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Show mm P A.I: IP) ? IWr :IS7- - - PROVOr UTAH, i muxJi UTAH Cenerally t fair, with prohibit ehewers tonight; soot--. tf tonight and Tuesday, , MONDAY, JULY 2V19ffi. PRICE TWO CENTS. rmm .. TheAVeather ? n7 tin n n tn C7i i rmp: yPiondor HELP! GclMd Is Day- - HELP! Only Of J M City Vjlfeso '41 Mow Are Numbered Among The Living Citizens Of Provo Pioneer day will be celebrated today in almost every vil- ' -- : city of Utah county. on wui conduct its festivities Fieasant.view the lawn nd grove surrounding the meeting house and will, begin . Mearfr to the morning. Vineyard will celebrate at the meetinghouse and. has ar ranged a splendid program for the occasion. The Lakeview neighbors have been invited to join in the celebration. r Three, All Vomei1f Of The Pioneers OF 1847. Jones, wife of Patriarch -- Alnert . Jones, 458 PROVO- - PIONEERS tct and Mrs. ; By PATRIARCH ALBERT JONES. The day we celebrate, red letter day indeed, So be it marked on history's page; so read ... That all shall know, and fully understand The history of this heavenly favored land! K, How on this day some 75 years; ago, The pioneers arrived; but then you know Somewhat their story, their toil, their iungecpain Their patient fortitude, and courage to maintain Their lives, and families in this then dreary land; Myvoiee near fails me speaking of thatJbancL.- WTio struggled onward, and so bravely fought As witness all around us, what they've wrought. : All hail I to those brave men, the pioneers, Who led the van, now past these 70 years, ' To this once desert land, but now so fair, ,4 teems That with plenty, outgrowth f thei care; 'jV A few'suryive the toils they underwent- their stalwart forms now bent ' Beneath thew'&rgfetpf years, and worn with care e'er knew despair. Their courage great, But soon they'll pass away to That's ennp hffnr thpm. t.hnsft with whom rhpvPW.W&I They were the first to plow the earth we tread, The first to make this sterile soil yield bread ; First to direct the living mountain stream To lands, which now with heaven's fair bounties teem; The first to build the bridge; the ,4ira t9 plan ..: These cities, filled with happy homes of man. First from their hands, their much loved country's , ringvule nas also arranged for a rioneer day pro as has, also Payson. Benifumne will conduct its ceie- ration at the amusement hall. Lake Shore and Spanish Fork will celebrate at the newly onstructed pavilion at Lincoln Beach where the program pill be given in the forenoon and sports and games will be taged in the afternoon. , l Provo will begin, its celebration at 8:30 in the morning hen several interesting bicycle races will be etagedto the ys. In the afternoon the celebration will be transferred to utual Isle where the rirls of the Mutual Improvement asso-iaiion of Utah stake nave arranged one "f the most unique " urograms ever staged in this county. to visit Mutual Isle and Those who are not intending help the girls celebrate, are going to . attend the baseball ame at Timpanogos park between the Timps and Lehi. Manager Dave Mitchell intends to have Addie Miller per- Wom in the box for the Timps. The following is a song, It Is the Place," written by of July Evan Stephens especially for this Twenty-fourt- h elebration. It is declared by many to be the best dramatic liong that has yet come out of the state of Utah. It will be Mung at Timpanogos park as a part of the tableau Monday bight at 8 :30 o'clock. Cut out the words and take tnem with as rou,v.This Drommhasjifien Mranged lor a u p. m., so - ' lot to conflict with the program at Mutual Isle. ...... . . Ye streamlets, ye valleys, And thou 0 clear blue sky, -- That o'er the vale extends. While arching o'er the Tale, Ye bring to me a message long sought, That gives my weary heart repose. Day after day weary toiling; . .Night after night eager watching; Glimpses of hope only catch us. Tbiough dark'ning clouds of despair Thougbts of. the dear ones in sorrow, ...... ' . LeftJ Prized in