukt them by the men. The way will not seem near so long. Phillip MilW of Magnesia prevribed by physicians for 50 years. - s HO rCEI. ' HO FOHrETTtREB s Nor we so tired and weary. Is women are Our etr ths rentiHM gwrastM Chiropodists say Refuse Imitations of genuine Phillip And when were near the end and feci Itcdi ta developing hoofs. Horns - would .liXJJ We can no longer roam, ' - cause mors general alarm. bottles contain full directions and uses. and . ' We know the last turn in the road Will bring us safely home. Notwithstanding ths fault that "Milk ef Mmols" has Ita lf 0. flfkta4 Trta Mark f Tto Chtftf has been found with them, Adam HU PfeiXUjMi CTiwtnl Beatrice McDpnald, Detroit News. 1C tad Its jrtaMtw of CharlM HU TfcUhjtt Mt tm. Important Events In Church History 00 y t Nab-loue- pre-Lent- Twenty Years Ago. V .... lb PARAGRAPHS -- t Too , OSS t Chasing the Rainbow -- nt esia so Deseret Building I w - -- r SATURDAT ft- Ith os 25-ce- nt 50-ce- nt ha I |