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Show tavpt THPONTriT1. I! PAYFON UTAH - Lucile is the News Notes it Happiest Girl4 Take Rimr-kali- Mi many mothers Your eliminative organa will be functioning talk about nowadays properly by morning and poor eonitipabom will end with a bowel action aa free and giving their children nay aa nature at bat bet no pain, an 11 juices, as if tills o fruit griping. Try it were a new discovMild, tafe, purely vegetable- As a matter of SALT LAKE Using the waters of ery. over fifty for fact, Great Salt lake, the years, mothers have plants of Utah produced more than been accomplishing tons of refined salt during 1928. results far surpassing anvtiiing vou LOGAN Utah produces enough can secure from home prepared fruit At Druggiata only 25e evaporated milk each year to make an juices, by using pure, wholesome nnbroken line of cans over the route Fig Syrup, which Is prepared ueaith Hiving of Colonel Lindbergh's history-makinunder the most exacting laboratory W, from San to Paris. Diego flight supervision from ripe California Figs, richest of all fruits in laxative and UTAH State highway construction Alt Win tor and maintenance cost $279,756.25 dur- nourishing properties. tfarfclout Climatt Coj Hotel Tof4al It's marvelous to see how bilious, .mpa- - Splendid Roadafgrgfou Mounted ing January, according to the monthly View. THg tmmUrf u I deomr t rmmorff the Wm statement issued by Auditor Ivor Ajax, weak, feverish, sallow, constipated, Writ Croo A CAmftmy children respond to Maintenance $81,102.58; required its how thdlr breath gentle Influence; travel $108.37; equipment, $1,768.03; CALIFORNIA salaries, $3,623 and the balance for clears up, color flames In their cheeks, and they become sturdy, playful, enconstruction. Booklet free. Hlxtit reformne A Western mother, Best result. PrutnpineM PROVO Stockholders of the Utah ergetic again. Mrs. H. J. Stoll, Valley P. ()., NePATENTS i. comui.PNMl B. C its Poultry Producers Cooperative asso- braska, says ur watxoi My little daughter, ciation received $11,000 in divldens Roma was constipated from Lucile, recently, announced C. C. Edmonds, babyhood. I became worried about W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. The dividend last year her and decided to manager. give her some amounted to $7000, he said. About California It stopped her Flan to Restore Old Fig Syrup. 2977 producers shared in the dividend, constipation quick; and the way it which was In addition to others that English Yarn Market improved her color and made her pick have been paid for eggs and poultry. up made me realize how For some time past the ancient she RICHFIELD Arizona has bestowed had been. She is so sturdy and well yarn market at Dunster, West Somthe name of Grand Canyon bridge up- now, and always in such good humor erset, England, has been In an exon the giant structure that spans the that neighbors say shes the happiest tremely dilapidated and decayed conColorado river at a point six miles girl in the West." dition. It has now been decided to resouth of Lee's Ferry, according to Like all good things, California Fig novate the building. Everything possiJames J. Davis, news reel photograble will he done to preserve the origiSyrup Is Imitated, but you can always pher, who has just negotiated the get the genuine by looking for the nal features of the structure. An Grand Canyon bridge road from Flagname "California on the carton. expert has already examined the staff, Ariz. to Richfield, Utah. building and materials In keeping SPANISH FORK Jacob A. Hanson, with the period will be used In the Simple Radio Outfit president; U. C. Ewallbitrg, manager; renovation. Maine can mutch the achievement E. M. Banks, vice president; and G. of a California woman In Standing In the middle of Dunstera receiving a Vern Hayes, secretary of the Utah radio concert from a saucepan on her historic main street, and facing the county livestock show, announce they electric range. A farmer living In castle, the home of the Luttrell famiwill be assisted In putting over the Greenwood at the junction of two ly, the yarn market dates from the show this year by the same workers roads, with the telephone wires makSixteenth century, and Is now the sole who made it a success last year. Plans ing a V, a prong of the letter running remaining relic of the days when the are at present Incomplete. The fair each side of hls house, pets free radio village was famous as the mart for will be held March 27, 28 and 29. In that way. lie has a Dole about Hie the noted Dunster homespuns and SALT LAKE About 50 tons of Utah size of a p'ate rut tn the door of his broadcloths. Here the West SomerLake carp and suckers will be canned cottage, covered with a wooden patch set weavers once flocked to offer their for use as fish food under the terms of for use when not "receiving. Evewares to cloth merchants who came a contract announced recently by J. nings he opens the door and through from all parts of Europe to purchase Arthur Meecham, state fish and game the aperture floats all sorts of enHie finely woven cloths for which the commissioner. The carp and suckers tertainment. While he Is denied Hie district was famed. are seined from the lake and canned power of selection, he Is never trouas food for small trout fry. The Utah bled iwitlK static. Scandinavian Color Canning company contracted the work v6 Other states may have their Browns, at 5 cents a pound. Advic on Silencn their Joneses and their Smiths, hut More than 1000 books MONROE fn a country of such diversified poo Minnesota has Its Andersons, Johnhave been contributed to the Monroe pie. 