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Show ly, March 28, 1940 THE WEEKLY REFLEX Born John' Tyler, , jne Is SCOTT f tuioWeetern 150-Yea- rs Ago, orLeastKnowii Presidents T-Bu- t fern Mi? ture of him poseful adorn- was the first vice presi-'-- t to be defeated for that let in one election and then and win in :ge a come-bac-k one. next i He was the first President surround himself with a ain Trust of college pro-W- s and experts (even Wh that name had not yet a, coined for it) and in do- -l so he antedated Franklin Roosevelt by nearly a ments that really - He .m1 went w- was the only President po was purged by mem &s of his party . . . and they g Jere more successful in He fo; than President Kjsevelt was in his attempt-- 1 purge of his party! He was the only President io ever renounced his allegiance to the United States. After leaving the ' White We, he accepted the lowli-- t office ever filled by an that of road over- ex-esid- ent b bet, the dark thread of atfc was woven all through the item of ath of a John Tylera life. The Virginia congressman, Oopton, in 1818 resulted in Nler'a being chosen to fill the ircsncy in the house of representatives and thus brought him i the stage of national affairs. 'jt death of John Taylor in 1824 Ssulted in the nomination of Ty- 3 to fill the vacancy thus crest i in the United States senate but a friend, Littleton Tazewell, as elected to the post. The tth of William Henry Harrison me Tyler President of the Unit-- i States in 1841 and a little Mire than a year after he moved to the White House, it was aped in black in mourning for 4 wife, Letitia Christian Tyler, ;oka H office-seeker- s, Presl-len- ts 0 - Tenth President of the United States. As a ninning mate for Old Tippecanoe" they selected the ex Democrat, John Tyler. They believed that this cultured Southern gentleman would attract Southern votes and his friendship for Henry Clay would hold the support of the Clay faction in the party. In the tumultuous campaign which followed, Harrison and Tyler wod an easy victory but within a month after taking the oath of office as President, worn out the aged Indian-fighte- r, by the demands of Whig died on April 4, 1841. Upon succeeding to the presidency, Tyler announced that he would retain the cabinet chosen by Harrison and would carry out the latters policies. What they were, no one knew for the Whig convention had not adopted any platform and in the campaign there was no discussion of issues between the two parties. As a matter of fact, the Whigs had nominated Harrison because they believed he could be managed" and Henry Clay . intended to do 1812. that Eii wife was the first wife to die in the White fill JOHN TYLER io-(- powe: yK'V Hotel Plandome 'assy 4th Ha A fltata St. 7 I true to his oath of office Then 10 members of congress, headed John Quincy Adby ams, now a member of the house of representatives, brought in a report charging Tyler with violating a promise he had made before his nomination and threatening to impeach him. .Tyler replied that he had never pledged anything to the Whigs.' Despite this denial, the Whig congressmen issued a seriea of Addresses to the People" in which they charged that the President had gone into office fully committed to a program which he now repudiated, thus selling out the party." They listed the reforms which they desired and which they declared, the President was impeding." Finally, when Tyler filled his cabinet with Southern Democrats, headed by John C. Calhoun as secretary of state, it was the last straw. The Whigs issued a proclamation that all political connection between them and John Tyler was at an end from that day henceforth. The party had completely purged , places the managing. l. I Graham Cracker EATING crackers in bed is a American custom that disastrous attended with aftermaths, and eating graham crackers Is much worse than munching soda crackers because the former crumble more easily. For this greater evil we can very definitely blame Sylvester Graham, health food faddist of the early well-nig- h 1800a. He devised graham flour, not n. n, ts -- T--t at-V- . bte-Righ- ts -- nt, own-intern- n, last-minu- e te Sl.ZS at ua (ta 1940 WALLPAPER PATTERNS rar te - I0o . lit and 20a new Sprlaf Early-Da- y r SI. Sea major-genera- Is . prov and