Thursday, November 20, 2025

DEBATE: HONORABLE JUDGES, WORTHY OPPONENTS, AND FELLOW CLUB MEMBERS ~~~ ARTOPIC CLUB 1935

 Honorable Judges, Worthy Opponents, and fellow Club Members


1. That Short Men make better husbands because:
    a. They are more even-tempered than tall men.
    b. They are more economically dressed.
    c. You have a better chance of happiness with a small man.
    d. You will keep your youth and beauty longer.
    e. Your own work is more easily and quickly done.

These points I have just given may now sound irrelevant and preposterous just now.  However, I shall prove every single word I have said to your satisfaction.

Let us look at the small man stature to be outstanding in the world because of his inherited size.  But they have been all the mightier for it.  Let us look at Napoleon Bonaparte.  Never did there exist a greater general than he.  He was defeated you say-- of course he had indigestion.  Look at Confucius the greatest mind in Chinese history.  We know that he was described as being "as slight as a small woman".  Yet his words are as a religion in the world today.  It has been written that a man's greatness cannot be judged by his stature.  And so I say that I will prove to you on the above points that even as in history the small man triumphs in the matter of fitness as a husband.  Surely this fact matters more to us, the women of this generation, more than does his capacity for pulling trees, throwing bulls, or rubbing the paint off the ceiling with his hair.

I shall not prove my points with any stories from my own experience.  The fact that I am married to a man who could not be called tall, does not color my faith in the cause for which I argue.  Moreover, I feel that to bring personal experience and opinion into this debate would be to give my worthy opponents an unjust advantage.  You see, good friends, both my opponents are married--and my worthy colleagues is not.  So that to count experience as proof of argument would leave us in the dust.  And most unworthily.  However, it would not go too easily with our worthy opponents if I were so minded to speak from experience.  There is not one woman in our club who has more experience living with a tall man than I.  I have lived with a taller man than is any other man in town.  So were I to produce as evidence my experience with him, the result would be so shattering as to preclude any necessity for further debate.

But Now To My Argument:

   Small men are more  economically dressed.  This statement  almost goes without argument.  But just supposing for instance, that you were contemplating a pair of pajamas.  We all know that inexpensive ready-made pajamas are made in conservative sizes and that for a very tall man, they will hit him at the ridiculous point, just above the wrists and ankles.  And when they are washed and shrunk, you will begin to wish that you had ordered one of those hideous monstrosities--a nightshirt.  However, a small man may be fitted perfectly--and if they are a little long, you can cut the sleeves and legs off and provide yourself with some lovely quilt blocks, dishrags, or any such little items they may suggest, of course you perceive the argument.  Supposing you decide to make your husband's pajamas.  The same argument holds good here also, a small man will sleep comfortably in a pair made most lavish from four and one half yards of material but your lengthy better half will require at least five yards or maybe six.  Since I said I would not stoop to speak from my own experience, I could not do so.  But if I should speak I could tell of buying nearly seven yards of cloth for one pair of pajamas--but I will not speak from experience.  Contemplate, that I have only mentioned one item of clothing.  Everything else may be considered in the like manner.  Then there is the matter of shirt tails. Did you ever see the shirttail of a tall man waving in the wind?  Of Course you did.  Lots of times--he is most always too long between shoulders and waist to allow more than a half an inch to tuck in--therefore it flies out every time to he exerts himself--much to the embarrassment of his wife--or every woman in the vicinity.  But a small man always has inches to spare and tucks his shirt tails snugly about his knees so that he does not catch cold--and thereby saves on cough remedy and aspirin.  He needs feel no draft about his middle to keep you awake all night by his coughing.

The second point tells us that you have a better chance of happiness with a small man.  Just supposing that you were married to a burly six footer and the doors to your house measured exactly five feet and one half inches.  Your husband must concentrate each time he entered his house, else he will bump his head which would put him in an ill humor.  His brow will become wrinkled and corrugated with thought because of his intense efforts to concentrate.  He will no doubt become hunchbacked from going in and out doors too small for him--what will be the result--away will fly romance and love--who could love a cross, wrinkled faced man with a hunched back?