'itfilh such diversified Ideals said sons and Petersons. Taking $t Paul, high school by parent and patrons of an American statesman Hie only safe the capital of the state, as a reprethis school district toward the making Hdtig'.'ls 'to say absolutely nothing. sentative Minnesota city, It Is learned of a school library. The process o! Womans Hume Companion. there nre 2,870 Johnsons, as compared Is cataloging the books progressing to 1,050 Browns; 2,650 Petersons, comand will be completed In about another pared to C50 Smiths, and 1.570 Ander-son-s, Cold Need Cause week, according to Principal C. A. compared to 280 Joneses. Other No Inconvenience Scandinavian White. The library will then be opennames predominate In ed for the benefit of the students of Singers cant always keep from St. Paul, ns Is shown from the followthe school. catching cold, but they can get the ing figures obtained from the city diCEDAR CITY During December best of any cold In a few hours and Carlsons, 770; Ericksons, rectory: and January 6387 pounds of alfalfa so can you. Get Papes Cold Compound 880; Jensens, 400. The imputation of leaves saturated with strychnine so- that comes In pleasant-fastin- g tablets, SL Paul Is shout 250,000. lution have been fed to the rabbits of one of which will break up a cold so Beaver, Iron, Washington and Kane quickly youll be astonished. Adv. Color Picture by Wiro counties by John E. Blazzard, district Successful transmission of a colored agricultural Inspector, with the assistYou Know Hi Typo from New York to wire hy picture Mar La of ance. Price, county agent "Wlmt kind of a fellow is this BurIs one of the latest deSiin Francisco of Beaver; Walter F. Smith, agent in ton? velopments of Hie the respective counties, and In Bcme "He Is the kind who always speaks process, says Popular Mechanics Magcases the Boy Scout organizations. of it as the infiuenzy, instead of flu- .azine. The feat was accomplished by UTAH United States treasury warCincinnati Enquirer. using three negatives, a red, a bine rants in the amount of $15,495.39 were and a yellow, each being sent separdrawn by the state road commission Desirable Error ately and then put together at the reMonday for use on federal aid highI give Cloakroom Did Attendant ceiving end. Tlie entire picture waa ways and for federal vocational edthe right coat mid lint, sir? transmitted In 30 minutes. ucation in this state. On the amount you thanks! "No, drawn, $6582.86 is to be used on the If you have r kindly feeling for road from Harrisburg bench to AnderA woman is never olhers, good breeding will surely manison's ranch In Washington county, after she In you. married. fest itself gets and $8912.89 goes to vocational education, it was announced. PROVO Traffic through Provo canyon was completely closed recently, as a result of two snowslides that came down recently at Ferguson's and Bridal Veil Falls, about one hour announces the apart. The latter Is said to be one of the biggest slides, that ever came clown into the carvon, according to The huge mountain of observers. snow covers the main highway to a dentil of 33 feet, for nearly 500 ft. Now PBOVC One of the high spots of convention of the Utah the throe-daHorticultural society and its various Contains: subsidiaries was the talk by J. W. Gillman of Provo bench, reviewing the 144 pages ot description and "apple deal of 1S28. Mr. Gillman colored illustration. has one of the largest orchards in the All varieties of alialfas, clovers, stata and a large storage plant. It Is claimed for him that he ships the grasses and seed com. largest amount cf apples of any grower. lie is also president cf the state Registered alialias and grains. beet producers cooperative. Certified potatoes. SALT LAKE Snow, forecast by official weathermen, arrived on time in The latest vegetable seeds. Salt Lake, and gave the city Its greatest depth of the year. After the storm All varieties ol flower seeds. had subsided, three inches of new snow had fallen, bringing the total The newest Sweet Peas, Dahlias, depth to ten inches. The storm deand Zinnias. scended on the city at 2 a. m. Saturday and after falling heavily it stopped alHardy Trees and Shrubs. most abruptly at 11 a. m. Thereafter the sun emerged from the clouds and STATE