hnw why BURGE, tha MORE and futrat Mllkar avar bailt CLEANER milk with lana tima sad labor. Writa for Informalian WALLACE TAYLOR. Diitribatar Halt Laka City. Utah It Ha. Wast Taaipla Gen. Burnside Why General Burnside wore them is open to discussion. It might have been to make up for the tact that his .first name was Ambrose and his second name Everett. But his achievements never needed apology. He was graduated from West Point in 1847. He served in the army for a while and then resigned to go into the manufacture of firearms. He Invented one of the first breechloaders, called the Burn-aid- e breechloading rifle. It loaded from the top, thank goodness, because If it loaded from the side It probably would have been called the Sidebum breechloader. Back In the army again, he was a colonel during the Civil war, was prominent at the Battle of Bull Run and later became a ' He was intensely patriotic, amiable, modest and very popular. No American patriot deserved more to have his name commemorated. Ita too bad It had to be Immortalized In reverse Salt Lake Hiaala TW SURGE MILKERS I -- '4te-Righ- HOTELS Wh la RlNO. NEVADA. t at Uta HOTEL GOLDEN Kao larrwt a at atMl papalar ImUL : so the bits of cracker would its President. 'Brain Trust down uncrawl The remainder of Tylera term Although retaining Harrison's our der disof office was the pajama marked by cabinet Tyler immediately asfa be--i and collars the pute question slavery sembled about him a group of ovejr sheets tween the , faunofficial advisers (the first and the annexation of Texas, (it, but because he Brain Trust) which included vored by the Democrats and ophave, wanted to prebeen the Whigs. Having Prof. Nathaniel Beverly Tucker, posed by natefc serve the wholeout of read the William party, and law Tyler of at professor lay of the someness now had to lose and sui o died nothing tetter September 10, 1842. And Mary college, who first suggestwheat entire ker move the for annexation, ed an Exchequer Bank plan ported ally his own death prevented rbera nel- without As success but at first 8. Graham 4 holding the last office to which which Tyler later proposed and Sylvester Grawas ever elected member-ti- p whose recommendations about a the 1844 campaign approached, la in was bom ham Conn., in Suffleld, the this became princiquestion in the congress of the Copublic lands policy were incorpoeducated son a of the 1794, issue. K. James the highly Polk, nnate States of America. rated in the Homestead Law of pal jsetti He became a Democratic indorsed English clergyman. nominee, Massaof Caleb Cushing Tyler was born at Greenway in 1862; keel. tried to minister, also, and went through life chusetts,' one of the greatest au- annexation.a Tylerof had own and harles City county, Virginia, build his and as a Presbyterian to save his soul up party larch 29, 1790, the son of John thorities on constitutional law, torn and became 'a vegetarian to save he was seek Although nominated was for who later Tier who had served as gover-o- r then. his nominated a small body. His theory was that temfaction, he by of the Old Dominion from chief justice of the Supreme way to was withdraw from perance could be furthered by a persuaded Fourteen years court; Littleton W. Tazewell of the race Fork 38 to 1811. bewon. and Polk Just strictly vegetarian diet which would iter another John Tyler (the Virginia, called by Thomas Jeffore leaving office Tyler had the prevent all desire for stimulants. ferson one most of the brilliant aior) was chief executive of of seeing his plan (or ring One new food theory of his led but after serving one minds I have ever known"; and satisfaction that Texaa annexation of the to accepted another and he had a wide followto the United Robert J. Walker of Mississippi, Lone and the Star gjinia elected republic by later President Polks secretary ing. Some followed him because When the doctrine are into next came it the the year wanted to save themselves from of the the of and author they treasury was proposed by Union. e liquor, some because they wanted to South Carolinians,"' Tyler tariff of 1846, who became Tylera 'Robin Hood of Virginia. preserve their health and others folroke with his party and resigned spokesman in the senate. e la lowed him because they wanted to . was career am the senate. As soon as Henry Clay and the Tylers political lay break his neck. Among the Utter He ended. to now his retired other leaders Whig began trying a serious ship were butchers and bakers who riotAism in the Democratic party, to' dictate to Tyler they discov-ere- d homer Sherwood Forest,-wher- e, f. ed 'when he spoke against meat and rethat the man in the White in a facetious mood, he often at soar only had the "nulliflers, un- refined flour fa Boston in 1847.'