OCR Text |
Show THE EVENING HERALD, 1I0NDAY, JIARCII 1. 1926 PAGE FOUR 2. of the Pleasant UuLetUuu'a hoBio The present road Daughters of the ia that aectioa to reported- to t Pioneers, will be held Ib the ward impassable several uonths of the ball Tuesday, at 4 o'clock. AU went year.- The matter will be investi to be present as gated by the members her are special buboes will be transacted mission- - Wednesday. , at that time, Baseball Dame Plans are under Here Front Salt lake Mr. and way to bold a big baseball benefit Mr. Eugene L. Mill of tjult duace in this tity during the eotuipg City are la Provo for a few day. ; uionth. It 3s the desire te dress tha Timp p'ayers is Sew suits dur-inj' Skier MIhs YMtfin? eao and the pro. fiuhy Griffin of Salt Lak is visiting with ceedjf tb"e" dance wrnl be used her sister, Mrs. Joy O. "iSegg Of for ihafrMirpose." The exact date of the duuee has nut bees .arranged Vineyard,' for aw-ek. at this time. la Salt lake Swen O. NUjison, of Provo 1 la Halt Lake ttty on I b,Uing Jlcre Jllss Winnie Cbrts. btulncfi this week. teusen of Salt Late City Is iu Prove visiting with friends and X special meeting View ramp of the CITY NEWS Ceast Mis, "arluda Leave f Perry of Helper, I'tab, lod JUtddi l!IU of Prove left, last .evening for tliforula over the Soul hem lH4fkr whre tbey win visit with fr'nad and relative at Jla a- Fran. clLiV I'M Angrfe aad Sacra iwii to. lliejE lutoiKl to be goae for .several keeks." .' .. relatives. View. Win -- - Mutual )anr Tbo First ard. a v lit gl Muaual organization danee and eand.V shower Tuesday evening. One of (he uiilo.iie of the dance will he t'.f awarding of Jftge box of candy to Meouple duaelug 4he vhwlstB " the best feu-tar- e - Meet The Monday-evenin- -t- Qita-'egt, Columbia at the home South 467 " . Parade One-- f Mertlng iward Belief Postponed The Sixth society urectlng, which 8S to be held Tnestlay afternoon, will be jtostpone4 until Wednesd'iy on account of the fnnerrI services of Mis. William Banks. , . Miss Ida; f.'eter-so- n was awarded the tree hat, and Saturday evening. mTrazeTTXuftairainiwrrUei the dress. ... the early a . aJU margin. , : ing. Today's Letter From Out Correspondent In Washington, D. fty (MKLF.S T. STUART- XEA Service Writer. WASHI ngtu.n oil , eonsena- tion, which the govemmVwt has hwn talking so much about lately though it hnsnTaone any .conserv ing means more to pedestrians than they realize, maylie. It means fewer automobiles. It means --sfcrararunwr' means and suc- - smaller Size,- - which1 it woil't- hurst , tr 9' TUB year" gathoflr the tomb of Lincoln, in-lead of burytng him - in tha forgetfulneaa of time, the7 teem to bring him ever closer to the hearts of the DELL CHIPilAN 212 West Center Upstairs'- - people. It is easy for a man to be great The amomg hi oontemporarie. la atrong Impulse to within us, hut to the clearer light of history sounder estimates are made, and only the truly great are honored through the- - ages. has .grown with' tha . Lincoln years. New and greater monu- - . - ' '. JOS. F. SMITH'S IDOWDIES -V- J fit,' '- - -- Hll - U f n jL -- jgSE--- m O. r tt'lw -- r; f-only or st . - Is obtained only through know- Jng that Sou have gotten a orial made of a beautiful and everlasting material: designed and fashioned by .real artesans f f neatly letterwl and properly the price ig 'erected; and-thfair and reasonable. ; 5 Mc-m- ' Our these requirement -- Now ply i m. the wheat to pul fodder three days to pay for ft with a ' mill and" While the horses rested In the turned the grist into flour. When field, Abe sat on a fence-rai- l and their work was done, his father read. When darkness fell and work hired him out neighbors as was finally'through for the day, be hostler, ploughman, would stretch himself, on the floor or to do chores and mind babies before the cabin fireplace and read -- wood-choppe- r, -- order for spring delivery. .Ton .will profit by so doiug. "Wc have 8 splendid variety from' which' " " o select. 4 '"fit jrssrzsv. vyjv" . . 