NURSERY & SEED COMPANY did such splendid work that by 6 p. Established 1890 8.5 on 54 Rrcfnliousrs ml n the inches remained j m., only Helena Mont. altitude ol 4300 feel ground. UTAH The annual winter warfare cm magpies and other predatory birds and animals started Monday with the Derived from Daily Use of tlx purchase by the state fish and garni department of 200 ounces of specially Kepared poison, according to J. Arthur Mechatn, commissioner. i Privilege to Live in So ! M-K- intfi Utah I ( I g 75,-00- 0 I Utill-forni- a -- g nnnnsIInSm m long under-nourishe- rUalm R prlndfS run-dow- n s A daguerreotype o Abraham Llnco!n the sixteenth President of the United States. This was the fevorlte pbctographlc portrait of the man who is known variously as the Martyr President the Great President. Emancipator and the Story-Tellin- g Lincolns Friend He labored In I lonely field, Yet sometimes I have thought He glimpsed a Figure distent them As patiently he wrought Through aching stillnesses wherein He toiled, and murmured not How often In the anguished bourn He felt and understood The Lonely One who watched afar So sorrowful, and good The Silent Friend Whose presence there Cave solace to his mood. Surely he felt Him near when men Forsook and fled the placet When ell he knew of comforting Was In that changeless grace I Surely, in his Gethsemane He must have eeen His face! Laura Simmons in the Boston Globa. Greatness of Lincoln Shown in Statecraft Writing In tlie St. I.ouls Nathaniel W. Stephenson, professor of history at the College of Charleston, S. C., thus reviews President Lincolns great achievements. The history of the North had virtually become, by April, 1801. the tory of Lincoln himself, and during the remaining years of the President's life It la difficult to separate his personality from the trend of national history. Any attempt to understand the achievements and the omissions of the Northern people without undertaking an Intelligent estimate of their leader would he only to duplicate the story of llnmret with Hamlet left out According to the opinion of English military experts, "against the great military genius of certain Southern leaders fate opposed the unbroken resolution and passionate devotion to the Union, which he worshipped. of the great Northern President. As long ns he lived and ruled the people of the North there could . be no turning hack." He was nePher a saint nor a villain. What ne actually was Is not. however, so easily stated. Prodigious men are never easy to sum up ; and Lincoln was a prodigious man. The more one studies him the more Individual he appears to be. By degrees one comes to understand how It was possible for contemporaries to hold contradictory views of him and for each to believe that his views were proved ly the facts. . . Lincolns Friends and Enemies. To measure Lincoln's achievement, two things must be remembered : On the one hand, his task was not as arduous as It might have been, be cause the most Intellectual part of the North had definitely committed Itself either In of rievnhly for. or irrecondl Lincoln, ably against, his policy therefore, did not have to trouble himself with Ills portion of the popn latlon. On the other hand, that part which he had to master Included such emotional rhetoricians as Horace dree-ley- : such fierce zealots as Henry Win ter Davis of Maryland, who made him trouble Indeed; and Benjamin Wade. Such military egoists as Mc. . . Clellan and Pope; such crufty dealers as his own secretary of the treasury; such astute grafters as Cameron; such miserable creatures r a certain powerful capitalist, who .' sacrificed hls army Jo their own lust for profits and filched from army contracts. The wonder of Lincolns achievement Is that he contrived at last to extend hls hold over all these diverse elements; that he persuaded some, outwitted others and overcame them all. The subtlety of this task would have mined any statesman of the driving sort Great Creative Ability, We are, even today, far from a definitive understanding of Lincolns statecraft, but there is perhaps Justification for venturing upon one prophecy. The farther from him we get and the more dearly we see him In perspective. the more shull we realize his creative influence upon his party. In the Lincoln of hls ultimate biographer there will be more of Iron than of a less enduring metal In the figure of the Lincoln of the present tradition. Though none of hls gentleness will disappear, there will be more emphasis placed upon hls firmness and upon such episodes as that of December, 1800, when his single will turned the scale against compromise; upon his steadfastness In the defeat of hls party at the polls In 1862 The Civil war was in truth Lincoln's war. Those modern pacifists who claim him as their own are beside the mark. They will never get over the Illusions about Lincoln until they see. as all the world is beginning to see, that hls career has universal