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Show THE PAYS0N1AN. Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents ARMENIAN JAMES A. CARF1ELD o 1831 1858-6- 1 Nov. 19, James Abram Garfield, born at Orange, Ohio. of Hiram President College. 1858 1860 Married Lucretia Rudolph. Member of Ohio Senate. 1861 Colonel 1862 1863 1863-8- 0 1880 1880 in Ohio Volun-teer- s. Brigadier General. Major General. In Congress. Elected to the United States Senate. June 7, nominated for President by Republican Convention at Chicago. November, elected Edvin M. Bulkley, Soutnern Impressive Church Ceremonies Followed by General Rejoicing. Llllum eamlnluiu. a native of Europe, was 'numb iced in ucil. ii g ii It is in Lectures of the Undertaking, But No. Treatments Planned. New y, r Li! Europe Has the Finest and the Oldest. TUBERCULOSIS SPECIALISTS TO VISIT RURAL DISTRICTS AND MAKE FREE DIAGNOSIS. Financier and Philanthropist, Defines Near Educational Exhibit and East Relief Work. Will Also Be Features There is no simt on the gloV ,.tN where there is mere desprH and hopeless suffering than in Vjinam ' Edwin M Bulkley, the well fcovji .New Turk banker, wln lias Just bra eleited chairman of the hoard a trusses of Near East Relief, deelarottmhn umkley succeeds the Iut Alexander J. Hemphill as head "fff,,. Anerkan relief work In Armenia Turk-- ), Palestine, Syria, Mesoptftjih. and Persia, lie lias long been eftnet, , with the banking house of Kpcjc ,r Tn,A & Co., and Is with the Near Eastern sititum Elsil ro, Mr Bulkley continued, "there f,n due that tears at our heart-stliiand evokes our pity and out helft itut in Armenia It is nut start atl alone that tin people la e but start on coming after six yeais EASTER AT ROME the Crndrlpm In The Utah public Health association, wnh the stale hoard of health, will send out next month a traveling clinic which will visit every take the county in the state ami message of better health direct to the people. The clinic Is planned especially to reaili the smaller rural set lions that have only a limited medical and nursing service and where the doctrine of prevent on is pint tic, illy unknown. The pi. man object of this umlcrtak-- i Ing is to bring vviih'n the rc.o h ol a Me li h bei of pe.suis ihe oppoitu ,nitv to become morined of tiler ti n physical condition through an ox- amination by a plr sician skilled m diagnosing (best to iditmns and to learn the facts about tllheri u! wls, the prevent ve side ot w an h will he fea tured in the exh let which will form a part of the heal h raijvtin. Expert to Be in Charge. A huge automobile trmk will ho equipped with a commodious body, where full clinical appliances may be set up. which will be In charge of an expert diagnostician and tuberculosis James H. Wallis, executive pxpert. secretary of the association, is in correspondence with some of the best known tuberculosis doctors of the large eastern e tics and sanitariums recommended by the National "liber rulosis association, relative to secur ing the best qualified person to take i barge of the health caravan. A trained graduate nurse will also hi a member of the staff, and this staff Is with the local planning to ph.vsbpins and nurses in each comnui nity. Lectures and demons-- t rations will he given in some eentr.il locality m each county and consultation and BULKLEY advice given free. destruction, wrought by a wr that Examinations of school children has never ended and that today is not will be made in each community where even ended. It is starvation fallowing there is no public health nurse. The pestilence, and stalking hand in hand importance of dnld hygiene as a prp witli death from exposure, from vio- ventive feature of the tuberculosis lence or lrom disease. makes it imperative that all In the mountains between Kars campaign defects and handicaps Iip physical and Alexandropol there are XT, IKK) remedied in children. human beings without clothing, food or Aside from the clinic an educational slit Iter in the hitler winter, who are exhibit, pictures including motion to wandtring fiom place plate like health topics, stereopti-niwith dealing people in a nightmare. Unless they views to illustrate lectures, variare succored before the end ot anous charts and posters emphasizing other month, tlio.v will all he dead In southern