Our third point proves that you will keep your youth and beauty more easily married to a small man- think my good friends of the long legs and arms  of your burly big bruiser.  Think of the long cold nights when time after time you will waken to find yourself uncovered because he has moved an arm or a leg.  You will not get your rest, your beauty sleep that is so vital to your youth and beauty.

My last point proves conclusively that your work will be easier if your mate is small.  Your washings will be smaller--A small man cannot dirty as large a piece of clothing.  Your darning will be easier, his socks will not have such big holes because the socks are not as large.  His appetite is not so large and his smaller feet cannot drag in so much dirt.  His trousers are more quickly pressed--his legs are not so long.  I have not spoken from experience.

Finally I shall prove to you that WHO of the greatest men in history and in modern times would not make suitable husbands for you nor me--nor any other woman in this town.

In history let us take Abraham Lincoln.  He was a great man, I grant you that there is probably not a greater man in history.  He was a tall thin man well over six feet--just the type our worthy opponent would have you believe makes the best husband--and yet why would not you or I want Abraham Lincoln for a husband?  Because he is dead.

Now let us take a man of modern times.  Who better could I choose than Franklin D. Roosevelt, our President.  He is a large active man, with a charming personality, and not, I say Not one of you could bring yourself to marry him, charming and tall as he is-- Why? My dear friends-he is already married.  Thank You!

Sunday, November 16, 2025

ONA LOY PETERSON HOWELL







 Orem, UT) | Date of Publication: 17 Apr 2024

Obituary for Ona Howell

Ona HowellOna Loy Peterson Howell 83, passed away Feb 6, 2019, in Orem. She was born Oct 6, 1935, in Mt. Pleasant to John Albert and Ilene Charlotte Bailey Peterson. She married Donald Fay Howell Sept 15, 1954 in the Manti LDS temple. She spent most of her married life rising children and running a small daycare out of her home to help bring in a little money. Later in life she worked for the Mt. Pleasant hospital as a home health aide. She really enjoyed this work. Her hobbies included gardening, sewing, square dancing, family history, writing and art. She has always been very active in the LDS church holding many different callings and loved to volunteer where ever she was needed. She especially loved attending the temple and helping train missionaries at the MTC by acting as an investigator. She is survived by her daughters Marie Watts, Spanish Fork UT; Bethany Jo (Terry) LaDuke, Benson AZ; Julie (Alan) Paystrup, Levan UT; Verona (Steve) Johnston, Gering NE; Linda (David) Beck, West Point, UT; Carolyn (Ken) Kolling, Provo, UT; Sandra Heineman, Layton, UT; Dawn (Dale) Pearson, Charlotte, NC; Jenifer Howell, West Jordan UT; 25 Grandchildren, 28 Great Grandchildren, and two Great-great Grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, son John Franklin Howell, son-in-law Lance D Graham, brother Jay Rodney Peterson, Grandchildren Jared Harris and Boston Graham, and Great Grandchild Beau Graham. Funeral Plans: Viewing Thursday Feb 21, 2019 at Walker Sanderson Funeral Home 646 East 800 North Orem 6:00PM-8:00PM. Funeral service Friday Feb 22, 2019, 11:00 a.m, LDS Church 422 East Holdaway Road, Vineyard, viewing 10:00AM-10:45 a.m. prior to services. Graveside dedication Saturday Feb 23, 2019, 11:00 a.m, Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, 900 South 100 East, Mt. Pleasant. Memories may be shared, and condolences offered to the family online at www.walkersanderson.com . We would like to thank Bel Aire Assisted Living in Orem for their exceptional care of Ona over the past six months. We would also like to thank First Choice Home Health and Hospice for keeping her comfortable as her health declined.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

HAPPY BIRTHDAY DADDY ~~~ November 13, 2025 ~~~ Born November 13, 1902


 The true and loving story I want to tell here is one of my fondest memories.  My father went to Utah State Agricultural College in Logan, Utah, soon after he and my mother were married.  There, he graduated in Carpentry.  Soon after this time, World War 2 broke out, and because he was married and had two children.  He was then sent to San Diego, California, to help build airplanes at Consolidated Aircraft.   The men you see below are the men he worked with.  Lee Seely is the second from the left.  There was another from Ephraim, but I have forgotten his name.  

