Show EOPLES TICKET GENERAL ELECTION tox3t3ay tu1 C 1SS LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY Council District JOSEPH BARTON Of Kaysvllle and District C F OLSEN Of Uyrum rd District C C RICHARDS Of Ogden rthDistrictu W W CLUFF Of Coal 111e th District u u JAS H MOYLE Of Salt Lake City th District F S RICHARDS Of Salt Lake City tenth DistrictWM G COLLETT Of Grantsville Uth District JOHN K BOOTH Of Provo District ABRAM HATCH Of Heber City thDistrict W A C BRYAN Of Nepal venth District u W II SEEGMILLER Of Kicullcld Uth DIstrict u u House it District um JAS T HAMMOND Of Logan Sond District JOSEPH HOWKLL I Of WeUsvUle I1 DistrictWILLLIMM LOWE Of Willard h District mJOllN BOYLE Of Ogden li District uJOSIAlllll FERRIN < Of Eden l District u JOSEPH R POUTER Of East Portervilie enth District ALMAELDREDGE I Of Coalville aUi District ALEXANDER HERRON Of Tooelo city Ith District u LE GRAND YOUNG I Of Salt Lake city th District JOHN CLARK Of Salt Lake City vents Disirict JAMES SHARP Of Salt Lake City JiUth DIstrIctu E G WOOLLEY Of Salt Lake City enth DistrictuHE BENNION Of Taylorville rwnth DismctTIIOS W RUSSELL Of Mill Creek jocntli District WM CREER I Of Spanish Fork ecnth District m S KTHURMAN Of Provo fjntcenth DistrictLYMAN S WOOD Of Springville tccnth District LYCURGU3 JOHNSON Of Ashley getecnth 3 DistrIctuuJ A MELVILLE Of Fillmore Intleth District CHRISTIAN N LUND I Of Mount Pleasant ntyflrst DistrictWM 1C REID I Of MantL fntysccond District m W E ROBINSON j Of Beaver City intythird DlstrIctWM P SARGENT Of Panguitch ntyfourth DistrictW T STEWART Of Kanab Salt Lake County ctman KICHtRD HOWE Of South Cottonwood gctman ORRIN P MILLER Of RIverton ctor LEONARD G HARDY Of Salt Lake City frintendent of District Schools WM M STEWART u Of Salt Lake City PIONEERS AND MONEEB DAY was 3 mighty work which vas begun lis valley fortytwo years ago today they were brave men and women who posed the little pioneer band which ned its tents on the site of this city in I Every community has its heroes I L gh every community does not duly Ir and reward t1 em Is the Utah comity com-ity one of the neglectful ie motives which prompted BRIGIIAM jxo and his handful of followers to seton set-on that terrible journey need not now scussed The inspiration which sus d them on that long jaunt r be regarded differently by rent men and women Some will it religious fanaticism while others insist that it was divine direction led the band across the trackless sand over the untrodden mountains iiis then desert waste All will admit bver that whatever the incentive the icy was one of the greatest ever un iken and completed It was mighty laring in its conception and mightier Bore daring in its execution Tho world seen nothing like it nor is it I I y that the world will ever again wit the spectacle of an insignificant com I > i of men and women deliberately with I iing from tho association the commu I and support of human kind turning faces from society and plodding their a thousand miles into the wilderness ngupa government and establishing ilization everything frowning and for me save only the face of that Provi in which they had so longed long-ed Tho story of the hardships I privations and the sufferings io Pioneers always reads like vivid roe ro-e and the tale of the founding of the unity seems almost mythological this practical unsentimental age it isi d that wo do not sufficiently esteem rtpprcciato the men who led the way marked the path and drove the stakes h were the beginning of this mighty wealth We know that the masses appreciative though their ot properly tfulness may not be willful It is cur hut tho nation indifferent otherwise hardy heroes to which the trans ouri side of the republic owes so much jd be honored by something more than genre and forgetfulness How many j the Pioneers hastened the settle r of the broad west and the develop measureless resources will of its be told c be known nor will it ever many lives wero saved by the cstab lent in this valley of tho halfway b on the road across the conti I t p nent where the weary could rest and the hungry be fed but there is a great obligation resting upon us all and one which will never bo paid so long as we permit Pioneer Day to pass unobserved unob-served and neglect to even inquire What of the Pioneers themselves Tho legislature legisla-ture has made the anniversary a holiday and there is an ungraceful suspension of business in some places but the second most important day in the calendar to the happy dwellers in these vales of peace and prosperity is marked by no unusual rejoicing and the men who gave us the anniversary arc permitted to live out their years and pass to the everlasting beyond in forgetfulness THE HGIULU respectfully suggests that in this matter the people of Utah arc not acting act-ing creditably they are not doing themselves them-selves justics It might not prove that our hearts are better bet-ter but it would show that they beat more properly if Pioneer Day were celebrated awe a-we celebrate the anniversaries of other mighty deeds distinguishing the day by public rejoicings and by recounting the heroic he-roic deeds of those who founded this vigorous vigor-ous and virtuous commonwealth |