Persia, the remnant of the child welfare vvoik and pamphlets and ancient family of Chaldean Christians ircrature on the prevention and care hate been forced to renounce forever of tuberculosis will be given. A compll hnja of ever returning to the home- plete lighting system will be Inslalled land where they hate dwelt and flou- In the car so that no phase of the rished for l.tiOO .tears, and to become work wdll be hindered by communities pitiful fugitives, dependent upon the having no electric lighting plant. Local preparation vv ill be secured generosity of strangers for life itself In Cilicia, 15.0(H) Armenian refugee) through the of the county have crowded into the coast regions newspapers nnd any organization, seeking safety from the anarchy which committee or individual engaged In reigns in the interior, in terror for health or social work. It Is not in their lives. The.t live from day to tended to descend on any community day on tile food which is given them until the field has heen prepared and in t lie soup kitchens established by s large a number of people as possible the Near East Relief. Scattered encouraged to benefit by the opporthroughout the Near East, there are a week will be some 7,700,41)0 Armenians, the re- tunity. Practically given to each county, the clinic anchor mainder of a nation of 4,000,000, who in some central locality and work have neither government, country, ing Ing throughout the section. All cases homeland, shelter or hope of regeneraand contacts of tuberculosis suspoets tion, save that which lies in the great will he examined and records kept to heait of Ameiiea It is a tragejly so stupendous that assist in the general state survey of the disease. it is difficult for us to grasp Its meanNo Treatments Planned. A whole ing. nation, a living, Chiistian To the country nurse the coming of people, face to face with extermination today, unless vve help. We shall the traveling clinic nnd exhibit wlfl see on entire nation disappear from almost mean a new era In her rural the face of the earth before our eyes work, for it will mean prompt atten if we withhold our band now, when tion to the many suspected cases thin the call comes to us to save by giving, she has been on and trying to calling or by inaction to condemn to death. impress with the importance of an Save the Children! Few persons have early diagnosis. Perhaps vve cannot save all the either the means or the opportunity grown pcopde of this oldest Christian to go to specialists in some far dls nation in the world. But at least we tant city, and it is for lids reason can save the little children who hold that the Utah Public Health assoeia the future In their hands. They huve tiou and state hoard of health wronged no one. They have harmed sending the spen ,iist to the people. no one. And they have suffered The clinic will he for diagnosis through the precious years of childonly No drugs , r treatment will he hood a calvary of agony and wretchedness. For three years the Near East prescribed hut instruct. on will be the patient on earing for him Relief, an American organization, in- given self and pi eventing spread of the in corporated by Congress, has built up he child welfare the nucleus of u new generation in the fection to others. Near East, with the little children features of the cllnm vvkll he carried give prae that it has taken In from the roadsldi on by the nurse. yq)P and barren places, and nursed back U tical demons! rations on the nre of in health, fed, clothed, housed and edu- fa nts. The entire undertaking Is made pos cated, in the name of the American people who have furnished the funds slble by the money raised through the for this great work. ale of Christ nuis seals, .md is planned This lias been our signal contributo bring hack to each community In tion to the worlds future peace that aetual service the value of their eon tens of thousands of these little ones tribution to he Ctir;gtn)(l, sale shall all their lives look to us with gratitude and faith. It .s a seed of All Have S gniflcance world brotherhood that we have sown. Shall vve let it die now? Lovers of flowers may )(, interested The Near East Relief Is appealing to learn that the entire to the American people for the money church calendar tm.v be cmivecj In to go on with this work to keep