-- . to as himself the Robin ferred House mind had a of his own. the leadership of John C. Cal-uHe died e natural death fa 1876. broken away, but a much They first pushed through a bill Hood of Virginia." It was during i of this retirement he to that United a establish bank. States period formed irger party, which was office the of road i the lowly South under the name of Tyler vetoed it, and their effort accepted The Guillotine :ees to pass it over his veto failed. overseer. were opposed Whigs, machine used for or. When -- the Whig ... leaders - re- .. Although a Virginian and .. a THE guillotine, and of thr. Jackson, far France,' was policies It nf proached Tyler for his action, he slaveholder, Tyler was' opposed named forbeheading administration regulars. L Cuillotin, who Dr. J. ight reminded them that he had sub- to the institution of slavery and the national assemLost His First Race. in to no platform and that became president of the African prevailed upon scribed in 1789...to .adopt, tallies In the er een campaign of 1838 these they ahould have known his opin- - Golonizatiomsociety',' termed with bly for all executions.. WX this nominated contraption Whigs ions before they nominated him. the view of recolonizing tee about this need clearTaro things bth L. White of Tennessee for slaves in Africa. Early in his Somewhat crestfallen, they was not GuIUotin Dr. the president and Tyler for vice pres-Th-e asked him for an outline of a career he looked forward to the ing up. First, mannered mild a was cruel kindly, be National Republicans bank bill he would sign. This re- time when slavery would disapras He Paris. from bninated physician William Gen. trf Henry sult was Tuckers Exchequer pear from Ike South as it already of behalf in tra prison for President and FranBank plan, which they changed had from some of the Northern spokemachine beced ce Granger for vice president and pushed through both houses. states but being a strict construe- - the' was a rtth the influence of Old Hick-7,- " Thereupon Tyler vetoed it and tionist he wanted to bring .that cause it iart who bad forced the nornina-q- q painless quick, again an attempt to pass it over about by Constitutional means. method of inflictof Martin Van Burea by the his lag As the clouds of the threatened disapproval failed. Then coning death. tor ocrata, was potent enough to gress passed a protective tariff civil war lowered, 'the Second: Gufllo-dn-e about his election and with bill which Tyler vetoed. A pro.to.' help used bis .influence.. the election of Richard M. gram for Internal improvements avert it. His last great effort to with e U"splled' final e that ohnson for vice president So to be financed by the federal gov. the Union was as presi- is ' not found in preserve rftt out in his lost first eminent met with the same fate, dent of the Washington Peace Tyler Guillotlns ha for vice president because Tyler believed that the Convention of 1860, assembled in Dr. :UL. al different seek-somwas a it a effort to story fpur states should, make their rs later. As the campaign of improvements. compromise between the North chine la gufflo-tin- e approached, Henry Clay pre-jft- d Swiftly the breach between the and the South. He looked upon Dr. Goiliotla . instead of ila, to make his third bid for President and his party widened. the convention as an attempt to I not only bethey Presidency. Leaders in the The cabinet, with one exception, preserve the Constitution and the stowedgulllotln the doctor upon paternity Daniel Webster re- laws of the nation, which he conparty, though certain that resigned. to be of decUred child but the a Buren, would go down to dp-j- ft mained they oh long enough to complete sidered the North had sought to the female sex. AH French nouns fa hie face for n negotiations ter the ignore, not change. must have masculine