Show I 1 qa 4 1 I I 1 1 1 I r I 1 I 1 1 I 1 I D a ds 1 1 I 1 it I 1 4 I 1 i z I 1 I 1 11 I 1 column 0 I 1 N artl I 1 I 1 1 1 11 t 4 H haw 0 I 1 ni 4 aki im 4 THE IIAN WHO 11 HAS A WON I 1 WANT to walk alk by the side of the man via atoo 0 has suffered and seen and knows who has measured his pace on the battle I 1 line and given and taken the blows I 1 who has never whined d when the tha scheme went wrong arong nor scoffed tit at the falling plan put but taken his dose with a heart of trust and the faith of a gentleman who he has parried and struck and sought and glien given and scarred with a thousand spears can lift his bis head to the stars of heaven and ashamed of his tears I 1 want to grasp the hand of the man who has been through it all and seen who has walked with the night of an unseen dread and studs stuck to the world machine who has bared his breast to the winds ol of dawn and thirsted and starved staged and felt the sting and the bite of the bitter blasts that the mouths of the foul have dealt who was tempted and fell and rose again and has gone on trusty and true with god supreme in his manly heart and his courage burning anew id ghe my all be it little or great to walk by his side today to stand up there with the man who has known the bite of the burning fray who has gritted gritter his teeth and clinched I 1 his fist and gone on doing his best because of the love for his fellow man I 1 and the faith in his manly breast I 1 would love to walk with a ith him hand band in hand together journey along for the man who has fought and struggled I 1 I 1 and won is the man who can make men strong I 1 author not known I 1 I 1 I 1 S A in ab B cr or OF MOTHERS 1 xay BAY BY SM JR IK IN SAM column in last suni days edition ol of the portland oregon journal the fol following loIng paragraphs appear I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 we approach the subject of mothers day this time with mingled emotions the fleeting hours bouis since JT mothers others day a year ear ago the one who mothered us aunt annie has slip slipped away quietly gently sweetly etly as she had lived ard and with sustaining faith that all would be well As we are sure it Is i I 1 the sky siy is 15 beautiful she smiled I 1 what a pretty sunset and though her eyes were closed and the clouds were of the leaden gray that presages storm in the mountains it was comforting to know that as she faced west beauty beckoned her on CIL a get the children ready she said and that was n as all 0 0 nn telling I 1 what the tired and fevered brals brais had conjured then some gay party for the I 1 young folks perhaps or maybe a pic liture ture out of happy days of the past 1 0 0 but it was like her a last thought I 1 for the children so mothers day might bring only sorrowful recollections I 1 I 1 but it Is not so EO she had lived nearly fourscore four tour score years a very full life of toll tol and trial and tribulation and in turn ot of joy and happ happiness iness and always a life alte of unselfish service I 1 in which the body had grown old and weary arid and ready tor for yes rest t and sum summoned I 1 home it was comforting to know that the last letter w we e had written to mother had brought her happiness I 1 she carried it always in her pocket they told us ur the last days she had b been a en able to get around tor for mother mothe r managed always to have a hidden pocket for little personal things and treasurers treasur ers somewhere about her clothes we remember that as a boy it seemed to us that a mysterious told fold in dress or petti 1 coat was an all inexhaustible source ot of a bit of sweets a round white peppermint or er a lozenge of musk or piece of 0 licorice i 0 and the nickels tucked 2 way away in a well worn purse v wrapped rapped in turn in a handkerchief and the pocket finally i locked with a safety pin mother was a frugal soul and thrifty she had bad to be to keep us all together I 1 any arway way she prized our letters and when her dimming eyes could no longer tee see even to pick out the message slowly and carefully word by word she asked that it be read to her and from time to time I 1 and when it was all over and nd the family circle went through the little personal effects that had been hers as families do on such occasions among the bits of old lace and sewing silks and crochet needles nd and old family tures ard and ribbons and faded flowers we found the letter we had written lor for last Jl mothers others day and it made Us happy to find it there and so we teel lel that tt if this day prompts any man 1 I 1 or boy or girl or woman to send just a simple melage that otherwise m might be I 1 put off until I 1 it t Is too late mothers day 1 after all la is not entirely in vain rain because one never knows knowe I 1 a T a T a I 1 FIFTY YEARS TEAKS IV IN if BUSINE 1 S CLUB i MORE THAN fifty falve years the park record 1 has been doing business in li greatest silver lead mining center park city never missing an issue during the entire two thousand eight hundred and seventy falve weekly issues to date its I 1 a long time to be doing the same thing i over and over again tor for more than fifty I 1 j five years but it has been accomplished with vath comparatively very little profit I 1 tor jor the publishers but with immense satisfaction in knowing that our best efforts were put forth during these 2875 11 weeks tor for what we conscientiously bei e to be for the best interests find and u Up building 0 of our home community A arid and r we are still going but for or how I 1 much longer no one knows with an absolute tb solute certainty however that the me R record will be issued as long iong as the I 1 mines I 1 of the district continues ore shipments and quite likely much longer 1 y nie REASON tor for this wandering van dering back i to 0 the long ago Is the fact that a fifty years 1 in business club Is in the proem process 1 of r organization and the record Is eligible C membership this organization Is be agne sponsored by general charles C oila i 1 associates of nashville ten ator tr t r received this week t who ho Is the orr am I 1 I 1 banzat gan zat lon secretary he asks I 1 ilow how many firms in the united states have withstood the complexities ol of zit amer american an business life tor for as long as fifty years how many of these concerns are still in the family that started i them and which of all these Is ill the e oldest I 1 I 1 these questions will he be answered for the first time through the formation of a fifty years in business club says the I 1 i general Ga who Is of the opinion that fifty