7. Beesley MarMe & '.'t Granite Works Just South of Tabernacle f :vfi . : . . thatjie j , - ! ., , h&ssl- - . . t -'. h pin-toro- ' ! f& jj ' - ehareterltlo poe tudy-- .ki f till' AS' , ' . farm lighting. 'Thea, in & Jarftmg an , commanity in ( agr lcultural chemist - seeking make" metallic calcium from, llmet i and coal tar," produced it' eplortuL1 brittle subsiance that .was not at alT" what "he "" wanted. When he,""" threw it Into "a nearby creek gas,. ' ascended from it Some one threw- s a match into the, gas and carbide. gas llgh't was discovered, Tai time s value to humanity was reoog- x nized, and modern farm lighting is . Nofln-jCarQllJ- tj , - - f-it' result It was ah (he 1 iUm, The comfort of a modern farm home are In atriklng contrast to the hardship experienced by the frontier farmer of Lincoln' day." In the days before the automobile, was unknown to Indiana in Lin" ." coln's day." Lincoln had one early experi ence .with love which 'ended tragi cally, and shadowed to some extent ' Light From Shaving his later life. In his early" twen Everybody became Interested in ties he became engaged to Ann educate himself., PetttUedge.Ubasaatifj of his landlord, but the died a year .' V. pie 'would lend him books, and tell him "where1 to borrow themV 'Wlieh before' the date set tor their mar riage. He was never able he was living at New SalenvJlll-nois-, get her; and throughout his life his the village cooper allowed thoughts frequently ..recurred to MnTtb go into his shop at night the love of his boyhood days, and keep up th Are" with Wood , The life pi the farmer's son then shavings." Even the children gath- was a dull thing compared ta the ered shavings and brought them to moaern tarm poy a lire, lie still for without the light' the books were useless, "and there 'was only to supply It Tallow the candle wwmtnatty "beyond-t- he means' of the pioneer farmer. pine-torc- mi. Leg cabin near Hodgensville, Ky, - -- . do, and cattle to feed." However, there la seldom water to carry very far. If he worksHn the field he drives a trae- tor, or runs a gaa engine or aaj automatic threshing machine. His home life Is entirely Food Is the best the farm can produce or mnpey, .hojFurnj), Is the last word in - comfort - Ant automobile carries him to the mov-- ; Ing pictures, or- across country to j : see his girL The radio bring tha , world to him, and the free library offer him all the books he can carry home. Accident and the march of progress "have" madejt: no longer necessary for him to build fires with wood shaving fa' order to have lieht at night for No Time for Girls' . study and reading. When he- was not .reading, he When Lincoln was studying kvwj was telling yarn. Life offered few in the - light of-- aan otner recreations. A rough gal- - other great man nametf Edmund ong the young Davy was maMiiffTa1atojT7ex- folk, but Abe seems to have had! pertinents that led to the discovery little time for the girls. Even the of carbide gas which was to light old buggy that used to carry the the study table of farm. chiMrani JL young folks along the path of love seventy-fiv- e years later, and en able ffielrmofJlBrB to cook meSter-a- nd lieat water over a "hoi" plate? instead of bendlng-oTerr- an opea - " fire or roasting over a hot range. T. - Accidental Olaeovery ' ' Like Lincoln, Dvjr suffered from',. ' "V. S , lack of knowledge. He did .not know the value Of hia dlseovery , and the world jfras kept Raiting1 another half "centory foT'inodera' him, read and study t- one-roo- - J pine-torc- . - v has chores ..to might have light to '. " by. Whn1 one realizes that even today when modern conveniences are so generally availed of in the " country, nearly 20 per cent of the 9,000,000 farm children In the pub lic schools suffer from bad eyes po6T7 Hg&- t- in by TOnwrtfir tight ts a day-p- aid to hla faAer. wearying.llght Jrom the burning their homes, it Is a mystery how 'wo"fiadonlyoa "Eesraan a year was all he man- - pine logs. His need tor" light was Lincoln, Red to spend at school, yet