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Show THE BULLETIN r HOUSEHOLD When Lincoln Spoke at Gettysburg Three Score and 15 Years Ago QUESTIONS Bepellinf Slice. The smell of peppermint is most obnoxious te mice. A little oil of peppermint placed about their haunts will soon make them look for other quarters. Broken Glass. Use a wet cloth or dampened absorbent cotton te pick up broken glass. Even the tiniest bits will adhere to it For safety, discard cloth and all. Mending the Wringer. If a crack appears in the rubber roller of your wringer, bind the cracked part tightly with adhesive tape. It stops the crack from spreading and it does not come off. To Clean Chromium. Chromium plated household fittings should be kept clean by frequent dusting with a soft cloth. If dirty, wipe with a cloth wrung out in warm water and then dry thoroughly with a soft duster. Or try wiping with a rag moistened with paraffin. OS Dont Vinegar Cures Bust waste time trying to clean rusty articles with emery paper I Place 'them in a jar of ordinary vinegar, leave for a couple Of days, and you .will' find that they are quite free from rust. ' OOO Care of Satin. Freshen black satin with potato water, sponging jon the right side and ironing on the back. By ELMO SCOTT WATSON C Weitern Newapaper Union. score and fifteen a tall, gaunt, man stood upon a platform overlooking the scene of one of the worlds decisive battles and began to speak. Ilis voice was thin, in strikshrill, ing contrast to the rich, full tones of the trained orator who had preceded him. At first that previous speaker had held his audience THREE ago high-pitch- sw. suoXSv fa ow o PiCv - jy , frt Ab dll vi tm too Sab, OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED ttreka and chain. Start rt attdiac awh'a. aafea. typewritera. 242 8. State. Balt .aha. B. L. DESK FX LIGHT FIXTURES Aw gMi7T.y Ayv dfy (IfreloulDP, A,f A AVy, Ayvi' 1 iff yV AtfanuMMi, &J yttyfiVoTTui d Xdo durtirti ms flCx'Aitfy rtCuo, uulQi dm A &- MOSER-HARTMA-N rfipyu jrrt T Jr Am Morey yfig.0 go;Sr 'Ce63eZ -- mjcLpmh of AI&4 dityiyy dsvgre; du; j. HoSS reyfay ttyyiitoi3) ON AN "UPSET STOMACH Neutralize excess stomach acids to wake up feeling like a million table-spoonfu- ls of Phillips Milk of Magnesia in a glass of water AT BEDTIME. While yon sleep, this wonderful alkalizer will be sweetening your stomach . . . easing' the upseweeling and nausea . . . helping to bring back a "normal feeling. By morning you fed great. Then when you wake take 2 more tablespoonfuls of Phillips Milk of Magnesia with orange juice. That is one of the quickest, simplest, easiest ways to overcome the bad effects of too much eating, smoking or drinking. Thousands use it. But never ask for "milk of magnesia alone always ask In "PniffiptfMilkofMa"" PHILLIPS MILK OF MAGNESIA IN UQUID Off TABLET FORM With a Purpose Be not simply good, be good for something. How Women LINCOLN SPEAKING AT GETTYSBURG erty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal, the shrill voice proclaimed. People leaned forward to listen, for it was difficult for some of them to hear. A minute passed . . . two minutes . . . then: . . 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 perish from the earth." With those words the speaker sat down. His audience looked at each other in amazement Why, le had stopped just when they thought he was beginning I Who ever heard of n man making auch a short speech! They were right For there were exactly 272 words in that fahi Iw speech. Sert tool ililw fat s Uuii (Matty Ira SS to IS), wfcaltoai As he aat down there was but feat ttitot lam at pap, ato little applause and' that was very ana aatt moody apalla. apparently for the speaker, beOat mm fnafc air, an. alaap aatt V you Matt a paatt noaral ajratoM task taka lords cause he was the President of K. PlaklBuaVVasatahla Camaaatt. mrnim the United States, and not for the aaptaiaUi ft mm It haipakatan batttt he had uttered. But in that words pbyareal reelrtaare. thus halpa fire mn if viractty to aatoy Ilia aatt miuTmlmlmm were wrong. For the speech they aarraa aatt grtary ttlaturtang eyiaptoree thai aftaa aeeompaay chaaaa al Ilia WELL to which they had just listened WOBTB TBYQKM was Abraham Lincolns Gettysburg Address, that has been WNU W 43 33 called "a classic which will endure so long as the English language is spoken. A Disappointed Audience. In the light of that statement with which few, if any, will disHelp Them Cleanse the Blood sent it seems