Newspaper Page Text
BBBBJ ' PEbmsssmsmBssmBbsWBsm BBBs H . PAGE EIGHT. IRON COUNTY RECORD, CEDAR CITY,) UTAH. FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1920. BBBBBbB ssMamMiiswsMswaswswssMiis"'"w'""'' ,- ,MM-a .. ft fr I PRICE IS SECONDARY H when patrons sec the rich colorings and pleasing combinations H in our art-designed WALL PAPER BBBBB H Tlic agreeable surprise then is, after selections, when it is H learned that our prices arc from 10 to 30 per cent savings. M Let us show you while our shelves are still B full and prompt service in hanging still possible. I Leigh Furniture & Carpet Go. H mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmtfmmmmmmimKmmmmmKmmmmmtmmLMmmmmaHmi "Ni I'M ALL ALONE AND NO WHERE 10 60 K' - . Welsh When His Mother Died H'1 Salvation Army Acts. BBf BH Denver, Colo.. April 14. Twolvo BH year old Carl Welch stood rit the bed- BBM aide in the room of Captain Lottie BBA Schell of the Salvation Army watch- BBj ing his mother die nt 11 o'clock Tues- BBM ilay night, and when the cold fingers BBj relaxed their hold on the small warm BBW hand of the boy, ho turned to Captain BK Schell and said, "Now I'm nil alone BBJj and don't know where to go." H The Salvation Army is caring for BBJr Carl and will continue to care for him. B- Thnt is their work. K On March 1G, Mrs. Rosa Welch of BBBT Grccly had written to Captain Schell BBJ that she was "in need of a friend" BBJ, and was going to seek thnt friendship BBJ at the Snlvation Army. Sho explained BBJi that sho was a widow with one child. BBJi "I wnnt to come to Denver to work BBJ, and keep my boy in school. The great BBf, cold world looks so big and terrible to BK a woman battling life alone. I have a BBj serious trouble with my throat which BBJl if left alono may provo fatal, but I BBJ L cannot and must not die nnd leave my Hf boy alone. I've got to help make a BBP man of him. BH ' "I want him to have schooling, for BH he wants it too. He studies hard, is BBj good and industrious and helps me by BH working after school and always pre- BBj tends that he had rather work than BH play when I tell him how I wish life Hj wcro easier for him." V When Captain Schell,' in clmrgc of BBj relief work for the Salvation Army, BBJ received the letter, she straightened BBj her shoulders, put' on her bonnet nnd BB went to the Union Station to meet BB'- the train from Greeley and there she Bfl found Mrs. Welch, her face drawn Bfl with pain, leaning heavily on the shoulder of her little son as she groped her way through the tunnel to the sunlight. With true Samaritan spirit, Cap tain Schell did not wait to make ar rangements for hospital care, but took the woman and child to her own room whero death followed them. Tho boy, sturdy ns a litlo oak, witli blue eyes, golden hair and a sprink ling of freckles across his straight nose, is facing his loss like a Spartan. "She wouldn't wunt mo to cry," he said "but wheat's a fellow to do when his mother's gone," nnd straightway Carl Welch cried like a child who is being cruelly hurt. Jn the Snlvation Army's Home Ser vice budget, ndoquato provision is be ing made for cases such as these and an appeal for1 funds to take care of these cases will bo made during "Res cue Week," April 12, to 20. PROBATE AND GUARD IANSHIP NOTICES i h For Further Information Consult the County Clerk or the Respective Signers. Estate of Elizabeth L. Corry. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to tho undersigned at Cedar City, Utah, on or before Juno 23rd, 1020. ELIAS M. CORRY, Administrator. J, M. Poster, Att'y. for Adminis trator. (First Apr. 23 Last May 11, 1920.) LOST. Waterman Ideal fountain pen with two gold bands around it. Finder please return to Ianthe Mathe son at Record OHice for reward. lw. pd. w Tlie Record is in recipt, too lnte for use this issue, of correspondence from Kannrra nnd Harmony. Tho impor tant items will apepar next week. America's Tribute to Its Heroes BBl mmfSf , A bbI V i $$fa$ Sfv'PW?5?W y BBBBB JbBBjHRv JrBBBE2tHbtBK! H'BBsiBs v. jattf BBBBM SPWi&JS'iF'"Wlv BBBBBl x "TjTi j f iwW9i wywtt ti w JSiiMniPf r ? & &''! i&H VwV"i& . $ BBBBsb Hint for i$luBsV vAffBEMMMkVBBFttfiBiBB Ba V BBBilwJLiifiCSSSMSTP! Bflj pince-nez nnT BH deliberation. 'Ington Ampltheater, tho Unltod 810168' groat tribute to BB "Isn't this yillor and marine hero dead, located at Arlington Come. H remarknblo yo-'otomao at Washington, D. C, Is nearlng completion and BBl " dfwlnrol "Whated this year O A. R., Spanish-American and World BBl ' )vTo,'iw iiwdors will ofllclato Tho structure cost a million dollars BBl f. anyuiing ji tombB for co bod08 u w) roqulro a special net BS,' If " "aU sca' to lntor within tho memorial. President WIlBon and BH , x American B;.8njn nave uoon a8ied to make the principal addresses BB'j, father's old-f v BJH undcrtnnd It BB "borry, plol , BS I told y BB repllwl. 