Show PEOPLE AND THINGS B By FRED BAGBY Nephi Jensen former judge of the city court has a special prescription for or tired business men which he says Works wonders It is walking walkin and working n the garden The former j judge dge walks from h his s off office ce in the city to his home at East Twenty first South street every afternoon end then he does a daily dozen with the spading hoe end and other im pl ments in his large garden He Heis is if proud of the fact that last year car he produced a dozen crates of strawberries straw straw- I berries from the small pitch which I J he e planted I ut in th the Cold I State Chemist Herman Harms just cant see ec any sen sense e at movin the chemists chemist's office from corn com quarters on the main floo t to a old cold cramped place in the base basc- Ment The state spent more 2500 to fit up a laboratory on the thc i first floor which gained gaine national notice noI no- no I ti tice e for its completeness and arronge flent he s says s Now it has spent some 2500 more to chuck us into the basement where there is no heat heal I nd md we all have colds Darrell T. T Lane American leL le- le L tion Cion national committeeman eman from Utah Utah and Clyde Early Earl happened to meet med at lunch on the other day dy and during the course of con con- found that th they y were both in Chicago atthe same time one attending the legion meeting the other an undertakers undertakers' con con- 1 dave ela I knew the American college of surgeons was meeting 4 there at that time said Mr Lane but I didn't know the undertakers undertakers un- un were were there too Well I wonder what the sIgnificance If If any or of the doctors the undertakers under under- takers and the legionnaires all meeting at the same time In the same place Someone suggested th the medics and morticians might have been there to take care of the casualties Ernest Smith for ears connected with the Oregon Short Line offices here is sure he sees confidence re re- among the people of the coun- coun ry and he h holds that this is the first requisite to r stored busin business pros 1 rity it He expresses confidence that adjustments will come about which r C Jim restore to the railroads an im- im measure of both oth passenger ti and freight tonnage 1 Albert R. R Barnes former attorney at- at y torne-y rener general l of Utah declares 11 1 f s conviction that he has discovered disco ered who Is the real forgotten Yes man said he the forgotten tort for tor- rotten gotten man Is the average average t n lawyers lawyer He h has s been corn com forgotten ever er since th thI the I Democrats went into office rN To 0 Sun for 2 Weeks tf it ma may be impolite to talk about weather but th Is the bus business ness t f the weather man And speaking or the with apologies to California Easter weather in Salt Lake ke J. J Cecil Alter local who tells tells' us what the weather to be but sometimes isn't recalls that the Easter storm is not th the only freakish vIsitation that Salt Lake has had In June ot of 1913 it mowed The fall was light but was to put a coat of white while on the streets during the early morning hours It soon disappeared under the influence of a bright sun i 11 Also In March larch of 1902 Salt Ii Lake City and valley alley were coy coy- ered ered by a cloud blanket that obscured ob ob- f f the sun for a stretch of nearly two weeks This phenomenon phe- phe It Is recalled attracted i. i much attention at the time and Was the subject ct of considerable II newspaper notice T thick blanket blan- blan ket of clouds appeared to have r 1 dropped down between the peaks f c of the Wasatch and Oquirrh rang range and became marooned t The clouds hung close to 10 earth and the air on the streets was perceptibly filled T with mist There was almost ti I i dally daily slight precipitation or of rain raint rainor t or snow Morning alter after morning Salt Lakers f. f ro got up to find the some same dull gray j shrouding the valley An AnI photographer whose r aine could rould not be recalled scaled o ot of the mountain peaks to the ast and took a picture oL of the upper I sUrface of the cloud blanket With t the e sun Bun glinting or 01 the fleecy billowing bU- bU lowing clouds the picture presented striking likeness of what ancient Dike Ike Bonneville may have looked like ike before this greet inland sea dwin- dwin I dIed into the saline resIdue ot of Great lak lake A rising barometer and anda a wind which had been lack lack- f irig g before made the cloud blanket vanish over night |