our fond hearts dejected, V Weighed down with sorrow and care Mountains aboveus, And torrents beneath, us, progress each moment to stay, When like a vision of landscape celestial beneath, us a fair vdleyy;, , , Spread like a vision of dandscape celestial Yes, i , Spread out beneath us a fair valley lay. It is the place, f TByseeri of old foretold; It is th place, I did in dreams behold; ' i i t It is the place, f i It is the place, Where soft , jointojnL YEARS AGO TODAY ia-th- Elopers Held " , , ume Ye .' i t 2 . . ' ereek. ''" ? I Dandai f the pioneer quadrille, ': ' i ". Yauer blossoms as a rose. :r. : led . Prevo Maa KJUa Self. o'clock :'. OA Friday last near It Richard V. Jones, a young man em ployed at the Utah Central railway office ia Provo, was .accidentally shot and' killed by a weapon in his own hand. by Thelma Eggert. Be narvesxers aancc. If iu Wilm& Jeonsen and Izetta Fonk, MemnriM of the nast Dancina? of - the dances by the Daughters of the Pioneers and their partners. Those in charge of this dance are Mrs, Grace Cheever, Mrs, Aiornson. ifseret Gray; Mrs. Win Dunn, and airs. a. ; .'. ed .Bsther Hughe gantst wd charck s Walter Cuip, , .. saialstsr, were found peeling tots m Pert Huron,: Mich., pot, aa held for authorities from Sprint ' Valley, O. where Cuip has a wtfa tad alM ehUdrea. Where TKIa Newa Cams Prom.' The above- - ooUectloa of news items was copied from the Terri torial Enquirer of July ti, liM, and was news on Pioneer day 3 years ago whea tha lata John C. Graham was editor of the Enquirer. alt-ius- e, . ... , uiu u4i RininH. c Los Aa eies, adopted daughter and bfM be late Admlrat BUUasv WCSfttty ' adopted her owa paraataj ; Womon very . Da3y Herald ill interested. In be that Zona learning Gale's latest and best story, will bev printed exclusively in this newspaper. . Watch for x . ' NV first year, and- all "of them are women. They "were, all children when they arrived here, ranging la age from three to nine yearsv but HieyTeraBinber-'inany-things-in f terest about the . Journey serosa the plains as weU as the settling ot.', this commonwealth , - - , ' Two of the women are sisters. -They- - are, Mrs." Jane 'Park Jtraes wife of Patriarch Albert Jones, 458 n &)uth Fifth West street, and Mrs. - - of 'i - Marion "'Park , Vincent.: wire ot Daniel R. Vfticeitt living- - On West Cen!rtreetrnwet of the jteflToad" , tracks. Mrs. Jones, or ?Aunt Jane,:', called" by her as she la affetionately many friends,- Was five yearn of age and ;TMrsTrVfliCeB was three" when they arrived here with their parents;-- ' Paother woman pioneer W p " 18t has been living during tnv with her daughter. Mrs. Jo; year R Peterson, 159 North PifUt Weat ,j street. - Mrv fraugnton is 84 years vividly 1 ' it cidenu that took place In Nauvoo. She heard the Prophet Joseph speak i many. thnes,, and also hU brother, . as if it had Hynim. been yesterday, the Incidents toad- rs to the martyrdom ..of., the rr. f" , v C. Klrnbau. At the coming of Johnston's army.,,-Mrs. Fraughton together with her t ' parenU, Thurstoa and iMary m Sophia Simpson, participated the general move soutn.. ruuow Fraughtoa ? ; ing her marriage Mr made her home for many years la Woodland, Summit y county,-- ' late a . - "j. ; moving to VernaL Mrs. Jane Park .tones and Mrs, Marlon Parkr'Vjncent , are the-- j , daughters of Joha and 3 Louisa' Smith Park. nd were horn la Warou-- wick, now Walford, UMnbton ty, On Uric--, Canada;" The tatner r.v. and several brothers of John Park v': as well at many other residents" of Lam bton county embraced ."Mor- monism" in the early days through, - -the nreachlng of Elder1 John Bar- rowman, who later also came to. Utah and lived in 'NephLv Among --y the others who Joined the church'.. ; at that time was Archibald Oard--- ; ' r J - s, : ner, the father of Senator Hearyv Gardner of Spanish Fork, Mrs. Jo--, seph Francis of Lake Sore,and,J; '; Bishop James H. Gardner of of the Utah-Idah- o p.. ingar factories;' Gardner'-tamthe The Park and , llln left Lambton county together v . early in 1848 for the westward move to Join the Saints, and re-- " mained in the same company - ' trek ' acroea- - the,.