'IV BJBBmimi1i i n pJb . i.. .,.. i. ..... ' WK UTAH WEEKLY , INDUSTRIAL REVIEW , Continued strikes nnd labor agita tions aro adding steadily to the aU ready "high cost of loafing." How long before wc will see this? It takes operating industries to fill the dinner pail and dining table. I April If) Ogden is planning a new I25,000 sewer system. J Logan roads arc to be repaired. . Ogden 200,000 pounds of TNT is en route for state road construction. Salt Lake Utah Light & Power Co. lias asked permission to extend lines into Juab County. Ogden Wireless phones are to be I Installed at 4 points in district No. 1 I where fire hazard is greatest. ' Annlgamatcd "Sugar Company ( secures enough beets to operate a fac- j j tory west of Ogden. I Salt Lake Western Union pre paring to expend over $100,000 in lo cal improvements. Ogden A concrete lining is to bo placed in the Davis and Weber coun ties canal to prevent seepage. Cost $8,000. After reading thnt a $70,000,000 government powder plant was sold for $8,500,000 with $&,000,000 worth of materials thrown in for good mea sure taxpayers begin to see where their money is going. Eureka Good progress is being made with sinking at East Tintic Ogden-r-Devclopment plans aro ar ranged by the Chnmber of Commerce to include tho installation of n credit rating bureau, organization of a traf fic bureau and tho installation of a publicity man nt the Union Depot. Salt Lake $00,000 contract let to drain 2,095 acres of land 4 in Davis county. ' A flying school i3 promised Ogden. Altn Pumping operations resumed at Emma Mine. If the farmers of tho country do not secure common 'labor soon to help till the soil, wo will face n food famine in the not far distant future. Ogden Pncking and Provision Co. increased capitalization from $2,000, 000 to $3,450,000. Salt Lake Granite Furniture Co. increases capital stock from $50,000 to $100,000. Gateway Union Pacific R. R. pro poses to build double track through Weber Canyon. Tho Cache Valley canned milk out put was valued at $4,000,000 in 1919. Weber County has best outlook for good beet season in years. Thcro seems to be a nation wide demand in the interest of industry that so-called excess profits tax be romoved. Ogden Paving of Ogden canyon contemplated at cost of $250,000. Garland is to have new water sys tem. Ogden Now Hour mill nears com pletion. . With tho world wide demahd And shortage of crude oil the wonder is thnt gasoline is not higher priced. The stato paid $09,914.80 in animal bounty in 1919. 300 nrmy trucks aro to be furnished the state for road work. Ogden Sperry Flour Co. is to build new offices. Beaver City Propose to bond Bea ver county for $125,000 for roads. Will give $300,000 in all. Price city limits are to be extended. Salt Lake Prince 'Consolidated shnft is going down rapidly. i Ogden New box factory starts op erations. Provo Work resumed on new I building of state insane asylum. - j Eureka Tintic Standard mill con- struction under way. Eureka Lchi-Tintic to install ven tilating equipment. Logan Work resumed on canning plants which was stopped by strikes. Provo Site for new armory has been chosen. Banks aro doing more than over before to co-opcrnte with communi ties in cncoui-nging industrial devel opment. ' Ono hundred forty-five thousand horsepower is undeveloped in Utah. For Dental X-Ray Service see Drs. Thorley or Petty. A PREVENTION, NOT CURE, IS MOST IMPORTANT (Continued from first page.) fit employe is an asset and a healthy mnn or woman is a productive agent nnd not an impediment. It is useless to apply the principles of hygiene in one group, or to follow , out some principles and not apply this generally turnout both schools and industries. One of tho principal aids to proper physical development is the wearing of hygenic clothing, loose, elastic, proper fitting. This must bo the rule among- groups nnd not the exception. The fresh air habit day and night, I must bo taught and practiced. Clenn liness of body nnd environment must be inculcated and prncticed. On these similar lines a new aristocracy the physically fit will be built up. The whole nation every class 'must participate, and take pride in this undertaking. Its effects will rench nil. Children in our care, in our home , or in our town, demand this much of us, and the least return wo can make in behnlf of our future citizens is to see that they have health as a foun dation on which to