| OCR Text |
Show ij WHEN DAYS ARE DARK. a This has been one of the longest periods of storm known tp the 1 older inhabitants of this part of Utah. Since last fall the. hour? of I sunshine have been few and the days of clouded skies have been many. I People accustomed to the bright days of an average season in the J intermountain region freely complain when, for any extended time. I die sun fails to shine. They cannot accommodate themselves to the doom of clouds and storm.' Up in Ogden the natives would be con- j tented if there was nothing more than a promise of a fair day once I 1 in three months and. in California, the sons and daughters of that L land of endless boost, would be enraptured over the thought that 1 : the Supreme Ruler had been soo mindful of their best interests as to 3 I give them a canopy of clouds and an abundance of moisture. The li C'alifornian sees good in every mood 01' Nature, and we in Utah should r I practice a little of that same lesignation to the inevitable. ( J When days are dark it is well to contemplate the sunshine which J is in store for us. |