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Show t I liife SAUNA stay UTltti SON, SAUNA, CARD OF THANK8 walls of one who had never losFhls love for them, and lt appeared that We want to express our deep apprethe one aim of their new possessor ciation and gratitude for the kindness had been to get them at their makers shown during the death of our son prices. All of which gave to the old and brother, Morris Johnson. The artist a new view of the fact that of our neighbors and frienda while the arts may change, hearts do loyalty will linger long in our hearts. not; and a new Idea of the reality Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson. vain In to art which all strives fully represent, the reality of the fairy spirit that moves and shines behind all the Canadian Shipbuilding Ill be gloom and cold of the world. As eurly a. 1723 shipbuilding waa a hanged, he said, If he didnt look Just brunch cf Industry In Canada of the like Santa Claus. French regime. During that yew all merchant ships and two were built in the colony. Ia 1T88 a 74 gun ship was built at Cape art8,1?1 In 1810. fifty Quebec city. NEWS NOTES FROM Oldi tary Rlne" whispered to years after of Canada the surrender REDMOND toat lt looked aoj MeetIng HoU8e by Goxernor Vaudreull General to -' though they would all go down togethAmhert, 2(1 vessels were built la Canuda, having a total tonnage ot Miss Leah Nielson, a student of the 5,83(5 tons. These statistics show that University of Utah at Salt Lake, is they must have been small vessels. at her home here for the holidays. The G. B. G. S. 0. D. II. club (guess Definite Wage Term it) a newly organized girls club of Minimum wage Is a terra Redmond, were guests at the home of to indieute the lowest level of Miss Della Nielson Tuesday evening earnings for-- u given class of laborerg. of this week. The club members de- which will iiflurd them aDd their voted the entire time to needleeraft natural dependents a means of existand Tuesdays function was strictly ence udeqwtie to maintuin them lu full adhered to in this respect. Periodicphjsical efficiency and soclul decency. ally, however, the members are allowed to serve luncheon. Bachs Large Family Mr. and Mrs. Leo Christenson enJohann Sebastian Bach, the celetertained for twenty guests Tuesday brated composer, was twice married Cards, music and other di- and was the father of 20 children , evening. versions were enjoyed until ten seven by his first wife and thirteen oclock when the hostess served a de- by the second. Four of his sons wera licious hot supper. distinguished musicians. The Old Artist Had to Confeea That Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jensen enterHo Wat Hungry. tained at a dinner party Sunday evGum Arabic From Sudan er, and The Mountain Summit sug- ening, covers being laid for six guests. Best gum arable comes from the Sugested to An Evening Sea" that lt Peterson and Mrs. James dan, natives bringing out the raw Joseph to to be better conquer. stoop might motored to Richfield Monday tdrial on freight barges from the Nile There was no token of this last Idea, afternoon. valley. for In the the however, preparations night that signified the old man's lar tentlon of remaining in and sticking Sentence .Sermon Monster Gooseberry no ear for the situation out. lie-haA new gooseberry as large as a Sometimes It Is ns Important to keep the chimes that had Fegun to ring out the ears shut as tis to keep the mouth plum has been discovered In the woods of northern Florida. There was not a trace of expecta- shut. In deterthe cheer of Christmas tion mined expression of the face that was reflected from the old mirror. They must all belonw to the past forever. There was another thought on the vay, though, and lt found expression that Christmas jporning when the artist awoke to a rather cheerless en-- i fg vlronment to be summoned to his door $ by the loud knocking of a very rotund, EM florid and merry Individual, who it seemed to have brought his years with cliand him into a congenial friendly mate. An old friend from a far country, he took In the state of things at a glance and as quickly decided upon M his course of action. After the greetl ings and the historical recountings iii were over, and as a result of this most AUTHORIZED DEALER number of a the FQRD visitation, unexpected in' piimii! paintings that had concluded to die IlliillliillUII Die were introducecLto a new are as hefplesias the nesses of the present to succor fainting mortality, and the old artlat had to confess on that Christmas eve that he was not only hungry, but rather lessly so. It was true that his artistic remains were not wholly despised. Mr. Blavatsky's auction room was not very far away, and there was a . dally slaughter of helpless pictures there. But this massacre of Innocents their father could not consent to: he