build their nm bitions. "Our boys" have been fighting I "Over there" for liberty nnd democ racy, they fought for us and they can demand this of us nnd nothing less. If we are fighting for democracy, let .us see to it that democracy is made 'equal to its responsibilities. For Dental X-Ray Service see Drs. Thorley or Petty. Adv. tf. 4 1 piii Mnyor Arch Swapp returned the first of the week from n rather ex pended trip into southern California where tho Mayor has sheep interests. President Wjlford Day of the Iron County Construction Company is in Snlt Lake City this week for tho pur pose of submitting a bid for his com pany on the projected Lund-Cedar road, to the State Road Commission. Mrs. Jane S. WJlkinson was a pas senger on the south bound bus Inst Monday on her way to Hurricane to visit with her son, Dr. II. II. Wilkin son nnd receive some medical treat ment. II. J. Doolitlo of Lund is in Snlt Lake City this week on business. Tho Misses Mcll Corlctt nnd Agness Coss lctt, lessees of the Root Hotel nt Lund have also been Salt Lake visit ors for the pnst couple of weeks. Uncle David Bulloch returned from St. George last week, where he has been doing ordinance work in the temple. His wife, Mrs. Alice Bulloch nnd Mrs. Caroline Schoppmann, who accompanied them, remained for n week or two longer. Attorney C. E. Norton of Snlt Lake City, who is a son-in-law of our old friend, John T. Mitchell of Pnrowan, was in Cedar City last Wednescday en route to the county seat, hnving a case in tho district court wiich has been in session there the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Heyborno have a golden wedding coming in about a year and a half if both tho good people arc spared to each other that long, which seems altogether probable. This long backward winter is rais ing the dickens with the contents of coal bins and wood piles. On tho whole, wc believe the ice man is less to be feared than these fuel sharks, and wc would like to try n chango anyhow. Mrs. Jane Lambeth returned home Wednesday from a very pleasant visit to relatives in Salt Lake City and in Millard county. Sho reports that Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Goddnrd are very com-' fortably located with their family in Salt Lake. Have a nice home nnd Mr. Goddnrd has a good position fn a gro cery store. Tho seventh grade of the district school is preparing to issue n school paper next week. It is to be a neat eight page sheet, with pages about half the size of this paper. The pro ject is being handled almost exclus ively by the students, who will write the articles, attend to the business and conduct nil departments of the work. Well, the weather seems more pro-) pitious for spring today than it has' hitherto done. Voluntary weather observer, Parley Dallcy reports that there has ben a precipitation of 10 inches in Cedar City during tho pnst winter. Mr. Dnlley has promised to furnish us with n comparative table of the moisture during recent years, which, will, we arc sure, be interesting to. our readers. j o Mr. John M. Macfarlane of Snlt Lake City, Mrs. Urio Macfarlano and her little son of the snme place, and Mrs. Brig. Wullfenstein of St. George passed through Cedar last Mondny af ternoon on their way to Lund. Tho two former were returning home from n visit to their former homo at St. George and tho latter was on her way to Beaver to attend the funeral of her son's young wife, who died in Salt Lake City and was sent to Beaver for burial. Recent visitors to St. George state that the weather has been extremely cold thorc lately for this time of year. Mrs. Christina Wcstcrhold, who has been visiting for some time with her daughter, Mrs. Nancy Lunt, at Bunk crville, has returned home. Mrs. David Gibson returned from the northern part of tho state last Friday. She went about three weeks ago to visit her son Murl. who has been attending school in Logan and' also relatives in Salt Lake and Provo. Mrs. Sarah Ann Bulloch, who has been in St. George for some time, do ing temple work, is homo again. Mrs. Bulloch states that the weather has been none too warm for comfort in St. George. Loynl Corry, Carl Carpenter, Rhone Hunter. Emron Jone3 nnd Jim Uric have each received letters from Church headquarters giving notice of mission ary work. Most of the young men aro planning to leave early in Juno for their respective fields of labor. a Coach Christenscn of the B. A. C. left todny for St. George, where a field and track meet is to be held with tho Dixie Normal tomorrow. On the 30th inst. a divisional track and field meet, in which eight teams arc expected to participate, is to bo held on the