significance because of its bearing upon the It universal problem of democracy. will not do ever to forget that be was a man of the people, always playing the band of the people, hi the limited social sense of that word, though playing it with none of the fieat usually met with In the statesmen of successful democracy from Cleon to from Andrew Jackson to Lloyd His gentleness does not reGeorge. move Lincoln from that stern category. Throughout Ills life, besides Ills passion for the Union, besides his antipathy for slavery, there dwelt in his very heart love of and faith In the plain people. We shall never see him In true historic perspective until we conceive him as the Instrument of a vast social Idea the determination Kobe-spierr- . Task of Democracy From Lincoln's Gettysburg address, delivered t the dedi-.tio- a d tbs National Cemetery. November 19, 1663. 1 The world will little note, nor Ions remember, what ws say hero, but it can never It la for us tbs forget what they did hers. living, rather, to be dedicated here fo the unfinished work which they who fought hero have thus far so nobly advanesd. It ia rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before ue that from these honored dead we take Increased devotion to that causa for which they gave tha last lull measure ef devotion; that we here highly resolve that them dead shall not have died in vain that this Nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not pariah from the earth. to make-- a government based upon the plain people successful in war. Intense Love for Mankind. ne did not scruple to seize power when he thought the cause of the people demanded It, and his enemies were prompt to a cense him of holding to the doctrine that the end Justifies the means a hasty conclusion which will have to be reconsidered. What concerns us more closely Is the definite conviction that he felt no sacrifice too great If It advanced the happiness of the generality of mankind. Five weeks after the second In augunition Lpe surrendered and Hie war was virtually at an end. What was to come after was Inevitably the overshadowing topic of the hoiir Many anecdotes represent Lincoln In these last few days of hls life, as possessed by a high though melancholy mood of extreme mercy. Therefore, much has been Inferred from ttie following words In hls last public address, made on the night of Hie eleventh of April: "In the present situation as the phrase goes. It may he nty duty to make some new announcement to the people of the South. I ant considering and shall not fall fo net when action shall be proper." No Animosity in Hit Heart. What wits to he done for the South wlmt treatment should he accorded the Southern leaders engrossed the President and Ids cabinet at the meeting on April 14. which was destined to he their last. Secretary Welles has preserved Hip spirit of the meeting In s striking anecdote. Lincoln said no one ied expect he would "take any part In hanging or killing those men. even the worst of them. Frighten them out of the country, open the gates, let down the bars, scare them olT" he said, throwing up his hands, as tf scaring sheep. "Enough lives have been sacrificed; we must our resentments If we expect bar ninny and union." While Lincoln was thus arming him self with a valiant mercy, a hand ot conspirators at an nhfu-nrhoarding honsp In Washington were planning his . assassination. The passage of 60 years has proved fully necessary fo the placing of Lincoln In historic perspective. No President, In his own time, with Hip pos sible exception of Washington was so bitterly hated and so fiercely reviled On the other hand, none lias been Hie object of such Intemperate hern worship. However, the greatest In the land were. In the main quick to s- -e him in perspective and to re. ognbe Ids historic significance. It Is recorded of Davis that In nfter days he paid a beautiful tribute to Lincoln and said "Next to flip destruction of the iVn of Ahmhan, t.in federncy. the coin was the darkest day 'In Sou.l. has ever known.' . the painting ot Mrt Abraham Lincoln which was presented to the White House by Robert Todd Lincoln, ton of The paJntinf tn the the Great Emancipator. work of Katherine Helm. Above it pictured The State Nursery & Seed Co. that Year Book for 1929 Is Ready Send for Yonr Copy It j thousWASHINGTON Twenty-twand acres of unreserved and unappropriated land in San Juan county, Utah will be opened to homestead and desert land entry on February 21, at the federal land office In Salt Lake Citv, an the department of the tni-ior nounced recently. Cutiesna PREPARATIONS The Soap, pure and fragrant, to cleanse the skin; the Ointment, antiseptic and healing, to remove pimples, rashes and irritations; and finally the Talcum, smooth and pure, to impart a pleasing fragrance to the skin. Ointment 25c. and 50c. hucum 25c. Sample each fitse. AMrtsi: "Cuticura, Dept. B6, Malden, Mass. OvUgfCntienra Shaving Stick SISc. Sop 25c. |