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Show 5 t SOUTH CACHE CITIZEN, HYRUM, UTAH 1 V. ' THE SOUTH CACHE CITIZEN not to learn, they said. And these are the men who most frequently look for raises. Published Every Friday at Ilyrum, It simply illustrates the low view Cache County, Utah. men take of themselves . They want their pay to be raised but they do not Application has been made for want to elevate their inherent worth. as second-clas- s mail matter. If anyone told them that they were mere draft animals and not minds, CLYDE F. SETTLE Editor and Publisher. they would be insulted; yet by reas fusing to conduct themselves Our advertising rates will be made minds they simply emphasized their known on application. likeness to draft animals. Not long ago a man went to speak The movement which is now under to the younger students at a trade ;way for the appointing of a county school which was provided by the inphysican and nurse should be enof dustry concerned. The school was deCache the citizens couraged by The Public Health Service, signed to permit men to rise from bounty. which is so active in Hyruni, is en- the degree of laborer to that of medeavoring to convert the county com- chanic by teaching them what othermissioners that such a move would wise they could only learn at cost of Ifce Several time and school fees. He asked one profitable and wise. towns in Cache county have no physi young fellow a question and the lad replied, Oh the company does this dian and for that reason they are But, to hold a clinic. By securing just to get more out of us. Jthe full time services of a competent said the man when you leave they physician and a well trained nurse dont take away from you what they the health of the county would be have taught you, do they? Under the sway of that pecular (greatly improved and many ailments tvould be avoided by the inspections form of unprogressive philosophy f the health experts. Strong heal which seeks to keep back the workers thy children are the countys greatest of the country, this lad failed to see that it was himself who was receiV' assets. ing the most. It is rather sad to see men victimTIME TO ized by this curious method of selfCLEAN-Udepreciation. Yet that is the stock-i- n Now that the snow has melted from trade of most of the labor doctrine the lawns and gardens it is a good which is being preached today. the grounds time to dress-u- p Learn. Labor. Wait. This com your home. Within a few bination cannot be beaten because it (days work on the farm will be so is rooted in natural law. Labor is compulsory. All of us pressing that no time will be given to the home lot. Pickets that have been must do it. The only labor that is Ibroken should be replaced by new pitiable is that which proceeds withones and it would make a great im- out the accompaniment of learning. provement of the town if everyone It is that kind of labor w'hich spells would either paint or drudgery. Drudgery is witless work, his front fence. thoughtless toil. Drudgery does not As we are. judged by the company spring from the job, but from the We keep so are we judged by the drudge who performs it. HENRY un-ihb- le P white-was- h grounds we keep. It is also time td plan on planting a few flowers about your home. Much joy and satisfaction will come throughout the summer from a bed of beautiful flowers. Some sweet peas may be planted now by the side of a fence or as a border on the lawn are good places to plant them. First dig the plot a foot deep. Make a trench four inches in depth and plant the seeds placing one inch of dirt over them. Then as the plant grows gradually fill in the trench. A little work now will be amply paid for before the summer is over. The following flower seeds may also be planted now: asters, coxcomb, balsam, petunia, scarlet sage, stocks, and verbena. LEARN, LABOR AND WAIT success. Learn. Labor. Wait. The man who knows will always find more op portunity than the man who does not know. The man who knows how will always have a wider way than the man who has to be told how. The man who knows why will always be a peg above the man who only knows how. There is always something to know; what ever the job may be, always more to learn for that is the way progress is made. A small group of men were given work with which they were not familiar, and a man who knows how and why was put with them to give them all he knew. Did the group welcome this ? Only a minority of them. The minority figured that this instruction was making them worth more and was costing them only the effort to learn; they were being enabled to increase their investment in themselves by a little attention. But the others felt that they were being somehow imposed on. They were paid to work WIMeglm From Selected Hens, mated with 250-eg- g record Tom cockerels. Barron Strain. $10.50 per 100 in 500 lots or more; 100 $11.00. Rhode Island Reds Barred Rocks Black Minorcas $14.00 ... 