felt ready to starve first Then certain publishers hod "offered something for a set of skeletons, but In order thatj might reproduce them upon a re-uce sca'e- which was Intolerable to, ed v Mid Favors Ir. a summary report of the conditions throughout the state, effecting stockmen, the farmer, and in general conditions, J. Cecil Alder, meteorologist, gives a highly encouraging as follows: The weather has peen excellent for livestock and outdoor operations. Local snowfalls extended the grazing radius from watering places, but increased the amount of feeding on farms. Dense fog persisting for several days softened the browse. Plowing still continues in places, an exceptionally la:ge acieage having been turned this fall. Late sown grains continue a very slow growth, but all grains are thrifty. Most roads are gefod. Livestock are fair at Laketown; Bear Lake is not frozen over. Winter grain has made a good fall growth at Gailand. An exceptionally large acreage of land has been plowed this fall at Ogden. Winter grain is up, has ample moistuie, and is doing well at Tooele. Ranges are good at St. John. Foggy weather occurred at Benmore, the resulting hoar frost causing some sore mouth among lambs; the desert needs snow; there is no grain up, but soils are well saturated. . Livestock are doing well at Santaquin. Plowing has continued at intervals at Moroni, but grain growth has been stopped by cold weather. Grain looks well at Spring City. Sheep can now leave the foothills at Manti, as new snow has fallen, though cattle feeding will be increased since pastures have been covered; highways are fair. Early sown grain is good or excellent at Levan, but late sown fields are coming" up slowly; soil moisture is plentiful, and snow is four inches deep. Snow and foggy weather have softened the feed at Milford and livestock haye done well.' Cattle feed is good on the foothills at Duchesne. Desert livestock are still good at Emery. Livestock are doing well at Ouray! Roads are muddy .at Moab. Range browse and grass are only fair at La Sal due to drought in the early growth stages; livestock are still good. Livestock are doing well at re-po- it, The Beaver high school basket ball team had an easy time taking a game from the North Sevier; quintet last night, when they rounded out with a score of 62 to 29. The Sal- ma boys were out of the game for some reason and could not check the onslaught of the visitors. Beaver has a fine team and during plays with Panguitch, Circleville, Monroe, Rich- field and Salina, captured three out of five. The Salina boys, commencing next Tuesday, will play with Ephraim at Ephraim. Wednesday of next week a game has been scheduled with Min- ersville to be played m Salina, and Thursday, Friday and Saturday of the coming week will contest with on Beaver, Milford and Minersville the respective dates named. North Sevier hopes to be in fine.fettle" by. the time the regular games for the Sevier division starts, January 8th. LOCAL ITEMS OF INTEREST. V Mrs. C. M. Nelson left for Salt Lake last Saturday evening. She will remain over the holidays as the guest of her daughter, Mrs. A. H. i. Hagenson. a Rex Barnar'd, manager for the Meat and Supply, made a hurried trip to Salt Lake Saturday, returning Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Murdock, and daughter, Adele, have gone to Provo to spend Christmas with relatives. Dr. Howard Call and Mrs. Call, were among those who will spend their Christmas elsewhere. They motored to Logan yesterday and will remain until Sunday. Miss Lilly Johnson of Gunnison, spent Saturday and Sunday visiting Paul Burgess, Lee and Olin Murphy at the home of Mr. and Mr& E. L. are at home from Salt Lake to spend Swalberg. the holidays with their parents. Miss Violet Johnson, Mrs. Carl E. Johnson and Mrs. Rosina Bastian, motoied to Ephraim last Sunday and ( were the guests of friends for a few hours. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Deaton are rejoicing over the arrival of a fine baby girl born to them at the Salina Finds Fairy Spirit Shines hospital Tuesday of last week. All Behind Gloom and Cold are doing splendidly at the Deaton Sal-in- Happy Christmas for Aged Artist of the World. home. Heber Whiting, a student of the University of Utah, came down from Salt Lake Saturday and is the guest at the home of his mother for the holidays. Dr. A. J. Lewis of the Lewis Drug company, was looking after import-abusiness matters at Manti last Saturday. Misses Helen Anderson, and Phyllis Jorgenson, came in from gait Lake Sunday to spend Christmas and New Years with their parents. Buster Barnard, Eddie Martin, Marion Bird, LaMar Burgess students at the University and Westminister colleges at Salt Lake, are at home for the holidays with their parents. The boys are enjoying their vacation and will avail themselves of the good times until