from as great as hla hunger tor books. a candle, or at best a makeshift oil - lamp, escaped blindness. first business venture was a and partnership in a grocery-stor- e tavern, but this did not prosper because the partner was Incompetent and Lincoln's study kept him from attending to It fanaedft ad cleaHtd sheet, - and -t- ook- Itto na- m i MrownTIfeT. He came from such a lowly depth and mounted to such an, exalted. ' JJIJJU! TH height, through youth and ma- turRy of such Bibter hardship and what struggle, that tine wonder his history might have been had his patiway "Been 'less difficult If Lincoln had had the ad van- tages of the youth, at Wday, if ha had had no need tor great effort, I would Ma great Bplrlt this, persistence, the fine quality of his grammar and thon study it in tha great humanity, have been dulled glow from a pine Jog? to f Farm-4i- f he gaveto the language a new sim ferent from, .what it waa in I4n-plicity. To law he gav a new clari- coln'a day that the contrast is in fication. To government he brought itself an inspiration. When Abe was ten years old, tha its most humane and democratic t interpretatlon-"goverhmenof the Lincoln family migrated from Kenpeople, by the people, for the peo- tucky to a location In the wilder-aes- s of Indiana. An axe was put ple." Finallyrie brought freedom to the, negro, and to' the nation into the boy's hand to clear a field ; 1;' tor corn planting and help build a .'. ".;; unity. , If his earlier years had been free home. , From that day until he was the axe was scarcely from povertoLand want if learning twenty-threehands had been talr-.t- o acq n,l - It- - tlte on "the frontier farm had been 'the . The new home was a Hfe of the .average farmer's son to tog cabin,: with a loft above. At day, woWdTiis service and lnspira- flrsttherewas neither window. e A tion to tHe nafibn have been tvas made of poles held up by two than they were? outer- posts, , and fastened into the Needed Book and Light catin wall. 'Abe slept on a heap of Lincoln's greatest handicaps dry leaves in thp loft Chairs and , nr laclrsnf bnnks and light tn talile wars made from rougft which to studyjthem wheiLhIajiayi slabs ofwood, . work, was . dun&ll.Jf iitnighthe were bored and logs, fastened; cquJ4 have spread nut his books, -- Food was coarse and often scanty, -- to and consisted brought frmk theree-libra- ry chlefly of corn' podge unlimited numbers, beneath a car- and potatoes. Frequently jxttatoes bide ga light, a the modern farm were the only food on the table, boy does, 'What would it not have anil - Lincoln became so tired of meoflt-to him in ihose years when thtm (hat on one occasion hen he hnd lrt walk fpn miles for father was asking blessing on r, with ' isthetimetoi)lace jour PROTO ' fte-S- ' WORlfc- Dept. Ike. J li "HigbTricia ZZ " him, ; -- a.. -- yet none seems so 4att as jthe sttucture he hLmself builded In MONUMENTAL . But Not - Luggage hero-worshi- p Real Satisfaction In i- - .. THE DEPARXVVE NT STORE OF PRPVO- curs by financial main strength last Wednesday, when the fell and Mrs. Smith now. Even a wee bit of increase in fractured her skull the cost of operation would be too was run into by a dog neat her rmiuh for 'em. home, fell, struck her head on the He veT rmThecT coll- To ne snre, the cfqiscrvntionlstii fumewalk-ai- id recommend higher test gas and less aciousness. Mrs. Smith would have been 75 when a stick of molasses candy was Mrs. John F, Bowman, Alvln F. extrnvugant motors. With her distinguished Smith, Miss Emma; Smith and Mrs, of age on Wednesday, the date a luxury. years the average ...They point out that set her funeral; as she 'was hntdmiK") Mrs. Smith traveled wide- Arthur Smith Jensen, all of Ball for American machine wastes on chores the. Iluwuiian Islands, Europe, LukciTuae brother, Alfred lambson other than the actual task "of .scoot- born March S, JSfil, In Salt Ltve. ly in and Mexico. She was mar- of Lester, Idaho and two sisters' Canada Slie: of B, the Alfred was of facc over the daughter the ing landscape, to ried the late Presideut Smith on Mrs. AIlKsrt Davis and Mrs. Julina 1847 one of Utah's 13 plo Lambson, iilsjut per cent of Its ef Jiclency. She was Smith, both of Halt neera and with her 'father assisted January 1, 1S71. For more than forty years Mrs. the mother of the latcilyrum"" Xo nufo'ean be made 100 per cent in njannirig" for the lieautiflcation the h. D. efficient. 