14.00 16.00 B. Ogden Nine Other Varieties. Walker Feed Go. 1786 Wash. Ave far-awa- Nellie Maxwell likes to cook, She also likes to bake, She makes a lot of tasty things, From celery soup to cake. Modern Rhyme Book. From celery soup to cake is a long jump in any volume devoted to the culinary art, but Nellie Maxwell knows every page of the way. Being a regular girl, she found a great interest in the always-bus- y kitchen of her childhood home in a small Wisconsin town. And her mother, being regular mother, gave Nellie every opportunity to try her hand and perfect her skill in the art of cookery. That her schooling was thorough and is shown by the record she has made. For the last eleven years she has given lectures and demonstrations for the University of Wisconsin at the many farmers institutes held in that state. Prior to this she taught domestic science in the state agricultural colleges of Iowa and Nebraska. Women readers who have followed Miss Maxwells suggestions in The Kitchen Cabinet, appearing in The Citizen will tell you that her advice is dependable and sound. Turn to it today and see what is offered. MiHing Co. e. leg-wea- ry sight. But a hope of success spurs them on; Many are tramping into the night Without any thought of the dawn. Out on the byway theres plenty of space, But the road is much rougher there. There is many a boulder and incline to face And the pathway is rugged and bare. There are head-ston- and es bone-hea- MENDON PIONEER CALLED Joseph H. Hardman, 68, died Tuesday at his home in Mendon following an illness due to old age. Mr. Hardman has been an active worker in the improvement of his community, and in raising the standard of Cache valleys livestock. He was one of the chief carpenters that assisted in the erection of the Logan temple. He is survived by a wife and seven FLOUR and FEED of ALL KINDS Bring us your Chopping. Prompt Service. Car of good yellow corn on hand. Hyrum, Utah Phone 140 ps that point out the fate Of those who have passed on before; Where the pitch of the climb slackExpert Wall Paper Hanging ens the gait, Calcimining and are found more The death-marand more. PRICES REASONABLE One wonders while musing on lifes Phone 128j Hyrum, Utah. rocky road, Why so many are forced to retreat; Unbuckle their knapsacks give up DR. W. their load, And finally acknowledge defeat. DENTIST. O, the smooth road is brighter More easy to tread, Office hours from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. While the path of Success is too Evenings by Appointment. hard; So the crowd takes the highway Office Located Over United Store. The few take the byway The end of each holds its reward. WILFORD D. PORTER. W. U. JAMES ks L. THE AWAKENING Maxwells Kitchen is Interesting Feature Associated Parmers The chill blasts of winter are fast giving way To Springtimes warm sunlight so of new birth. Pine trees are shaking their boughs from the snow drifts; Larks in the pastures take wing; All nature wakes from her winter of sleeping To herald the joy of the Spring. WILFORD D. PORTER For Legal Papers and for long time, low rate loans, Call On C. F. OLSEN Office at Anderson & Sons UTAH HYRUM The Best Magazine for Your Boy is SHOE REPAIRING THATS ALL. rare, And the robins sweet carol awakens streamlet Are seen natures gifts FIRE INSURANCE Y. A. Spenny OF SPRING. the day, While the south-win- d is freshening the air. From the meadows the grasses are sending their leaflets Out of the slumbering earth; On every hillside and by every BRUCE For The Best and Safest r r. b. McFarland Contracter and Builder I specialize in work of all lands. Prices right and work guar- repair anteed. - Hyrum Utah Boys Life is designed to furnish wholesome reading for every boy and, in my opinion, is the best and most uplifting boys magazine published at the present time. I urge that every boy become a subscriber to this magazine. (Signed) VICTOR LINBLAD, Scout Executive Cache Valley Council B.'S. A. ' Order From Willard D. Porter HYRUM, UTAH. Dealer in Periodicals for Every Home, Profession or Trade. If Theyre Printed in America I Have Them. well-direct- People Used to talk a great deal about the means by which