strange indeed of Harmful Body Wasto that the people who heard it utToar Hdtore ara conataally III tartar tered 75 years ago were so little wute matter Inna lha blood atraam. But kidneya aomrtimes lag la tbrlr work da mpressed by it. Yet such was not act aa Nalura intanttad (ail to rethe case. Dr. William E. Barton mora lmpuritka that, if Maiaad, any poiioa tha ayatea pad apart tka wbola in his book, "Lincoln at Gettysbody machinery. e book about a Syaiptoaia may ba n acting backache burg" (a pmialrat headache, attarki of diuinraa. says: speech!) awellin. nighta, Setting ap paffneaa under tha wea--t feeling of narvoua "People were disappointed. anxiety and ion of pep and itrenglb. After Everett's oration, the PresOther aigna of kidney or bladder dia order may ho burning, icasty or too ident's speech seemed almost no irrnuent urination. 6poech at all . . . That night they Than ihouid ba no doubt that prompt trea'ment to uriarr than negleeL lin told of hearing Everett and of mb. Doau'i have been winning Cn'i Incidenre (rienda (or more than forty years. soring the President. They ha vo a naUonnrida reputation. some of them mentioned the tally Are recommended by grate'll! people tha President had uttered a few recountry over. Aak your unpli'wrl marks; yes, they had heard the President. But while they were glad to have heard him. not many in Their 40s Can Attract Men mil 254-pag- 272-wo- rd (From i contemporary at the time said very much about the President's speech. A few remarks" indeed! Yet, the people who heard him were not the only ones who felt that way about it. Another of Lincoln's biographers, Ward H. has recorded Lincolns own dissatisfaction with his speech . . . how he himself called it "a flat failure" and added, after he returned to Washington, I tell you, that speech fell on the audience like a wet blanket. I am distressed about it I ought to have prepared it with more care. But he was wrong about that, just as he was wrong when, in the speech itself, he said "the world will little note nor long remember what we say here. Per- -' haps the world "little noted at the time what he said there. But certainly it seems destined to long remember. However, Lincoln wasnt the world's worst prophet in this respect. That title must go to the editor of the Harrisburg (Pa.) Patriot and Union who wrote an editorial in which he said; "The President succeeded on this occasion because he acted without sense and without constraint in a panorama that was gotten up more for the benefit of his party than for the glory of the nation and the honor of the dead We pass over the silly remarks of the President; for the credit of the nation we are willing that the veil of oblivion shall be dropped over them and that they shall no more be repeated or thought of. Of course, that was the of a bitterly partisan newspaper. But the Harrisburg editor wasnt alone in his attitude. For, as Barton records. The Chicago Times and the Register in Lincoln's own home town of Spring-fiel- d and other partisan newspapers were equally caustic and equally unjust." Lincoln Overlooked. Ore of the most interesting examples of failure of the editors to appreciate the speech was that of the New York Times. The of them La-mo- drawing). day it carried an editorial under the head Two Great Orations" which said: We defollowing n, vote a broadside of this morning's Times to the publication of two orations which we are sure will command the attention of the day. It then went on to discuss the beauty of language and the eloquent voices of two masters of oratory. One of these was Edward Everett, who had spoken at the dedication of the National cemetery at Gettysburg. The other was NOT Abraham Lincoln at the same ceremony. It waa Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, who had just returned from England and on the evening of the day before had addressed a great crowd at the Academy of Music in his home city of Brooklyn. To the credit of Edward Everett, however, let it be said that he was me of the few possibly the only me who recognized the greatnqps of Lincoln's speech at the time. He wrote te Lincoln the next day: "I should be glad if I could flatter myself that I came as near to the central idea of the occasion in two hours as you did in two minutes. Tributes From England. But if the greatness of the Gettysburg speech was not appreciated at the time it was uttered, recognition was not long in coming. Nor has that recognition been confined to his It was