Show There may be days das In InJune Tune June but no day 0 of sprIng could be more delightful than that ot of yesterday te rda Skies SIles clear sun bright and warm trees grass carpet carpet- carpetIng Ing the lowlands and above on the great peaks a I. I snow belt mak mak- makIng Ing a picture ot of beauty In Its contrasts What hat more could one ask for Cor Coras foras as to weather what more could one desire And then to think that while the daya lucre here are arc o perfect peo peo- people t plo along the are arc In mud and water It Is well ell that we arc not called upon to participate In all the misfortune ot of the world It If It Itero ere ero brought close cloe home nomo to us life lICe would not be worth orth while And so when It Is our turn to rejoice we must do so 80 regard less ot of what affects those at distant points at the same time lime doing our port In answering the calls ot of distress S. S An unemployment office has been opened at 2463 4 Grant aye aye- i nuo to assist who are aro In need ot of ork nork I It If you have e work to be done call up the office and by so do- do doIng Ing help some needy Taylor M. M Caine a brakeman I on the Union Pacific whose home homeL L Is at Twenty eighth street f. f has applied for Cor a I on what I 4 Is known as Caines Caine's automatic grade crossing block With the thc constantly Increasing number or of railroad grade cross cross- crossIng log Ing accidents this latest device should bo be In demand It Is the tho block sIgnal extended to the grade crossing ns as the me- me mechanism Is the same except that when the block Is thrown against a crossing to arms descend on each sido ot of the tho track making It Impossible for Cor an auto to t against an oncoming train other than by ploughing through the 4 barrier To make mak the tho block doubly effective the tive a a. bell rings at the side ot of the highway to serve n notice that the barrier Is blocking the crossing and at night red lights shine on tho arms stretch out to close the crossing Mr MI CAlno Caine has ha been In the block I signal service ot of the railroad and has had an electrical experience p which has helped him In perfect perfect- I d' d Ing his automatic P lie He Is now making applications for patent rIghts In other coun- coun trIes Mr Caine was asked Ir if the arms j ot of his automatic block were strong enough to resist the blow ot of an auto and ho he said No for that would be equivalent lent to a hazard And ho he point point- ell cd to the fact that the hea heavy barrIers In Ogden streets at safety zones would be regard regard- regarded ell ed as n a hazard for which the tho city might bo be held responsible It IC seme samo I Ione one should run Into them Wyoming had bad a big disaster n. n afew few tew days ago when nn an explosion oc occurred In an oil plant On Saturday Detroit went Into the calamity list when an auto body plant blew up Modern man In his efforts to ak nature servo serve him Is deal deal- dealIng lug Ing with tremendous und and occasionally ho he lets those forces get et beyond his conol when the tho cost Is b figured in human uman lives hives f t But Dut with all the disaster that I It t the powerful appliances now and then bring max mal will continuo to use them I There would be a great slip slip- slipping l ping backard arll It If all the highly explosive and destructive i cals were to b be discarded No sooner d es a mIghty con con- convulsion occur than the tho wreckage Is cleared away and man re- re rebuilds builds to once more make mako use of th the destructive o forces In that way the tho world has After Aller having tramped through Ogden canyon canon with Fred J J. J Pack Utah's famous geologist John M 11 Mills was so full ot of his subJect and bUbbling over o with enthusiasm cam that ho he wrote an 10 article for forThe TIle The Stan Standard lard which ap ap- In SUn Sundays Sunday's paper In the form torm of an apostrophe to the J great gorge Professor Mills In summing up his Impression expressed regret that those who have havo eyes to see often do not see seo the tho wonders all about them lIe would have every one In Ogden see the canyon as ho he saw V it under the illuminating mind ot of th the geologist and lIe be would tell the story to the tourists who ho rIde I through the tho canyon In the sum sum- summer mer ener time Much ot of the history or of the tho carth's surface Is disclosed In the Continued on oa la o T o. r 7 i NEWS AND ViEWS From Page Pae One rocks ot of Ogden canyon where the crust ot of the earth Is exposed to treat great depth due to the up- up uplifts lifts litis which have occurred The geologist g reads the story much as an open book and he docs It by knowing that er e every e t has L I. caUSe I The The wrinkles and the folds In Inthe inthe the mighty 1 cliffs are to the ge- ge geologist geologist what the lines of the face I are to a student ot of the character of man I i Every frown leaves lea a a. trace every ery smile snakes a record and so every ery convulsion of nature has left an Imprint on the geological formations In Ogden canyon the geologist does not find dinosaurs those ponderous anImals which have been uncovered In eastern Utah I but he does trace the life lite which came out or orthe of the ooze when the mists were being dissipated and the earth was being prepared b by bya a slow process for man The rhe rocks have a language e all their own so we are told and Ogden canyon canoll Is a whole language In itself with fascinating history locked In Its structures to be In- In Interpreted Interpreted by the student ot of the geological past Some times Umes It seems as though In the order ot of creation endless mystery was stored In order that man might never find existence made dull by knowing all Man Sian knows knos much but there are great s-reat fields ot of knowledge e the edge edse of which he has not even en touched When he begins to explain the secret ot of life lite Itself then there may be unfolded wonders ot of which all the discoveries ot of the past will be as nothing In the long lous ago some one corn com Lift up thine eyes ees It If you ou will look up at Mount Ogden when hen the afternoon run tun is 15 being reflected front the mantle manUe ot of white you vili see In one or two or of the narrow canyons near the western summit the evidence e of miniature Within the ho last last few da days s the warm arm weather has caused the frost to be released so as to dis- dis disturb disturb large bodies ot of snow and slides have resulted The traces ot of the slides at this distance took ook as though a oar oar- narrow row pathway had been made but comparing the width ot of the slides I with the trees which must be ot of considerable sIze the avalanches must have ha been more than minia- minia ture I We Ve compare comparo the forces ot of na- na nature nature ture with mans man's ability to meet them No doubt those small snow snow- slides were enough to hare ha swept away any ot of the works ot of otman man less strong than a a. wall wail ot of concrete |