these bloom from tlie Cambenias by t the little ones alive and to save tills Glastonbury thorn cn Chrisrn ,i- - day. London Tit Bits martyred Christian people. Sixty dollars per year $10 per month feeds a Ve have taken this great re child. The French are tuhrg of iVdih sponsibllity upon us. A whole nation ing their kissing TJev looks to us in faith and trust. well, in the interoU of a might We cannot betray them now." conservation if for no o or reason. Contributions may be sent to Cleve Why should men wnste hi sos nn inch land II Dodge, Treasurer, 1 Madison other? Winona (Minn.) Repnbhean Avenue, New Turk City. Herald. in I lie ii.cn si ! tin level x in ult I The years at the spring and Italy again celcluates Holy Wnk. It is principally in Rome mid Venice that the soiournc r's inuiest centers about the hlstcuic plaas of Sl Peter's and St. Mark's. Rome, if you would gain entrance j Into the gu.it cathedral of SL Peter, you must use before day brink. Only women will lie allowed seats within the church this mottling and to gain 'the privilege tiny must be veiled In blink and vvii.r garments of sc mber hue. I eng before the hour for service the editiee Is packed, hundreds of visituu- - being turned away. At nine o'clock the papa1 legiment enters nd makes room for the pope's guard, which, with other ecclesiastics, enters and takes up a position among the diplomatic corps. About 0:30 the music puds forth impressively, thej soldiers piesent mum, and then tho pope, nt ned simply in white, is carried In on his chair of Mute. As he t proceeds up the aisle lie bUssis the devout congregation to the right and j left. At the close of the Impressive serv- ice you are borne down the great aisles by the bulging congicgudon and with them ure belched from the door- - 15. Hi , ,i t ion. cst i f lilic s but the hardiest of the while lilies. Great quantities of e.indiduin Illy bulbs tile glow u in the vv.uiii climate of southern France, and these bulbs planted m the autumn do mu si md severe winters web while '.nlhs tunn j ba-lut- 1( ABRAM GARFIELD was the and, it is fairly safe to say, the last of the presidents born and bred in log cabins. Notwithstanding that humble state, he was one of the n scholarly men who have sat in the presidential chair. Garfield is the only president who was present at his own nomination. JAMES hnlf-doze- The presidential lightning struck him as he sat in his seat in that mo'Jt extraordinary and exciting national convention which met at Chicago in 1880. All the Stalwart clans, believing with a St. Louis editor that there was one more president In the bloody shirt, seized upon the great name of Grant, and under the banner of the Hero of Appomattox they rallied against the who followed the Half Breeds Plumed Knight, .Tames G. Blaine of Maine. The rival champions m that remarkable tournament at Chicago were Ros-So- e Conkling, chieftain of the Stalwarts, and James A. Garfield of Ohio, the spokesman of the Half Breeds," o n James A. Garfield. a although he was restrained from directly supporting Blaine by the instructions of liis state in favor of the nomination of John Sherman. Conkling, a handsome fop, carefully studied the right moment to make his theatrical entry upon the stage the first day, drawing trie applause as he ndaneed down the aisle with his grandiloquent swell, his malestie supereminent, overpowering, turkey gobbler strut, which Blaine had held up to the laughter of congress years before in a speech. The next day Garfield took his revenge by entering while Conkling was speaking, and the welcoming cheers drowned the voice of the indignant speaker. On the third day the two came to grips in a dehate and the Ohioan scored on the New Yorker. While the gallery still was cheering the victor in that round, Conkling wrote on the margin of a newspaper and sent to Garfield a mocking suggestion that he was playing to the galI congratlery in ills own interest: ulate you on being a dark horse! In truth Garfield could not rise in the convention without helping himself more than lie helped Sherman, who never hud a chance to win. As ballot after ballot was taken, it became plain that neither the immortal 300 who followed Grant nor the deafening cheers which his name evoked could overcome the prejudice against a third term in the White