Lord Charmwood of England who characterized the speech as a classic which will endure as long as the English language is spoken. And another Englishman, Lord Curzon, in a lecture at the University of Cambridge paid it this tribute: I escape the task of deciding which is the masterpiece of modern English eloquence by awarding the prize to an American. The Gettysburg Address is far moie than a pleasing piece of occasional oratory. It is a marvelous piece of English composition It is a pure well of r:mjl;sh..ur-deillcd- . Lincolns words are among the glories and treasures of mankind. -- ... fellow-countryme- fulmi-natio- n 1 me .... ...... the leading families of New England. After several years of travel in Germany and Eng- dire (Sff (26-13- 2, If the Gettysburg Address helped make Lincoln immortal, ICE CREAM FREEZERS it is me of the ironies of fate that it also helped thrust into obscuICE CREAM COUNSODA FOUNTAINS rity Edward Everett, the man TER FREEZERS and Ire Cream cabinet who had been cast in the role of Bar Fixture. S ton Is. Carbonate ra. Steam term chief orator at the dedication Table AIM racenditiaacdCO. aaaipmant Maaafactarera of the battlefield, so that he is II Pat Office Plan .j8iKJjtoOjT now something of a "forgotten PHOTOGRAPHY man and he lives in memory mainly as the other man who PHOTO-KRAFspoke at Gettysburg. ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Everett was bom in Dorchester, Any Rod Developed with Mass., April 11, 1794, a member 25c 8 Quality Print IWM. scf Living and bedrm. Sallinir at a real bargain. each. A 1m Cat eelling at (1.50-1- 1 lama pictures and aland lamia. COVEY INVESTMENT CO. SSI Eaat 8m Temple Salt lain City. Utah EDWARD EVERETT -- Aw ttPvAvtTrtuttttMU Pw dtPMirtuuAnly. ttVIArtt eASf ((m, & i -- - mv; ttykbtouXu.' iff fcalal SEWER PIPE FLOWER PACE BRICK WALL COPING and POTS ALL CLAY PRODUCT8. i Salt l.fca UTAH FIRE CLAY CO. My kyypto tjL. , dlfri paaalar CLAY PRODUCTS dyv- ApV NEVER SLEEP Ql'IKT Sure Sl ST. GEORGE HOTEL. Balt Lafca 4 Eart Iitt Saath Street III - 11.44, With Bath (1.21 ta 11.71 Reputable Cmnlwt Clm j,, ,t quence. new nation, conceived in Lib- - SALT LAKE Rate I1M. il.M CLEAN BK8PBt.TABI.E PLAN DO ME. HOTEL Sa. t rtaaiTilA id AV elo- But as his speech went on and on and on for an hour and 57 minutes, in fact, people began to weary. So it was something of a relief when he finished and there was a certain revival of interest when the next speaker arose and drew himself to his full height. "Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth upon this continent a J., I u.iL al Ifea Wkaa la RKNII NEVADA Ua HOTEL GOLDEN Reae'e larecal aatt ed spellbound with his L HOTELS lib pfalrtf w Mmvu .P&D To relieve the effects of escape "acid indigestion1 next day do this: Take 2 iji I n. of land he returned to this country to occupy the chair of Greek literature at Harvard and to become editor of the North American Review. One of the earliest examples of the scholar in politics, Everett became successively congressman, governor of Massachusetts, minister plenipotentiary to England and, after a brief interim as president of Harvard, secretary of state in President Fillmore's cabinet. But his chief claim to fame lies in his being a vigorous champion of American institutions when it was the fashion in Europe to sneer at our democracy, and an equally vigorous champion of honesty in public affairs and of social justice. He was a resolute opponent of white occupation of Indian lands without the consent of the red man. To him also was due the preservation of a sound currency in the panic of 1837 and the establishment of the first board of education in the United States. No mean record of accomplishment, this, and to it should be added the fact that he was considered the greatest orator in the country at that time. He had staked out his claim to .that distinction early in life. In 1824, while he was teaching at Harvard, he was chosen to address the Phi Beta Kappa society at Cambridge on the progress of literature in the United States. Tribute to Lafayette. Everyone expected him to deliver the usual scholarly address for scholarly men. But one circumstance helped change that. In the audience was Marquis de Lafayette, now an old man, who had come back to America to receive the tribute of the people for whose liberties he had fought nearly a half century earlier. Near the end of Everetts speech he turned to the old soldier and launched into a tribute to him with sucti