-throughout-t- he ; ' t. ' plains.' y-'Aunt Jane remembers' that her , r; father had two wagons J sad that he hired his .nephew-JamePark, 'to drive one i for him. (Later on when , love. Their wordawere full pathostruth and . J the nephew1 wa called W Join- th Mormon Battalion,' JlrsTTartt- had power jrheyjthanked Him for His strong protecting to drive the second wagon. She re-- . ) That sheltered them from peril every- - hour; lates how her father had to drive From every foe, from danger of the plain, . over the stream first and then -- ' ; From redmen's anger, o'er and o'er again. come back to assist the mother1 In 7 , The first graves dug were hallowed by their hand;V getting the second wagon over. . When interviewed Saturday by The first house built for; learning in the land, -a' Herald reporter, Mrs. Jones told attend.. children there Zi They reared its walla j their the following Interesting story of ... . The sires well knew while young the twig will bend,. the earlyday in UUb- - and the , V And take the shape most pleasing to the sight, migration across the plabwf i have heard my mother tell of . - So they their Children's minds would point arighU the rollings In thsclearlnrs Did this and more, through those first trying years they lo. . made' lh the vast timber 4is . trict in which tbeyv settled in Carh- - . All hail ! to those brave men, the first that came ' ada and how aha helped in burning Their greatness lies in deeds, and tot in name; the-- felled timber and enverbrusa. which now to that appears the way They paved " in the year MU my father left I That gladdens all our hearts; brave' pioneers Canada together Nvlth the Saints. Our thanks Teceive, our gratitude you gain, I remember nothlnof the Journey . from Canada to Nauvoo, but I re-. Our voices and our hearts, ring out again member my parents tearing me at v out v our Our voicfiand hearts ring again" Nauvoo te go and visit the temple. ; ' -- rirAIl hailfall hail ! down to the latest years, ... vua 1 Iff iuu,, f All honor to, their deeds, brave pioneers. (Continued on rage Twe.) -i wett-loade- s at . -- Who Reads the Few of tha pioneers who-- came. to the Salt Lake valley Jn 1847 are' j stiU living.; Jn! Jrovo only three , are. left who came here during that -- - r . ' h Y ; ing on West Center-stree- t Mrs. Mary Jne FraugH ton, living with her daughter, Mrs. John P. Peterson, 859 Worth Fifth West street .''..' prophet and the 'patnarcn ana re members visiting the Smith 1ome to jiew the bodies or the brother after they ha4 been' brought backj-- r , T to Nauvo from Carthage. . . ' Mrs. Fraughton - was also ac--' quainted with- - Emma Smith end A.: Ellen Kimball, the wife of, Hebef :; : Vincent, liv- wife Ing up pioneers-7-Battalio- n Adopts Parents County Delegate Chosen. 3. R. Twelves, Reed 8 moot, W. H. Brown N. C Larsen and 8. S. Jones were unanmiously elected as delegates to the county convention. The Springy Ule delegates are Jams Caffrey, Abram Noe and A. w. Mower. SprlngvUle Bey Shot On Saturday vjaotnmg Storri accidentally shot Ernest Bayer, Touth son of John S. id years old. and ' The Boyer, Esq., of SpringviUe. born were camping ia Hobble m-dia- ' THIS AFTERNOON. Baseball at Timpanogos park, 4:15. Log Hits Ray Jones. (Matinees, at Strand theater 2:30 Ray Jones, little son "of S. 8. and 4 o'clock. Matinee at Columbia theater Jones, was hit by a log rolling oft a hay stack. Ray was not seriously 2:30. Matinee at Princess theater, 2:30. Injured and was cautioned not to Preparations made for large slide down haystacks again. crowds today at Geneva Beach and Vivian Park. W. H. King in Prove. W. H. King. Millard county recaptured,: 1 all-wis- Girls and boys races at Pioneer Escapes from Pen. Nosey Banks, who escaped from the pen a few day ago, has boon n Indian troubles; Brigham Young, tne peacemaker., ' dance, conducted py Delilah Higgs. : Episode Coming 61 Johnston's