House, and it was made equally plain that this Old never would surrender to Guard Blaine. A new candidate was necessary if the convention was not to fall to pieces in factions. One solitary vote for Garfield on most of the ballots had continued to point the finger of destiny at him. Wisconsin pointed all her fingers In his direction when her deleh gation broke to him on the thirty-fourtballot. Garfield rose with pallid face and dry lips to a point of order. But Senator Hoar of Massachusetts, who was in the chair, rapped him down. In two more ballots he was nominated by a combination of the Blaine and Sherman men. In the midst of the uproar the nominee sat limp and perspiring in his seat. Get me out of here, he faintly whispered to his' seatmate, Foster of Ohio. form or jubilation, tne young people having by no means a monopAll sorts of oly of tlie funinaktng. pranks are played und much horse-plu- y indulged in, all of which Is taken In good part. R. cleric ss horses are turned loose with fireworks tied to their tails to race madly down the corbo. The closing revet is termed the moceolettl" v, lien everybody carries a lighted ea riche and each person tries to blow out the e, indie of Ills neighbor. Some mi bellows for this purpose nnd o be rs use handkerchiefs and towels, The s' reels are a blaze of light and tho festivities of the evening two hollrs. Then for b!l slides to signify that ihe enrni-vi- l is tided, a cannon booms from the f St. Angelo anil for six weeks therein 'er the city Is transformed into a scene of solemnity that is not Imtken until the dawn of Easter Sunday. ecy MERRIMENT MARKS EASTER FLOWERS TO TOUR STATE SUCCOR FROM DEATH Morgan.) RL LOVELIEST OF HEALTH CLINIC mans to u. s. for By JAMES MORGAN (Copyright. 19J0. by Jam NATION TAYSUN, UTAH, MARCH 25, 1921. cu-t'- i Even Stricken Hungary Celebrates at Easter j AcJl-4- . i France can be depended on In our elmmte II pioperly northern to 3 .Jrt Cvv thrive treated. Pen Jenson reserved to the Pi.uJmm i ll.ue you een Illy when he asked: hut a vvhytp Idlle blow?" Mu tollmen said of it: The great white lilv ihe old lord of the gardens, the only au thentie prince among all the- common nlty Issuing lrom the kite Inn giuleu, the ditches, the copses, tin- - pools and the moors, among the strim ms come from none knows where, wrh ms inth.ilie of s.tver, variable wln.se nobility dates b nk to tliet of tlie gods themselves the limn .iiorial lily raises Ills ament s. ephr, august Inviolate, which crmtis around it a zone of hastily , - m e and ght -Milwaukee Sc iit.n i - I I 4r V- - f rj .... - 3 Tge b.,4 V - NV ( J d a I c Piccadilly'', Ong Tippei tr E.itter Sunday dress, and ready far church, and ths ir, formal village gathering follow, and os ary ,' the in the d i p the cot vice ing n lunching No song Imd sue!, a vogue in !'U I I .mid m nglund fers to Picfnd.llv One story is that ,1 e pi n e vv.is n. im d after the Ph end 11a bid vvleie ,i i me d.ir tain kind of lace much in which c c i The Jubilation at Its I Rheridan. u Niiw.iv mill isvvcd.m Im peas ants It elude a iri cl ham m their Easter im mis ami cat it vvi.li tunsv midillng lu eiuiimcmioritliui ol t I blt-- , nun nt the ' seha1 list v !i .ihe h "as ir.g reign of Qm e made. The lace was i.illid pic ulillv because of its p hi po nts a dnuinu the of pica, a pike ' spear Piccadilly vvn once tnmous fords gambling inn b Witin one of lhes hoiibes. tier, the prince regent's conk, I.eau Brummel won $75,IH)0 In ten minutes and Insisted upon giving erne half to hern Easter In re- the do! J j VVddesL Familiarity's Breed. ways Into the teeming pluz.u There on all Hides you hear cheery greetings 'M'.nv, wlmt is an adv etl isment ' ' in the musical Italian tongue end are An advertismeiit is the picture of more Ilian likely to conn upon every a pretly girl eating, wearing, bold nccju. lint. nice you have In Rome. n g or driving something that some PiiA'cnteu reiemonies are el iho- vc n ills to sell. liodv Nashville rale. Maskers throng till s' i eels throw Ini' confetti and cm .'IN In ev- - jby aw u a jsi ULvii tflQ c qjffj I Gutting ZMj0(f(? 0 S-- vSV-- Spreading Manure : ! x.r f .VLjVm A I -' i- - . ... AJL 2!SZIS8mb I And to meet the demand of the farmer The Price is Now Em-cop- al tv tr A a xT' c-- VcWf jrvi'btrn vv, . VI y IP L V IAju 1 s on, Utah |