or feminine hot believe that Henry Clay he Then When his native state seceded, treaty. resigned. the 5 man who could carry the The party was beginning its Tyler, like Robert E. Lee, be- lender. Why the guillotine had to be femibanner to "victory. .. purge of its President. Next lieved that his first duty was to rj Taking a tip from the Demo-at- s the U not known from the sUnd-poinine went into and he Whig newspapers renounced his Virginia y of French grammar but it U success in electing a milt action and filled their columns loyalty to the United States. He hero decidedly Old Hickory" Jack-the- y with denunciations of the Presiappropriate for something was elected to the Confederate iy decided upon William dents There were even threats of congress but died January 17, devised to make a man lose his ed head . . . quickly and painlessly 1 ry Harrison, a noted Indian assassination. . But Tyler stood 1862. before the congress (Rcleaied by Western Newspaper Union.) and general fa the War of firm in his determination to be id Winter Heart Ailments Some 33,000 persons die from heart ailments each month during the winter; 25,000 a month in summer. Wa buy direct from tba mill 1atlern nrver undersold. Writa for umpire Hall ardere promptly Ailed. Eatabliehed ItlT. a- Salt Kadia A Wallpaper Caaipaay 241 So. State 8L Bait Lake City, Utah ache? idred years. France. and clear across the frontal features to join each other right under the nose or Is that thing a must- L up , ELMO SCOTT 'WATSON shows, they were husky and pur- ecutive. vinf ) used to be called, because it as Gen. who poptfiinzed A. them during the Civil war. The wags" of that day changed the name from Burnsides to sideburns just to be funny. sideburns General Burnside's were not the rather weak things so often worn by the younger mascu line element to- V-.- l day. At the pic- - r f WNU Service Sideburns least-know- ove siy. h CBrll Syndicate few-thing- s Sideburns TYLER, who was born just 150 years ago, n is one of the ille ci sidents of the United dl Cjes, yet few of our Chief K J Ccutives have had a more knstlii tt b resting or more unusual Ceer. Here are some of the lfj fro which make his unique: Qj e atbr o (He was the first vice presi-tbecome President the death of the Chief i and . Marriage. Better ? i rant a stretcxmans WATSON OHN urti Was the Old Idea of Permanent BT Had a Career That Is Unique World Jaunt Souvenir . If you would like to buy aouvenirs of a round the world trip without going around the world, you had best take a West Indies cruise te Curacao whose shops seem to duplicate the shops of Shanghai, Alexandria, Tokyo andJMadrid, with not -- a that come from Syria, India Kathleen N'orris Says: The Name Is Familiar i Newepaper Union.) tV PAGE TORES ned.'Wj3l Webster-Ash-burto- -- nt BRICK STAIN OPPORTUNITY Haemal ep porta nlty aew epea ta aaa wit Real Estate, Baiidtng er Falatlar aipertawca. st tar vary prefllable werk la year tewa. aieat af enly SSI reqaired. If ysa Wirt A bare Kytaq work,write aaceaeary liytrlMta la-re- BRICK STAIN COMPANY Balt Laka City, Utak Allaa Raildlaf MUSIC TEACHER WANTED Flaae teacher wanted whe will leara to play aad teach aeeerdtoa. Liberal eommlmioa oa aalea af both Inatnnaenta. 8UMMERHAYS MUSIC? CO, SIT W. let 8a Balt Laka City. ' , A woman , NEW ROOFING & REPAIRS iii . frirnd of mine, living in lonely exile from her o m land, had to endure the pretence of e beautiful dancer in her own home. or character aav him, he may be By KATHLEEN NORRIS drawn away by alow degrees, knowgreat disadvantage of a that permits quick ing all the time, as his wife knows, la that no and the woman knows, that a brief divorces easy ix weeks stay fa Reno will suffice woman can be sure of her husband to tree him for the intoxications of any more, no man sure of his wife, the new experiment and no home feel itself safe. My life is. mad completely That is the fact, from a purely wretched by Jealous anxieties," practical point of view. The moral writes a woman from Columbus, considerations, affecting the ' vow. Ive fought it Ive prayed men and women take, for better or Ohio. for worse, I leave to the theolo- about it hut with every freah Instance of .my husband's attractivegian!. I am merely thinking here ness to women and their feeling for that divorce does unsettle