4mtr4t can lie made 10 of her native city. She helped plant fsmlth was president -- of tliewomenf'mv aixistle-- of "hureh. &. ther trees that on ee nt so, instead Tliis would make a gallon of gas the Lambson, corner at First West and for a nnmiier of years she Funeral services vdE.be held We ferved as a number of the general nesilay afternoon in the Seventeenth go two or three times as fur us It and North Temple street does now. partlj off.cllliig"'a"nTgBeT of trarSmtt h itTif prlras ry""B ssKln tlons. . ward eliapel, under direction She is survived by four children. of Bishop Nicholas G. Smith, price,, luit not altogether. If thefneer hardship' ;and rememliered line - tef t fclb:fc; OKtllM WtlM . "Reading glasses - zyloid frame, toric lenses $3.50 ; Regular $10.00 value ; .1 -- Early Hardships Limned Against Background of Modern Youth. Mainprings5i?2.0 - ', .. . . threshed . ' So, TTTrTiruTdrwijer9mbablredi .35c Watch crystals ' . , , la the 'event of some such pro gram's adoption jbeautQltsV-onIj- r tecourse.wlll be to go in for lighter cars, If theywant to continue auto-- " or her nome: 143 North Secona west iaU.lijjufpIdnJtjtandjxiteer prices. They're hanging onto their streetr following an Injury suffered . reset nscrvatlonsist. iilmt flow n as. hard on production as some of them fav- - vr Expert watAnrelnng." Your, diamond while yoq wait. . BAIT-LA- KE Mis. Uuoicr, Davlaajid WiU)urwiUi itctums from Calif la -j- CITY, Marl.-of the country' leading oil Mrs. Edna Lambsoa Smith, wife of Orson Twelves, who for the past two months, has been visiting rela- men would advance the price of the Iota president Joseph F. Smith lof the L. D. 8. church and one of tives in San Francisco and Los gits, to a certainty. . the pioneer woman of Salt Lake, home. returned Thursday. Angeles, WALK UPSTAIRS 1 hat - dunce a group of solo dunces. ANDSAVE Paris eowboy sqnar . nWrfar RoadAdiTegutioa Jif exist where this time-trie-d the rttizens from -Luke Shore iiresented cessful reniei a pt'tltUm jto- the board of county out the woriiis and restores Drastic" oonservationtherkind theTnsy Welch people of. X'tah, at therr commissioners Monday asking for a hne of health to baby cheeks. Price i advocated at the recent conference annual reunion, at the Hotel Utah new road Sold by Iledqulst Drug Storesrof Siwotsrtea nf f turning fruiiuMiitt Ari ytVX fooreardenT-MraT-S- nifttt home north lo u point near Mis. Ell Adv merre, War 'and the. Navy "Wprjc, Daughters of Ploneera to Meet j was second only by a narrow ' uls-trlc- larg 1 VamnMMC4elt. tl--Emm- bH. a newest scarf f heavy- - taffeta with plaid fcorier la trlght color, with eontratUr borders, they ara jmart with th 1 m. s. Bntertatainf JtodLJLaJsfcIrs, iJosephine Jones Smith, a rck?Ter ( . -. Miu Gwendolen Winning-haan athletic girt vf 16. barely beat out a farm woman of 56 in a enn$ contest itaged by a Cape Girardeau. (M6J newspaper. Mist Win-ningham, at the right, teas adjudged winner, but- Si $s ; g, 1 Th PrlieaT-Mr- sjitlng amurtenu'iit featurt Jiaittitg J, 1), Boyd weat to tt-- Sunday the boy of the city will, be a Mill get A. 11. Johns wanted bore on a IJiiradu among the boys of- thfe viif, charge of failure torovjde kU wife uccord;ng to f)ell Web, city nre- - and minor child with the necessities Mr. Webb tfats jof life. 1I.1 case will come before atibn .director. the locaLf-ourtwithin the next day . . great doal of. fun and Interest or 'two. among the boys of the city. In Pleasant Grove Mrs. L. L. Fined $5,-E- arl Deal of Ameri NebMiit" of ProWt, 'as in Pleasant can Fork was fined $50 or sentenced t3TnvedurtnK the week-envlslttiiiT ' LULjclathW