B. A. C. campus in this city. The misses Rhoda Palmer, Irene Thorley, Gwen Williams and Evelyn Pnlmcr returned homo this week from their schools in northern counties, where they have been teaching tho pnBt winter. Tho schools in many of tho outside counties seem to be clos ing rather early this spring. An effort is being made by Direct or Frisby to get more members into the choir. This is one of the import ant organizations of the church and should receive the support of every one who can sing. There fs excellent opportunity for tho improvement of one's ability in tho choir and boing under such good management should be worked up more than it has been by people who should be interested in becoming members. Well, by heck! Wonder if it will ever stop storming and give us a littlo spring weather. It is just one snow after another, and the roads and land is kept in such a mess that nil spring work is retarded. Even tho Clenn-Up-Cnmpaign last week was nil shot to pieces, nnd scarcely anything rrromplished. The report cpmes from Washington county that practically all tho peaches have been destroyed with the frost, and it is further learned that nearly all the peach trees in Utah and Box Elder county have been winter killed. Tho apricots havo been frozen hero it is stated and there is little hope of tho peaches escaping. The prospects for fruit are decidedly slim for this season. It is just one d thing after another. Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Rogcrson of Enoch are in Cedar City today doing business. They arc selling out their interests nt Enoch nnd will move to Salt Lake. Mrs. Rogcrson, who has corducted the store there for the past eight or ten years, and hns carried a very complete line of general mcr chnnise, is selling out their stock of good. The Rogersons have been good and progressive citizens of Enoch, nnd hnvo rendered services there thnt will be missed when they arc gone. Lack of loyalty to the homo store on tho part of tho Enoch people is ascribed as the reason for their closing out the store and removing to Salt Lake City. An advertisement of the sale of their stock of merchandise will be found in this issue of The Record. Shooting the Mines. M)(AiQiuuL V.l4ft ihBHB BBBBCkW3Vv' BBBBBBMB'''WSlBBiFvr dBBBBBBflTT.'syBjSBBuB & bbbbbbbbYbbYI K 4eVVe3b9Ibbbb1 flBBBBBBBBBBtfuiHmBMkBBl jtsjPMNBMPjBBBBBBBBBBBBBBvVBfBBH bbVIbbbbbsbbbI The U. S. Mine Sweeping DtfcMh merit has Ju.it returned from tm wck In the North Spuh. The arr juremat danger of flouting mine was nwiitor actcd by the sharp eyesight of ttio men who were behind the rom. Ttalr Job wrb to pick off thr mlnc m titry appeared and explode then by dfoct hits. The IWes of the otfctr ami nbonrd and the safety of tltt hip do- pended en their keenness. A large proportion of th 56,000 mines laid la the North Sens by the U. H. Navy was destroyed In thk wy. This Is Just on of the Job that Conies In the career of a V. 8. tatfot ; one e T experiences tfcat Its hfc a grip on hbtsMlf and mas hUa a regular fellow. Do you want a bigger and taor beautiful Cedar City? Then voto yea on the bonds May 1. There seems to be quito an epidemic of colds, bronchitis and somo pneu monia abroad in tho land at prcseat. The sickness is possibly duo to ttw unusual climatic conditions which hare prevailed, this spring. MARY AND HER LAMB JOIN IN PARADE BBBs"9M PJ'Af'' ?'!'''' '.'-BBx9iflfi iBBAEjaW If Mary Rogers of Atlantic City, N. J., has her way thcro will bo an addition In tho future to Easter living symbols. Mary would havo neither a bunny nor bnby chicks for her Easter parado on tho board walk at Atlantic City Instead Mary and her littlo lamb wero thorc as shown horo. t MSBBaSaBBHBWHBBiSMMBMiaSiSSBBBBHSBiHBIISBBMSHaSHSStaWMHSHHMSHSi MRS. HOUSEWIFE THERE'S more of a trick to House-Cleaning than hard work. We are always on the alert for little things that will lighten that necessary evil House cleaning. KLEENWELL wall paper cleaner like soft dough but brightens up your wall paper wonder fully when nibbed over the soiled surface 35c jk' ,, , a package ; 3 for $ 1 .00. NIAGRA CREAM PASTE The softest silver polish ever made cannot injure finest articles, and makes silver like new 75c. per package. t' t , LIQUID GLOSS The easy polish to applyV Makes ( & ' old furniture look like new. Fine for polished J $ V." floors, and reasonable in price. 35c. a can. .I'M ''" " STERIFOAM Have you scrubbed in vain on the ' ugly brown stains on porcelain bath tubs, toi- , . t lets, etc.? Sterifoam will take them off for you. 4 ' ' - Can and brush for 35c. Cedar City Drug Co. "THE Slexall STORE" FllMI.BsMIWMstMssllMMrn.lWfMlM 4