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Show 15 FRIDAY FEBRUARY The Senator From Sandpit Mrs. Cowley read it, I am sure they would appreciate its beauty. When I am dead and nervous hands have thrust My body downward into careless dust, I think the grave would not suffice to hold My spirit prisoned in the sunless mould. Some subtle memory of you would be A resurrection of the life to me. Yes, I would be, because I love you so. The speechless spirit of all things that grow; You could not touch a flower but it would be Like a caress upon the cheek of me. I would be patient in the common grass That I might feel your footfall should you pass. I would be kind as rain and pure as dew, Just a loving spirit around the life of you. When your soft cheeks by perfumed inds were fanned Twould be my kiss and you would understand. But when some sultry, storm bleared sun had set There is a woman at the beginning of all great things. Lamartine. And the deepest tenderness a woman can show to a man, is to help him to do his duty. I would be lightning if you dared forget. Henri de Mondeville (1260-1320) described the fades of leprosy University of Colorado School of Medicine was originally organized in 1883. In 1911 it merged with another medical school and became integral part of University of Colorado. In 1924, complete medical school plant was opened on the university campus at Denver. 18 FEBRUARY AUGUST 12, 1935. Funeral To Be Held Tuesday CHURCH CAREER Mr. Ridges was born September 5, 1866, in Salt Lake City, a son of Joseph H. and Ann Agatha Pratt Ridges, pioneers of 1847. He received his education in Salt Lake City and moved to Ogden in 1891. He married Letitia Chambers in the L. D. S. Salt Lake temple February 26, 1896. Mr. Ridges had been a member of Weber stake Sunday school board; the high council of the Oneida L. D. S. stake, superintendent of Fairview, Idaho, ward Sunday school, member of the Mount Ogden stake high council and a counselor in Mount Ogden high priests quorum. He also filled a mission for the church to the southern states from 1892 to 1894. He was a member of the state industrial school board several years and had been manual training instructor at Weber college and South Washington school. FAMILY MEMBERS He is survived by his widow, seven sons and daughters: Eugene C., Wilford Owen Ridges, Jr., Lowell W., J. Harris and John M. Ridges, Mrs. Milford Piggott and Mrs. Lloyd W. Keller, all of Ogden, and five grandchildren. He is also survived by six brothers and sisters: Mrs. Clara Bell Pike, Mrs. Louie Carpenter, Mrs. Berniece Haddock and Beatrice Ridges, all of California; Mrs. Florence Dean, Shelley, Idaho; and Joseph P. Ridges, Salt Lake City. WILFORD O. RIDGES Funeral services for Wilford Owen Ridges, supervisor of repair work in Ogden City schools, will be held Tuesday at two oclock in the L. D. S. Ninth ward chapel, with Bishop E. Smith Murphy officiating. Friends may call at the family home, 3162 Adams avenue, this evening and also Tuesday until one oclock. Interment will be made in Mount Ogden Memorial park under direction of Larkin & Sons mortuary. Mr. Ridges, 68, former bishop of the Ninth ward, died Sunday at the family home of coronary thrombosis with which he was stricken Saturday. |