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Show o :1IE WEEKLY NEWS EXPRESS. LAYTON, UTAH . World TSSTtahpM In the Tha Lyre-Birlyreb!rd 18 "omewhat small-e- r than a pheasant The common species is remarkable for the feathers cmposi6 th! taR of the cock, giving the latter the , , d Balsam firs grew and In many as well if to the New fr conslder?? countries have .been H trees. ej earliest times sacred the. for fir br.ews.nsed Greeks appearance of an ancient . the Temple of Jerusalem;. bondlyre a priesabelMp fir 8hy and the hought.the Russians would thickest sh, 'displaying ftself age. .by Zeus: the. Long Live the King! on Franks small hillocks not cut the ree; tbe e afnlng Edward Makes Promises of very bom the 80ng.it efti though Ahead. Real Spending fbe Norsemen eafi'id It the myfiaupds and snglland Tribute to T. R.! ; the. Forest gnd Relieved- close to the ground, 6eln close? somewoven St King Edward the Eighth, ndw lof- . the (tiliq, their ruling ftplnit, roots, an5 fibers ln Its himself ' eodcaled emnly proclaimed king.-- will K'te , Altogethei thor! time me inhered .aitthtf . , ' braBChe and frem. his- - kidlng.place distinct species pf 5!f first kjng if are J5f the same thraw. hfesUntsu t The peasants. fyre,tbutall eral coloWig and are tave. may Englarfd 'tbak. From only (UU.,J ev'ei'. flew through-- , . .Idea pf . the Chrlstnras . In, Australia. . the .air.-- toward. . . the Jhrone. .. . , Peaiitj ' . He took 4 sep. a ....Density s usually expressej 1 'Swkieid'Lnd'.0. . arate oat-h-. "thi pen cubic f9ot,ln the Fw,y. Svrtlzerliihp.cwtrs stotffl reh pounds r e s p'e c t .tb-t- r and .of this Ush system Wefghts pud mens-th15,873 iqiiftre .mileq, of is Churth of Scotmetrlc astern, gram. , v efy Mmlierf surface 22J) per cenf land." There harm Uni Cultivated-65.8Bafts, rnd .P1 Y.CD.1?C eenRmeter pre.used. The. fighting ie ceit qre the more conven. .hafd., Alpine pasture fcJrnr back of that ot fhe countrys pr'oducflvp.area and Uenl. hocAuee the density of water Tbef o 0pe gram fo.r'esf lafl.I per tuhl $). per cent is Edward' .'vaYled centimeter, extremely Is of. land Therere arablS densldea fte toroplex- - expressed fa gire .metric system Eighth cotuporitfofl twtn.g mount the lty of- its geographical properties give a direct compq'rlsojJ of. lb Arlkif Brlaban throne fdr tb ' tnd the diversity of th cpUntry- .08 materlaf. wit; ' pfity first time at a Joint .session of.th? conditions 'As a rbl the that of water. There are 28 grams climatic lords and commons, anct solemnly , soil Is heavy and rich, often vpry ifl.aa ounce and Id promise to "maintain the tru trs cubic Inch. . . . and, tlmreforo; particularly tent of yonr enactments-tthe best ' damp and agrlcpl-ture- ,. aieadow-lanfur suited ' of my powers." , . , SieiU Contrast! In Detii The Alpine fegfecs,' on the After his coronation the king must Dbatb Valley Is a ether hand, are adaptedlor forestry region. of formally declare his adherenc t scenle contrastfl, with multi, and .pasturage. the Protestant church, and hls'ohr' colored swufdaihous . forraations. ligation "never to marry a Roma The. floor-othe salley Is 27G feet Maaefaetuviaff Cliw Cathollci" That dates, back te Hup flowered or printed, doth of.. below .se level. u 'pheketefl The Stuarts. . , between the Paaftmlnt mountains India wat meatloned ty historians King' Edward, whd Is nott supon. the west and the Funeral and before the CtirUtlan era, Wh?d posed ta con template'. marriageto he imparted Grapevine mountains en the rest,' fabrics began the official head of the .churches of all a part of ths Sierra Neva-Into- Europe, shout 1(531, tjey were England and Scotland, and "defendcame name .to callcufs. ritnge. Death Valley Is. approxi'The called er pf the faith. . ' havan fabrics cotton to mately 150 wiles. h length. and be applied From all the world, "snbjepts tt of warp and maximum points from 15 to 20 number, an equal ing the newJdn aand etnperor send . weft threads crossing each other at miles la wldtii.' greeting, Representatives 'of di'. right angles, . vine- power, .churches of every re--. t)fum Communication UgLon, Mohammedan, Jllndu,As used ;by the natives of Ro Tunnel , .pep, Chinese, Christian, and ' Rove tunnel Is', the southern flee-- . tr'al Africa drum . communlcatlpn speed the dead- - king on ht tlon of Rie Marseille-Rhone canal, depends, 'ob ah. elaborate code journey atwf welcome the' new ruler,. southeastern France,' staring hear whlcl) to pne 'ceased In the atmos7 of Le Roye 'and piercing' phere- 1? more- dependent 'on social, the . If get. their feonu'' a village tnu'tual rocky ridge; It Is about four understanding-anwill be soifie. quick ; money . there of the-- . tone variations than Tong,- with ft water .channel GO miles to Spending, e.noiigh' Quicken tb fee.t wide, and Is considered 'one of on translation Into letters. Travpulse of business whl.le It lasts;. of even .ohi' the engineering. greatest hnve pieces elers, European?, Merchants