success may be earned; the emphasis now is on the fruits of success. Once a young man was willing to serve his appren ticeship at dicipline and build up a capacity for usefulness; now the temptation is to think first of the pay. That is, where formerly the initial interest was in the individuals investment of energy, experience and industry, now it is in the dividends. Longfellows learn to labor and to wait seems slow to this generation. Still, there have been no substitutes found for learning, laboring and waiting. Knowledge, industry and the ripening of experience and judgement are still the inevitable elements of success. Where they exist, there is F. O. FORD. HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS doesnt tell her. He wants her to who is in love Lifes highway is crowded with strug- marry the millionaire So he arranges to die her. with gling souls, legally, have a lawyer send her Each bearing his burden of care. And Charfrom the estate. to y are Many trudging goals money to her luxury. lie every give goes Their loads will be lighter out- -. The young millionaire asks the girl there. to marry him. But another beggar, bondsmen and There are clubmen the fake a brute, White-Ey- e burley and scholars and poor, to On this smooth, beaten pathway of blind man, gets vise and threatens blackmail the girl In a terrific batlife; White-Eyand sore, tle, Charlie nearly kills Many are tired, and more in Because of the care and the strife. The story develops more human heart thrills and the Many are rushing to goals not in great climax is stupendous in its realism. Ogden, Utah Death Claims Author of Prisoners Song If I had the wings of an angel, Over these prison walls I would fly, And Id fly to the arms of my darling And there Id be willing to die. r, Massey, Guy whose Prisoner Song has swept the nation has anchored his ship in a safe harbor, for a few days ago, as dawn broke, he died in a government hospital, a world war victim. Ive a sad, sad story to tell you, he wrote into the immortal song, and he wrote from the heart, for a fateful love affair when he was in Brooklyn during the war ended disastrously and as a result Massey was confined to his ships brig for an indefinite period. But The Prisoner Song won his freedom and soon it became to be whistled and sung over the country. Radio took it up and it became one of the most popular songs of the nation. And then the dread disease, a sinus infection, set in, just as the first proceeds of the song reached the youthful singer. Two months ago he knew he was doomed to die, but he never lost his courage. When he was taken to the big army hospital at San Antonio, Texas, surgeons worked night and day to save his life. Lying half conscious, he hummed the words that are on the lips of the country, the story of his love. soldier-compose- BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY WANTED A young man with $5,000.00 to invest in a growing music business with a most brilliant outlook, party will be given active job in business selling pianos and other musical instruments. Must have best of references. Can make his own future. Address Box 874, Salt Lake City, Utah. PRIMARY CONFERENCE. The regular annual conference of the Third ward Primary association will be held in the Third ward meeting house Sunday, March 21, at 2 p.m. MRS. NORA NIELSEN, Street of Forgotten Men at Rex Tonight The Street of Forgotten Men, which will be shown at The Rex this afternoon and evening only, is the dirty Bowery alley whence the professional beggars of New York sally forth to prey upon the silken Fifth Avenue crowds. Among them is Easy Money Charley, really young and handsome, but concealing it with a fake plaster arm and ragged clothes. Charlie is hard, cynical, getting rich on his graft. A piece of female driftwood sends for him. She is dying and begs Charlie to look after her daughter, a little girl of four, inmate of an orphan asylum. In the emotion of the moment,, Charlie weakens. He promises. The mother dies and Charlie sends for the little girl. He installs her with a house-keepin an apartment far from the Street of Forgotten Men. She thinks he is a o business man. When she grows into young womanhood, Charlie sends her to a fashionable school. He loves her now, but he er well-to-d- and in a manner that we will Guarantee to Please You e Street of Forgotten Men p President Counselors. is equipped to do ail kinds of FRIDAY, MARCH 19 TODAY Matinee and Night ONLY KATE ANIIDER, PEARL PETERSEN, The South Cache Citizen Dont Miss This Show! 10 ri mi tin . " |