January 4th, when they will return to their studies. H. B. Crandall,, who spent "a week on the coast, has returned and was Blanding. accompanied by Mrs. Crandall and daughter. Mrs. Crandall left for Los Angeles early in the fall and has been Societys Failures It Is want of diligence rather than staying with her son; Harold, a studwant of means that causes most fail- ent at the University of Southern ures. Alfred Mercier. . . California. By CHRISTOPHER G. HAZARD REOT asever,1 and striking his cane sharply upon the pavement as he -- strode along, the old man was a distinguished figure amid the hurrying Christmas crowds. He pressed on like a contradiction of the Christmas spirit He had not far to go before reaching the ancient looking house that had once known youth and gayety as the result of his prosperity, but, which In Its loneliness and disrepair, had become a surviving sympathy In his later and adverse experiences. There he could sit and renew In memory the events and associations of happier days, which, like pictures in the gallery of life, were vivid again for a moment out of their tarnished frames. They were more real than the pictures that hung upon his walls, for lt Is the artistic atmosphere of the day that determines the light In which Rs art shall be viewed, and these works of the past had become only memorials to the present to which he had come. Butjhe present realities .of the past nt - lat hope-Saturda- men-of-w- DOn-mon- Si d d lUillj El)c Hirst lUialjFfi 'for pi A fflrrnj ffliriatimui a A ijappy Nrut Rear. it Martin Peterson ' life-upo- TO YOU " : : : : f $ I A I i Raise Looked-Fo- r A raise in TIRES is looked for 4 4 4 4 4 44- t 4 4 4 4 . T. 4. .. 4. .. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4 4 4. 4. 4. 4. . 44 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4, 4. 4, 4. 4. 4. i- 8--4. 4. .1, 4. 4, ,?. ... 4 .j, .;. 4. 4. 4.4. 4.4. 4. 4, 4. ... .J. - 4. 4. 4. 4. .;.'4 4 4 44 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, .j, 4, 4, a 4, 4. t 4 .4 41 4 4. 4. 4 h4 . 4. 4-- Hmj 4 4 4-- 4. f 4 Proprietor. 44444444.444444.44444. 4.44.4.4.4.v4.4,j...i.j,4.;..j..j..j.;X..j.'4.4...:..:.i: (Sifts- J aliita ittrrdmnt On the Highway to Southern 'Utahs Scenic Wonderland , Salinak trading Hostelry and where Service and Accommo- ' dation is foremost. Emmet Robins f? Manager. 4 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. . -. .v .. 4 4.4.4.4.4.44. 44.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4. 444444444444444.4.4444.4444.44.4444444.444444444.44444i4m444( i NEW DEPARTUR- E, j i t f t 4f 'll 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 IT! We have just installed a LATHE and CYLINDER GRINDER in our shop, and we can handle the most intricate jobs. If you have troubles, let us care for them. THE BEST EQUIPPED MACHINE SHOP IN SOUTHERN UTAH Christmas days bring Plum Duff, Mince Pies, Cakes, Wholesome Bread. Good Flour is essential for making these delicacies and we manufacture that kind. Don't forget when for flour to ask for our products. calling The Salina Hospital t Splendid and Modernly Equipped for General Treatment Proprietor 444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 4 YULETIDE DAYS The World Known, for sale at our garage 4.4. 4.444; $ ! ! LET US DO 1 4vv44vvvvvvv4vvv44444444444414444444441j,4444444444444, THOSE HAPPY DAYS We are equipped to adjust Chains to Cord and Balloon Tires and ve make this a specialty. You'll need them the coming of winter and muddy roads. We sell Gas, Oils, and furnish Free Air.' J J Petty Garage Proprietor. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Willard Batteries Battery Repairing SALINA SERVICE STATION 4 W. H. Brown, Prop. GAS, OILS, AIR. WATER 4- - v -. .- As Widely Known As the Scout Movement J44444.44.44..J.4. 4, 4.4..;.4.44.4.4-..H.;."..5- ; .4.4. 44444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 WHITE HOUSE. HOTEL Salina Roller Mills Jarvis Martin DUNLOP TIRES 4.44-5-- 44444444444444.4444.4,H.4.J,4.j..?.m4,4,4,(j4,4,4M,4(i5(4t4 4 What the market affords, we serve jroo. 5 I - SHORT ORDERS its 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4-- 4. 4. 4. 4. ; 4 $ REGULAR MEALS J t II t i i t: Hans S. Jensen s-- --I1 X 1 1 t tt t 4-- X -- Try our SERVICE under New Management. " front 1 4. ! 4 It II i four (Eljritftntasi 4, A 4 4 1 5 . 4 1' 1 MAIN CAFE $ 4 4 4 4 4 4 T ! BUY NQ while the prices are reasonable. We carry The FAMOUS FIRESTONE and UNITED STATES TIRES. . 4 s fr 4' 4 A 4 Seiberling Tires Miller Tire. .V 4 J- --I- I- ! 4- - f GRAND TOY DISPLAY We now have on display one of the largest and most complete selections of Gifts and Toys ever shown in Redmond. There are presents for Father, Mother, Brother, Sister or Sweetheart, and we can please the most particular. COME AND SEE THEM MAKE SELECTIONS EARLY t REDMOND CASH STORE r Redmond, Utah & lt i |