OCR Text |
Show Some Items Of Personal Interest We have had some good patronage from our friend Mr. Black ot the Black Barber and Beauty Shop at 605 East 21st So. Ha makes us presentable every once in a while and we can recommend his shop for first class work. He is not sufficiently suf-ficiently in love with England to be best man at a wedding of Britain and U. S. A. Adolph Sorenson, a friend and neighbor of long standing, is one of the best boosters in the city for the Townsend Plan and says he is making many converts. He has a good position in the State Liquor Warehouse and tends strictly to business. He earned his place by good, hard work for the men now in power. He often of-ten turns some good patronage to this paper. He is always trying try-ing to move upward and onward, on-ward, and is sure to get there. Neighbor John Stewart was in the other day and preached some of his gospel to us. He is tall, straight, and rather slim and has rounded out his three score years and ten, or will do so this month. His health has not been so good of late but he is determined to live yet another ten years, the fates being willing. We have one subscriber who weighs 300 pounds and when we cornpare him with Mr. Stewart, we tnink ard Taft. Mr. Taft looked him of the following story. George Bernard Shaw met Wm. How-over How-over and said: "Mr. Shaw, you look like there was a famine in England." Mr. Shaw retorted, retort-ed, "Yes, Mr. Taft, and you look like you were the cause of it." We met Neighbor Howard Christensen in church Sunday and he was listening to and appeared ap-peared to be enduring sound doctrine. We say again that you may listen all you wish to him, but don't for your sake contradict or corner him. He has the goods. Friend and neighbor, Mrs. Shaw sent us a beautiful card from sunny California where she has been spending a week or two and greatly enjoying it. The kind of giver that we love just as much as the Lord does is the one that not only pays his or her own subscription subscrip-tion but every once in a while pays for some good friend. After all it is not what you gather and hold that counts, it is the right kind of giving you do, the little and big services ser-vices that you render that really real-ly count, and that will stand you in well when life's lame-foot lame-foot race is over. We regret that our friend Rev. Jacob Trapp of the Unitarian Uni-tarian church is leaving Salt Lake for a pastorate in Denver. Den-ver. He has fought a good i fight here and may success iftend him in his new and larger larg-er field. M-i'-h mor-sl'mihl hjivMwi airl about J- A. TTpss eoinir to Idaho to spend his birthday. It was also the 70th anniver-aryofthe anniver-aryofthe settling of Georgetown, George-town, and he was the first child born there. So the town celebrated cele-brated with him He waked up on the morning of his natal day and looked out to where he first saw the light. He was banqueted and given his first real flowers and the best time of his life. He saw his old school boys and girls he had taught so long ago. Saw the ones who were left of the little Sunday School class he attended. attend-ed. It wa3 a royal home coming to him he will remember it as the best time of his three score years and ten. |