the mind I am him. down fa the depths again. of husband and wife. If there were He likes to flirt; he is continually no divorce things would go differentinvolved in an affair with tome fasly fa the family circle. But as It is today no matter how determined cinating woman. He writes them the woman it to make her marriage delightful notes; meets teem for a success; no matter how anxious lunch, makes them little presents, the man is to have his home on of but refuses to open his mouth to the happy homes of the world, there me on the subject With the help of a young boy I is always this fa the back of the thoughts of each: And if It simply do my own work fa an eight-rooWe house," the letter goes on. wont work, thares divorce. two have small a children, vegetaIn the old days there was much X abuse of a situation that offered no ble garden, chickens, and love evinch of love I ery It my kitchen, doorway of escape. No question of piano, my books, my room. Why that Some men were bullies at my should all thia that I have built up home, bad fathers, bad providers, be jeopardized by the eelflahness of unfaithful. Wives had no redress. casual outsiders, who at best take They bore the children and they him from us, waste his monaway bore with the childrens father in uney, and put ua all into a false posiafter complaining martyrdom, year tion, and at worst may lead any year. A friend of min who marto day ried a foreigner, 30 years ago, lived free. I his taking ma to aet him suppose it would be ailly in far and lonely exile from her to say that fa spite of all this I love own' land, and had to endure the him, but I do love him, love other presence of a beautiful dancer, a sides of his nature which ere more own chorus girl, in her home, as her and I suffer a continual husband's mistress. When he went dependable, sense of and helplessness on pleasant trip, on his yacht or very hardInferiority to bear." behind his span of dashing horses, A Vain Bay at Oeart. the dancer went, too. When the This husband, and hundreda like mistress objected to the noise the children made, the two smallest him, ia a type of tha man who grows ones were sent away to a country up in a business sense, and In some nurse. ways fa a mental aense, but who Injustices like this made the life remains a vain boy at heart. He of many a faithful wife and devoted la as tickled today,-- at 34. with the mother insufferable. Only two gen- artless flatteries of new women acerations ago a father could order quaintances, as he was 13 years ago. grown daughters supperless to their He doesn't want to hold his own in rooms, could forbid their msrrying a real world, where friendships, this man or that, could keep them books, home, garden, children and and in ihost cases did keep them, birthday fill his leisure hours.' THE m ldleathomerpnnllesf, dependent,1 all their days. It came to the 11 Barrett children by alow degrees, some 60 years ago, that their father didnf'intend any on of them to have any love affairs whatsoever. girl and boy- - after-bo- y all hope of love surrendered meekly and marriage because papa so Girl-afte- r- : Tie doesn't resliz that the Brand itof aomnaoad far toot laaka. i leal. Writa tor full detail A fra too a. UTAH ROOF CEMENT CO iWalatM B alUlas, Halt Lake CMy. Utak, "Uta apart. I TRUSSES laatraraaBta, H capital Bosplta Trana Maaalaetarar ot Atoeelaaf Claati Btraklnra. partara. TVa Pkralriaaa Baaplf Caapaap 4 W laS Sautli Bu Balt Lake City. Utak Bargical OFFICE EQUIPMENT 14 ahalra. typewriter. aMiae Back, aalaa. kk- A L. DESK EX, St W. BreaAway. Balt NEW AND USED Seek ELECTRIC MOTORS REPAIRED BatM artery week yaaraataaS I alalaM Mbm aa aikn aaS traaalaraMW. BCHBAGA ELECTRIC CO, 141 Ptarpeat. Balt Lake INEXPENSIVE MEALS Tke kart (aad la Balt Lake I aareaS ky Tto MAYFLOWER CASK M 114 Boatk Mala POPULAR PRICED Laaekeaa. Dinnee and USED PIPE AND MACHINERY I ta. Steal Pip, slip iaiats. Ilk mew, pay look la a ay q aaa lily. 1M fL 14 la. Steal Plpw wt toea flaavee rirrted m, 1141 per (oeC 40 ft. IS Ia. Steel Pipe, aaaw as tke IS ta, 1141 per foot. Poor Waytke Re. ft. Wnithe IS la. a IS ia. doeey Steal at S14S par foot. New Pipe. Bleak or Gale, any ala ia any qnanUty, at vary attractive prieaa. Pkeea, write, er wire at eaaa. Beverly Mackiaary aad Sapyly Ceapaay ItS K. Srd