years in business Is a priceless heritage that should be preserved and honored I 1 I 1 1 accordingly A nationwide nation wide bearc search 1 or the firms that have enjoyed a half century of successful achievement is being made when a sufficient number nu aber of such firms are listed a national meeting will be called in some central city and a nationwide nation wide organization perfected perfected keeping a business going tor for fifty years or more is no mere accident it Is a real and genuine accomplishment and seme recognition should be given those who io have thus achieved the voice of these bus business iness pioneers V ft ill have a stimulating influence and v ill serve as a beacon light to newer and younger firms he said announcing that churches schools newspapers firms corporations po rations lons banks merean mercantile tile establish merits ments and other business enterprises enterprise Is are eligible only ten per cent of the firms that I 1 stait in business survive I 1 ong long enough to become known as established firms the percentage to reach the halt half century I 1 mark la is much smaller yet but general gilbert Ol lbert Is of the opinion that that the nation I 1 wide search will find several thousand american es establishments that have made the grade and should be articulate I 1 in n the formulae for formulation mulat ion of principles to underlie business guidance and control I 1 I 1 DURING THE more than fifty five years of the records existence it has ahad I 1 had its ups and downs as all business concerns experience many storms were Vea weathered several competitors came and i went our city destroyed by tire fire and rebuilt our place of business and home swiped wiped out by the flames but immell I 1 lately following a tent was erected on the shouldering ing ashes and business transacted a new building planned and a 9 i complete completO new printing plant P lant ordered by telegraph and while awaiting its arrival the record was printed in an out ot of town newspaper office and distributed with uninterrupted regularity its pub i 1 fishers glad to be alive and able to igle gle on forgues lor greater ter achievement ac ac ac FROM AN exchange published away down south in the land of cotton we read the following declaring that marriage at their age was wai not a success and that they could be more contented apart martin van buren reeves and mrs elizabeth reeves beeves 93 96 ot of salt lake city have separated we dont remember ever rending reading any reference to this young couple I 1 in a the salt lake press As stated before we ve have to go away from home to get some home news y K y T u R WE VENTURE to remark that a cessation tor for a few months ot of the altogether too frequent Ire quent radio harangues ot of priest and dictator coughlin Coughl ln and long would be appreciated by both saints and sin ln ners ot of this country la in general politics will not permit ot of this needed rest however a A afi a F THAT IF we had one halt half ot of the cost of telegrams sent cent to washington recently urging the signing ot of the bonus bill we would gracefully retire and do considerable bus riding the next year cr so a a a UTAH TO give lobs jobs in aid plans reads a headline head line in the dally daily press well the only way to give jobs to the unemployed Is to give theand the them and not dallying along for ever talking about it its payrolls pay rolls we need not promises ua S B T LS IT WAS an emphatic and deserved deserve d turn down given that king of demagogues ag faey long in the V U S senate monday last on his demand for an investigation vesti gation ol of alleged wrong doings of postmaster general parley farley what long really deserves Is a sound thrashing lor for hla his frequent blasphemous blustering lie he will vill get it one of these days too afi R ui 99 THE BONUS block continues to holdup the bonus bill from the president in an effort to prevent a veto after all it perhaps would be beneficial tor for the country at large laige and it would certainly put an immense sum of money in circulation it if the tee veto it if veto it Is to be Is not sustained tile the principle disagreeable feature would be Is that huey long would take the whole credit for the bonus victory and we ve would be compelled to put up with considerable more if his senseless bellowing a 5 s s rl IN THIS mornings papers we vie read where president roosevelt Is getting ready to tighten the reins to force program etc etc it surely Is about time almo to harness congress as it were and get the members thereof going in the direction of accomplishment they have ve been running wild long enough merely ridding themselves of hot air and landing back just where they started politically kill huey long securely muzzle the few of his UK ilk put a stopper on the republican agitators and per on the republican agitators quiet down priest coughlin coughlan ln and herd ahe democrats into the line where they be delong and then concentrate on while legislation and legislate thlu then adjourn a fi a ai I 1 IT DID not take princess barbara the forty million dollar young beauty to decide that single blessedness was not to her liking after a taste of wedlock even though inharmonious the whims of the rich are many bi id IN washington the pre prevailing comment on the visit to america of H G wells british author for the purpose of appraising the new deal Is mr wells came to washington interviewed the new dealers talked with the president called on huey long arid and listened to father coughlin the result of 0 his and Is now being published in a series ol of lour four articles in colliers weekly which are tiding boing read with considerable interest by all kinds ot of people in washington and elsewhere W 3 9 19 A WOMAN PRESIDENT tor for the united states the suggestion in the form of r pee prediction diction comes straight from the white house in an article written by colonel louis howe president roose belts secretary for the womans comans home companion during the next decade says colonel howe the advisability of electing a woman as president will become B R very seriously argued question who will the first woman president be A halt half dozen names suggest themselves eleanor roosevelt prances france perkins ns miss woolley mrs ruth kuth bryan owen arid and so on even such heroines as amelia Earli earhart art mary pickford and helen wills may be seriously considered at least by the sports editors however there will be much water pass under the bridge before we have the privilege ot of voting tor for a woman tor for president |