fervor and eloquence that his audience waa held spellbound, silent, for several minutes. Then it burst into a roar of handclapping and cheering. Everett had said what every American felt in his heart about Lafayette and he had done it ao graciously and expressively that his speech became the sensation of the hour, not only hi this country but in France as welL Helped Save ML Vernon. In 1853 he used his eloquence in a cause which helped spread his fame. He became interested in the effort to raise $200,000 to purchase Mount Vernon and preserve It as a national shrine. H prepared an address on the character of Washington and delivered this address more thug 120 times in various cities all over the country-- People came from .afar to hear him not because there was anything new In what he had to tell them about the Father of His Country but because of the grace and style of the orators presentation of his subject. As a result Everett turned over to the women who were frying to save Mount Vernon nearly $70,000 and did more, perhaps, than any other individual in accomplishing their purpose. Early in the Civil war he began delivering speeches to arouse enthusiasm for the Northern causes They were not finished orations they were stirring calls to action. He became the most powerful platform orator of his day. So it was only natural that those in charge of the dedication of the National cemetery at Gettysburg should have thought of him first when selecting an orator for the occasion. His long and distinguished career came to an end January 15, 1865 three months too early to see the triumph of the cause which he had so ably championed. 3c Extra Printi Wrap coin and film carefully PHOTO-KRAFT-lo- a 749 Salt Lake City. Utah SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- DRUGS N ATHLETIC GOODS GOOD ATHLETIC GREAT WESTERN Uniforms. Bala, Glovee, Baseballs, Seftballrt UTAH-IDAH- O Vallybnlla, Athletic shoes, etc. SCHOOL SUPPLY CO Salt TRUSSES Surgical Inatnimenta, Hvpltai Sunpllra. Manufacturers of Abdominal Sup Trussea. Porte ra. Elastic Slockinga. Tha Physicians Supply Campaay 4JI2ndSniithJltSaltI;lteCjLJ!l2 Lappa Shortest Race The Lapps are characterized aa the shortest race in Europe. BUSINESS TRAINING . L D. S. Training Doesn't Cost LOOKING FOR WORK? It Pays! .WHAT CAN YOU DO? Taks a short, iacxpeniiva conns is business training, and yon can answer that quastioa satisfactorily. COLLEGE L. D. S. BUSINESS 71 NOKTH MAIN S-A-L- BALT LAKH CITT -E BUS EQUIPMENT Whits open bus Whits opsn has Whits opsn buses 2 I Whits bus chanii 1 Threa quarter ton Whitu chassis with cab 1 Pierce-ArroAmbulance Series 33 1 1 s. w All in good running condition Writu or call for LOW PRICES Salt Lake Transportation Co. 40 South Wait Tssipia Salt Lake City Weak Krt 1841 WNU SALT LAKH mmyuJWWWWVVUUl First Ethiopian Kingdom The first Ethiopian kingdom waa founded in the Eleventh century, Meadowlark Farmers' Friend The meadowlark is the farmers friend. Living near the ground aa it does, it attacks most of the insect enemies of the crops. Its food is made up chiefly of insects, a smaller amount of weed seeds and some grain. The grain, however, ia eaten in the late fall and early in the spring when insects are scares. Existed ia 1304 The famous diamond, the Koh-i-n(mound of light), the private Koh-i-n- or or property of the British royal family, is known to have existed in India in the year 1304. One Form of Indian Toyture One form of torture practiced by the Indians consisted of sticking sharp, abort splinters all over the body of a man tied to the stab. Then they would aef fire to the splin- ters. Wood Peewee Bnilda on Bough With his plsintive little ditty, the wood peewee trusts his mois and lichen nest to some woodland limb. He is one of the best architects of the bird world, his nest generally being so saddled to n bough that it seems n part of tha tree. An Honest and Free Man He who cannot wish that the whole world may think and act like him-el- f, he has no right to call himself an honest and free man. Auerbach. Meaning of Right, Left Wing The right wing, when used in connection with politics, is the conservative element, or, aa in Europe, sometimes the monarchist element in a political party, legislature or parliament. The left wing is made up of the more radical element of a political party or legislature. There ia record of a translation into Chinese of the first Christian work in China, the Book of the Jewish Messiah, dating 635-3i 8. |