jind friends. . jnll, by Judge George S. Jiallif Mon. Returns to Idaho Mrs. E. J. day morning, im a charge of possession of Intoxicating liquor. Turpi Hi of Itlackfoot, Idaho, htis returned home after sendiug 'the Judge Burtpa Here Judge Thom past two. w;eeks With Mrs. A. H. -as It, Burton Of tie fifth )Htrlt Xffison; of this TltT;'- ; ' court will prewfde over Judge Ellas t, Hansen a division' of the f ourth MOTHERS court hfre this Week. The Watch for symptoms of worms in case of the Spite of T'lah vs. Jesse your children. These parasites are Butts, who MchurgVd with" .battery, (he great destroyers of child Jife. If will tte lien ill lK'fore him. Judge you have reason to think your child flmiKcn . is folding court at Fill has worms, vact quickly. - Give the more this wivk little one a dose or two of White's tliaisuUL-panidJ!lmiU4--a:ejL- Jjjj ; , 53KTand ilrsT wavat the CmderellrTfockfffi !". Stilt A. ' I - ' , George C, Van Wsgetfen Was awarded" the Free Wll-Uai- n al . d y "M" Men to Entertain The" "M" JtiliWe TOeiwf the Viney r4-Frl- bapkettinU gHiiic and 4an (lay evening 4n rney ward suitls ment ball. Tlie public is invited. : 1 Mr. uud Mrs. Ar-- t Vis ta Parent line Glazier Kpeut the wwk-enWith Mr. Glazier's parents, Mr. and Mrs. U A.. Glazier . of Pleasant '. ta .,x ('. M. Cbrlstenwen extent the weekend in Salt Lake City, with friends " i sod relatives. Ml " , tt Silt Vfcina ' - Club 5 -- J. puuiibert . fMetl (Tub Meeting Mrs. SeyHere from Clilrac business on this, week. mour Gray will entertain the mem- In Provo ii fc'Mttla dub- her ef-t- ae home,Thursday rafternoon, The MgO. time will spent in card games. S. P Visitor from Sail a"Is Motored from Bingham Mr. onl l.ttrmn, of Km Francisco Cal, ia A guest at the Iltet Huberts t ill's Mrs. Leslie Bieckon and Mrs and Mrs. Art Mak-motored to Provo from Binnhum Simdiiy aeruoon ; Miss JYlerti to visit -- Mr. .Breckou'a sister Mrs Uoihtr . was In J. G. Strlckley. Johnson, of Graritsvllle, prove Visiting with her-- ru.Uer. VaJlir CSrtJe Meetinj The VbI-leMrs. Jessie W. Johnson, during Circle will" meet' Wednesday tlt week en J. evening at the home of Mrs. Rnlstoi' 70 South Second Jessie W. Here from Johnson is In Provo for a few days West All Kasterirar"nleuiber ' are welcome. visiting wit u hla family.. Sewing club will meet of Mrs, Kmma Jones . the,lg la Salt Lake T E. Ominltisluim few day in of Provo is spending Kalt,I,ke Cit J. .. W- - f'. t. v '4 ... ikr - ft aviiav est 1 - Phons 107 I: r:Winner in ',Venus Contest - ....n - wa In which Abraham born. Lincoln ' meaLthe boy remarked that i the moment he learned to Jead life became abeorbtn "they: were mighty poor quired loply bqoka and light In ;: Earned 25 Cents sTDay . which to read- - tbema - But books In addition to his constant effort were as scarce as hena teeth on hlun te"TfiTa-west- r axe7"whIcSBrouglit trtjntler. aad.be tne sobriquet or the scoured the countryfor thorn. He boy Lincoln" drove the team, cut once said he had Tread, everrboots (ho elm and 'linn brush with wlilc"! wltbtn Si radius cf. to miles ol. bis the stock was fed, handled the' old home in. .IndkAa On borrowed , wlolded book got wet. and he was obliged -- rt.rif " -- shovel-plough- 'the-aickl- h . accident-that-dominat- -- the bottom of a barrel of odds and ends bought from a passing 'immigrant he found a complete set, of Blackstone'a Commentaries, which more than anything elaar shaped his- destiny toward the law and ttl- -l " to'-fo- r . , , even simpler .. Lincoln' life.", At . - ? I tlmately toth WhttrHouse:.,, r f. Lincoln's contribttlan to teak--' kind was so great that probably no lessening of his hoj hood's difflcul-- : ties would have enabled him to to neverthelea v true that the modern farm youth baa a much easier path to hoe. Bat' it is safe to say that when the farm: "yield to"the nation 'another "man' of Lincoln's achievement, at-tback of it there win have been' hard . work, and midnight study.; and perhaps a certain .amount of accidental good fortune. he " |