will 'get ; more than tallied lood. end lodging by U lb 1927, was It. opened 'on $(500,000,000 owing ppst'accounts, means. . and. the. observer wjll notice, many . . .new overcoats, dresses and automo-Occ'upti)nl Therapy Pockmarks On'co Fashioqabl Occupational 'therapy was used by .bllcs. ' . . .1 ancient Greeks and Egyptians, espe.When Inoculation against; smallcially In the' case of mental dlsor? pox was' Intr'dduoed Into-- France, 'At', the opening of New Yorks ders. It became known by' this the keen Interest reached the fash$3,1500,000 memorial erected to honor, ion world, and women wore dotted iiu'Bie In the World war whp'n some the late Theodore Roosevelt, one ' t systdm.of occupation was used In ribbons "representing pockmarks-anspeaker praised President nmed a 'dress, .'styld "tronT. treating disabled soldier?. In 1917 one who "saw the . as chine" after. Dr. Theodore .the National 'Association of Occupanecessity for keeping both the leglssays Prof. A. II. Rowbotham' lntures and the courts In their prop-'- , tional Therapists was organized . in, tb United Staler. of the University of 'California. er places. . ' That perception showed 'a high Cabin John, Leningrad, Moscow, Differ spirit, but If some future. Theodore Roosevelt should go too far In that direction )t might become neces- sary for the legislatures and the' courts to keep that President in his proper, place.' BRISBANE JJe THIS WEEK . Wf - ( :feathers- e: orlgl-Eated.th- thli-legv- . tree,. - e 1 - e vety-elos- h.. - - , ciiblc-oenti- me. l- b d e '".' 0 . tis f . By ELMO 8C0TT WATSON EimUARY 12; 1030 . . . letter day la .America,1 red-- . In-'dl- aa - calen- ... a bolldny In mqBt of dar the states of the Union . I a day of remembrance, of hla name eulogy, of against the stars, For this la Llnpolda birth"fll-nglq- ... day. anBut let oa go back-tother Lincoln's birthday ', , , to February '12, 1801. . A short,, little 'locomotive a smokestack, la. pulling alon'g the single track that wlnda among the g hills of Ohio. Back there In one of the wooden coaches a tall; gaunt man alts by a win- d9w Rahg but oyer the bleak winter' landscape. Yesterday he had stood on the. rear platform ' of a train at the brick railway station In Spring-field- , IlL A crowd of nenrly a thousand people, silent, barehended In the cold, drizzle of rain, had listened to these words: "Friends, no one who has never been placed In a like position can understand my feelings at this hour nor the oppressive sadness I feel at . this parting. For more than a quarter of a century I hnve lived among you, and during all that time I have received nothing but kindness at your hands. "Here I hnve lived from my youth till now J am an old man. Here the most sacred trusts of earth were assumed; here all my children were born; and here one of them lies burled. To you, dear friends, I owe all that I have, all that I am. All the strange checkered past seems to crowd now upon my mind. "Today I leave you; I go to assume a task more difficult than that which devolved upon General Washington. .Unless the great God who assisted him shall be with and aid me, I must fall But If the snme omniscient mind and the ,same almighty arm that directed and protected him shall guide and support me, I shall not fall ; I shall succeed. Let us all pray that the God of our fathers may not forsake us how. To Him I commend you all, Permit me to ask that with equal sincerity and faith you will all Invoke Ills wisdom and guidance for me. With these few words I must leave you for how long, I know not. Friends, one and all, 1 must now bid you an affectionate farewell Lincoln's Arrival in. Washington (mo pamtino sv h o- - o V . . flat-toppe- d e s recog-.nl'tlo- . - Theodore-Roosevel- Biz weeks after his' Election South Carolina had passed Its ordinance ;of secession. During the next month Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida had followed the Palmetto states Jead. On February 4 representatives from these states bad met at Montgomery. Ala, and organized the Confederate States of America." Fire more, Texas, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee and Arkansas, were almost certain to join the six that bad already departed from the Union. - The future course of. three border states, Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri as well as the northern slave state of Delaware, was doubtfuL And always In the background loomed the threat of a fratricidal war between the North and the South. So much depended upon what he said and bow he said It that he had tolled, night and day,, fdr three weeks over his Inaugural address. "Be wrote It as a composer writes a symphony," says Don Glassman In the Washington Star. "Be marshaled all the melody In words, all the rhythm of speech and euphony of language to build s monument out of cold syllables , . . Be weighed every one on a musical scale. Be employed them as full notes and half notea He would