Bo. Pkooe Hyland ST Salt Laka l.ae ft. at Ita rip, it KODAK FINISHING PHOTO-KRAF- T ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Aay Roll Developed with 2Sc 8 Quality friaty Wrap cola aad Idm carefully SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- love-makin- g, s - lee 749 Balt Lake City. Utak USED TRUCKS Chev. 1 CXimp Truck n Ford Dump Truck Ford V4Ton Pickup Truck Chev. Pickup Truck Panel Truck Dodge Panel Truck International Chev. and Ford bang W.B. I V- iVi-T- on 114-To- Vi-T- on Vi-T- on Vi-T- Tort Stake Bodes IS atkar troeka different ibae aad keiHrt. kattwr Oar priau are lewar aad tonwa an tkea yea eaa set aUawkar. BIX US AND BE CONVINCED!, . Fred A. Carleson, Inc . . . BABY GMO Track Dealers SIS Batk Mala Btrv--4 BALT LAKE C1TT, UTAH CHICKS, TURKEY POULTS BABY CHICKS HATCHING DAILY Wktta, krwwa aad kuft Lrckerao, Bede . Kuapehlraa. Wklta aad Barred Rock. Ball Orpklayteae aad ail laadlaa va- - TURKEY POULTS pas-aionJ- . DRUGS N PHOTO-KRAF- T n. Tbe Natural Reaction. Modern marriage, with its quick divorces, its resulting Independence and alimony. Is the natural reaction to this unnatural situation. Girls painfully have fought their way to Independence and freedom, and if that freedom Is being abused fa Its tent, taking their real joys and richturn perhaps that Is only the swing ness fa place of tha younger exciteof a pendulum that will presently ments and flatteries and dreams. I say, the hard middle' years. right itself. Certainly a husband tomore inflni .rea is .Thera tely stable, ,S ,a hard, time in .moat mar-- , day. considerate and faithful than a hus- riages, when a man ia reasonably band had to be a few geaerations sura of Jbls job, a woman absorbed in nursery and household cares, and ago, When anything he did was perof force pardoned by that helpless when the glamour of thesacred intimacy and onc-neitif companion, wbowssalwsyssnd forever, to the end' of 'the chapter, marriage have lost a liltleome-thin- g until death actually did him part by familiarity. Dire poverty from her his wife. and uncertainty, illness and bitter But today's way means that any anxiety for the safety of children attractive woman, perhaps with two usually spare a family this crisis, or three unsuccessful marital expe- but not all families experience these riences behind her, can pick upon extremes, and fa easier times we any desirable mate, and even though are all apt to forget the treasure he be at the time happily married yn have fa dreaming of the outside and with two or three small chil- treasure that might be ours. After all, the greatest percentage dren. can do her beat to win him away from bit wife and family and of human Joy cornea fa ...Ahome. And society, .not to be too family circle. Most men flagrantly inconsistent, must stand know this., They know to their by and approve. Unless high moral hearts that !t Is only to weak eyes conviction, the Influence of religion. that tbe far hills seem the greenest M Isfra friats qufet companionship of the woman who has loved him all these yeara is raaL and that tha feelings be thinks he has for tha other woman are He hasnt sense enough in matters of tea heart to look about him at tha men who have married L the objects of their grande disilbored be to and only, lusioned. after a few yeara. And b isn't big enough, or his mother didn't train him thoroughly enough to know that tbe only sura path to comfort and happiness in middle age is to learn to live the bard married years in faithfulness and kindness and con- It, eqolpaaeat. Irntai (eaa. Ntkry aad etertri oai), fuden, watererv eQ. a.-Cal- aad eae a raal eeodara ahiek meters!ty fcaepItaL VUttar aiwmya weiootna. JtAMSHAWS UTAH PIONEER HATCHERY tat Be. State Belt Lake C3ty MEN WANTED! FOR TheUSwARMY EXPERIENCE, ADVENTURE, TRAVEL AWAIT YOU . , Qualifications: - ffhqrie CL &. ritfctaaa af eyed rkarertv ketwaaa aee ot IS aad ll wilfceet de 1- peedaata eed la teed pkyvicmi eeeditiea. Veeaariee exirt aew far aarrtn ta futae, Fkillppleae. sad tka L Hawaii, u. a. . GOOD PAY ENLIST TODAY le Air Carp, Infee try, FUld Artillery. Keyteew. Birnel Carp, tteerttrnuur Carpw ee arther ue er aervice. Ceeat Artillery, Madwel Cerpa. Coatact TIIE U. 8. ARMY RECRUITING STATION 233 Newt well-adjust- Salt Uli DaiUt City, Utah . WNU Weak Ka. 441S BALT E l |