army, $ing ZIon, Brother Daft V :v bar," JOY McAllister, soloULI ,; - - park. .prosecuting attorney, .stopped over M Frovo for day or two tnis week on his way to the capital. The breeze received that sighs around yon crag. Doubt not their love of country they were ming inspired the men that gave to you The constitution as a sacred trust From Him, ralltrue t, And yet, they once made trial of those laws, - . Were answered, "nothing can be done, though just v" - your cause." not from their hearts Then they fled here ; but fled Their love of country, and all which that imparts. Loved not their country ; dare say you so, Five hundred of their men, to fight the foe Give it the lie they loved their native land, Their children do todaas did that band ' " Of boys their wives loved lives their loved as. ; Loved it, yea, it they to whose breath were the first first the pjahjt, They Found joy at birth ; they first shed tears at death, them came Of those they truly loved, whe-witFrom lands far East, or homes beyond the main, First taught the savage, happy lives were led ' Spent not in strife, but peace; theyfed them bread; So gained a mastery o'er the savage mind, And treating them as brothers, made them kind. The first babes born were theirs, the cradle hymn First sang by their true wives; list, hear them sing: "Hush, my babe, lie still and slumber, Holy angels guard thy bed, ..' Heavenly blessings without number Gently floating o'er thy head." How sweet their voices as they hymned their prayer, Angels attend, their wishes upward bear,' Softly they sang; while their babes slept, God listened to their prayer, they safe were kept ; These mothers bore their part as mothers do,- ; Noble and faithful, loving, patient, true. Oh! who can rightly measure out the praise For each one's acts in all those, early days, Heroes and heroines, they all appear,. . ' Well grant the fact, nor contradiction fear, The first church built by them, a bowery shade, With thanks to God, these men grand music made, ' First to ascend to Him that throned'aboye true-Clai- street for It A. mu ion uusser, Act ing Fish Commissioner." - ' , Provo, Springville. Lake Snorej Pay son, Vineyard, Lakeview and Mutual Isle today, observe Pioneer day with fitting ceremonies. THIS MORNING. ; Bicycle races on East Center r " - flag ' nkee.7 5Urhir Evan Steohen'S new son Is the Place" 1 W. C. Bradford. Owmnunitr Servioe, Inc f BoloutVr'i:?;?W-y-'::,v''",'':'!'.'?'V'' :'';.'-'.- 'i 0E$Jsd Other News Just As Interesting TODAY Carp Raising Taught - "Those who wish a pamphlet on carp raising can have It by asking lt la the SCO. HIT BY LOO WHERE TO GO "The undersigned having sold all interest in the business formerly carried on toy him in furniture, etc, to George and Thomas Taylor, asks that all debts due the house be paid to the above. "GJORGH TAYLOR, SEN." shaU pierce the skies; heart wiU rapture cries, . I Where freedont ne'er sjjajl de. Episodes of Pioneer Tabkao. I) u .y Episode Ne'l: s Gominv nf th ninneers. Slninnff, vome, Nov-lrr-- JOHES Change of Firm. , : My Sr HORATIO T Whera. millions yeC Jtold, ShaU dwell "neth frLdom's sky. It U tha place, . . . Where appjr homes shall nse; " v theirts This ia takeo from the weekly edition of the Deaertt News of July 34, 1878. "As the d&te wlU Immediately suggest, the 'Mormon' people had beea esUbllshed here Just 25 years, a quarter of a century. There was no special celebration. Nor do subsequent issues disclose that the day was kept in any unusual manner. The Saints mn established to the intennountain region, with up and down the raW half leys. Two decades and meetfound them still growing, ing the problems with which and lookthey were confronted back.3 Ining to the future not dustry, agriculture, trading, all were expanding and progress was the actuating force e building of a great u jouy,mounuuns,H. .- lljemain, fc By Evan Stephens. ..- - fffn Jane Park Fifth West street " f J t South Mrs. Marion Park Vincent, of Daniel R, L rr Place1n ; j wiioBnr: i r t- ' -- . v , -- I 1V A |