pronounce each word separately and feel convinced of Its necessity both as to thought and style. By the time he finished a sentence It would harbor no contradictory thought or coarse note. The words were riveted together,, so that to strike out an sdjectlvo or syllable would upset the thought and leave a gaping bole In the sentence. Ever since his election, his mall had been full Some of letters bearing southern postmarks. were signed with the names and addresses of the senders; others were anonymous. They were filled with such words as Black Republican," mulatto scamps, "Jailbirds, "rascals and thieves." "Caesar had his Brutus Charles the First his Cromwell And the President may profit by Tron-.chi- -' - I ! ' wU'u a . . : Fost-Haml- The First Inauguration frROll F et - AN OLD FAINT) ot night," sneered some of his enemies. Culled him "that Illinois ape." Gen. Robert Lee Bullard says this Thus.. Abraham Lincoln came to Washington to escape-thcountry next Never before nor since has a President-elec- t en. war, butexpects to drag us Europe plans lered the nation's capital to assume the duties In. Besides, air bombing and poof his high office under such circumstances. ison gas. General Bullard expects In The bext eight days were a nlghtmare-- of perthe next war attacks with disease of sistent annoyance by a horde Of germs to spread deadly epidemics rumors of disasters that were about to befall, In the enemy's country. Bubonic of tlireuts of sneers, of countless Indignities. scattered from airplanes. Inplague, March 4 dawned-"blue Monday." It had fected rata scattered plentifully, been raining. Pennsylvania avenue was a broad ' might be helpful highway of spattery mud. Silence hung heavy ever' the crowd massed around the Willard hotel Sometimes literature pays. Kip-- '' Linas President- Buchanan and President-elec- t left several millions. In Amerling coln entered an open barouche and started up ica alone bis official publishers havs the avbnue toward the Capitol Sharpshooters sold 3,500,000 copies, of his books. were stationed on the house-top- s with orders to At the time of his death "The Jn& sweep the avenue with their fire If there was Books alone paid, him ten thougle were any uprising. In the side streets troops sand pounds s year. massed ready .for action. Other detachments were, stationed beside the Capitol steps and When you hear foolish talk shout near the' north entrance s battery of artillery revolution and getting. rid' of the was ready to unleash s blast of death If need be. Constitution, s remark mads by Still unfinished,, the Capitol dome was sur as he signed the Con.Washington, mounted .by huge derricks held In place by steel ' cable. "People might have drawn s striking stitution, may be. recalled: Should states the reject this ex parallel between the condition of the republic cellent the probablil Constitution, and .Its chief building , , , On s level with the Is an that will never of ity opportunity bronze stood the spectators Liberty figure again .offer to cancel .another li) which Would later surmount the dome. Perhaps peace the next will', be .drawn 1ft 'she was piaklng silent appeal to the man In Yesterday You Were Rushed to Death . s, , - States"! . : o 1 h, d e Now I am an olid man, he had said. Tea, Abraham Lincoln Is fifty-twyears old this twelfth day of February, 1801. But he. has come a long way In those 62 years. This should be a happy birthday for Abraham Lincoln. But hla three boys, Bob and Wllllfl and Tad, hear the sigh that escapes from his lips as he turns from. the window and they hush their noisy play. And Mary Todd Lincoln sees In the deep-se- t eyes that look of sadness which will shadow the face of this "Man of Sorro.ws for the next four years. of the United States Tee, he Is President-elec- t ef America . , . or should he say "the Disunited - t, Jew-fis- - . . Bud--'dhlS- , '.the'-ioljller- gently-rollin- . 1 their example,1 warned 'another, which . was signed "from one ot a sworn baud of 10 who We resolved to shoot you from the south side of in the Inaugural procession on the fdurth of March, 18C1. And still .another declare: "This Is to Inform yoil that there' Is a club .of 100 young inen In this place Aiho have sworn to . '. . . murder you." i. was hard for hljn to believe that ajiy one should desire his death. Bdt conviction came at lasL More disturbing, though, were the rumors of men In high places who 'were about to tufn traitor, to their country and who might have guilty knowledge of plans for. redeem It to a. state of anarchy t Stf he sent Jhe adjutant general of Illinois to Washington to sound out Gen. Winfield Scott, head .of .the armj. . Scott waj Virginian and his loyalty was puspeeted. RacH came the.reply from that doughty old, fighter: "Tell Mr! Lincoln that, ,ff necessary, Ill plnnt cannon at foothends of Pennsylvania avewie; and If any show their heads or even wnturt' to raise a TQnger, Ill low em to hell I" Put not even such reassurance could Wing peace to Lincoln's troubled mind. .As the tralh bore him nearer and nearer to the capital to the day when he vrtuld tVe Mieioatp of jnd office, his despair deepened. , "To the anxious, listening country his speeches oni the Journey to Washington were dlsappolflt-' Ing,' writes.. Nathaniel W. Stephenyon In.lThb Chronicles of America.' Terhap4 his sjrangely sensitive blind fell top powerfully the fateful-nesof the moment and reaefed with sort of lightness that did not really represent the real . .. man." In Arriving Philadelphia hi was fnfmned that Allan Pinkerton's Secret Service meir haduncov-ereIndisputable evidence, of a pjot te assassinate him. He was urged to leave the City of Brotherly Love that night y was. "I Ihivs promised to raise the flag 0xm. Independence hall tomorrow morning and visit the legislature at Harrisburg.' fieyond that 1 have no engagements." After the Harrisburg reception a special train consisting of a locomotive, baggage car and coach sped back to Philadelphia. There Allan Pinkerton met the President-elec- t with a carriage In which he was taken swiftly across the city to another station where he boarded a sleeping car. On the morning of February 23 the wires hummed with the news that the new President had made a secret entrance Into the capital The Prince of Ralls aneaked In under the cover e -- a d well-lai- d well-guarde- d I , Today, these handy table appliances make that extra meal a pleasure. . . . . . When friends and . fives unexpectedly far-carryi- ... us "... sion, nyiy have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic, chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and pa- trlot grave to . every living heart and hearth- stone all over this broad land, will yet swell ths chorus of the Union when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature., A roar of applause , . .from friend and enemy alike. Chief Justice Taney stepped forward holdBible. Then two men repeat-.e- d ing a together: "I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the. United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. So help me God t Abraham Lincoln was President of the United 1 States, C Wiitm Nmftpir Uiitw . gold-claspe- d blood. , - Grills. Toasts or 'Fries e $3.95 Allnda French, of St Louis; one hundred and four years old, attributes her long life to "hard wbrk In her youth and a dutiful apd a' . . her old age. She gets 'along without spectacles. Is "not Interested In politics. People get over that," after tjiey reach one huip , says ehe, dred.". , t The human race gets used to Once our ancestors everything. shivered, fell flat on their faces, when lightning flashed and thunder They thought some degrowled. mon was after them. Now meb put up lightning rod(s, properly grounded. , One the comet was considered aa . avenging messenger aimed straight at sinful man. Today Its coming and going are understood and predicted. Its path marked out Something unpleasant la bound to start somewhere on the earth, with all tba new theories, new hatreds, new armaments, new deadly weapons. It might start on the border between Russia and Japan's Manchnkuo. When you read, Russia uses force to halt Japanese," you know the explosion might come at any time. All would regret bloodshed, but It would bo historically Interesting te see the ancient autocracy of the Mikado at war with the modern autocracy of Stalin. It would be a long fight, probably. C Kins gvndlen Ftur W.VU Borvkc. 1m. a hurry, it's great .fun,, and convenient, too, to plug in a handy table appliance and in Mrs. . drop in when you are ,. - black." He 'stepped forward until he stood beneath a .canopy surmounted by the Stars and Stripes. For the first time 4 wave of cheering swept over the crowd of 30,000 massed on the Capitol steps an&l'q front. "Fellow citizens Of the United States!" There was emphasis on that word "United." Ttm murmur of the crowd was hushed as his .flfrn .cfear, voice went on: "The Un!qn will enduye forever . . ; no state upoVfts owp mere motion can lawfully, get out. of th,e Uhlon . I therefore consider that the Unhm Is unbroken . . there need be no bloodshed or ylo.lencd In four hands, my dissatisfied countrymen, and not In mine, Is the question of clll war . . . The government 4111 not assail you . . , Tou have no oath registered In heaven to destroy the government, while I s.hall have the solemn one to preserve, protect apd defend And so on to the end : ."I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends We must not be enemies. Though pas- re-l- a , Sandwich Tray .. find Toaster $21.50 serve hot food right at .the table. Coffee, toasted sandwiches, waffles, boiled eggs, fried eggs with ham,' and warmed over foods .will please any taste. ..Try . them: Easy terms can bejiad on the purchase of table appliances. . TVaffle Iron 55,3 s : Electricity V ' Come into our store. is The Biggest Bargain In The Hone - 1 & OGEI 5 n, |