San Diego


My Father , William Neldon Rigby lived in San Diego during World War II. He left Mt. Pleasant to go to San Diego to help build airplanes for the war. My mother, Helen Irene Rodgers Rigby joined him later. My two brothers, Charles and Richard were just youngsters then. They lived north and east of Sandiego, a town named Linda Vista.  

They moved back home (Mt. Pleasant, Utah) after the war and I (Helen Kathrene) was born in 1947. My Younger brother, Gregory Peter was born in 1952.

On Memorial Day after my mother had passed away, my husband, my mother-in-law and our youngest son visited San Diego with the very purpose of finding out wher my parents once lived.

We had an old greeting card that my mother had saved with an address from one of her friends. I believe it was in Linda Vista, California. My husband and I walked up and down the streets not knowing which house they had lived in. A young woman came out of one of the houses and enquired what our purpose was. She then told me that I should talk to her grandmother Mrs.    Eps.

Mrs. Eps had been a good friend of my mother. My mother called her Epsy. She told me which house my mother and father lived in. She was very congenial. And during those few minutes that we stood there, I felt my mother's presence. It was such a wonderful experience.




Wednesday, November 12, 2025

CHARLOTTE STAUNTON QUINDLAN JOHNSON HYDE ~~~OBITUARY and History

 

One of the most popular pioneers of Mt. Pleasant is Charlotte Staunton Quindlan Johnson Hyde. 
We found this obituary recently and posted it here yesterday, which has given us some additional facts about "Aunty Hyde".
Aunty Hyde died at the home of Mrs. M.M.F.G. Morrison. 
(Mary Margaret Folkwar Cruickshank Morrison) 
was the Relief Society President at that time.
Aunty Hyde taught for 21 years.

Aunty Hyde taught the following students:
Emaline Seely Barton, Oscar Anderson, William Morrison Jr., Sylvester Barton, Joseph Nephi Seeley, Annie Porter Nelson, Melvina Clemensen Crane, Peter Johansen, Chastie Neilsen, Benta Neilsen, Peter Jensen, Allen Rowe, Henry Ericksen, Miranda Seeley Oman, Wilhemina Morrison Ericksen, Hans Neilsen, William D. Candland, Charlotte Reynolds Seeley, Sarah Wilcox Bills, Celestial McArthur Barton, William A. Averett, Amasa Aldrich, James B. Staker, Maria Tidwell Larsen, Libby Barton Averett, Morgan A. Winters, Eli A. Day, W.W. Brandon, Sarah Davidsen Wilcox, Maggie Peel Seely, Samuel H. Allen, Harry Candland, Albert Candland, Charles Averett, Hazard Wilcox and Hans Neilsen.



 



Charlotte Staunton Quindlan Johnson Hyde
You would think that a wife of Orson Hyde would be buried in Spring City next to him. You would think that she would have a very distinctive, monolithic marker of granite and stand very tall. Not so for Charlotte Staunton Quindlan Johnson Hyde. Of those many names by which she was called, we can only verify that her name was Charlotte Quindlan Hyde. She lived in Mt. Pleasant, taught school in Mt. Pleasant and died in Mt. Pleasant. Her grave marker is about 18 inches tall made of marble. You literally have to kneel down to read her epitaph there.

Charlotte Quindlen was born 22 of August 1802 at Lower Pensnock, Salem, New Jersey. Charlotte Quindlan was the name used at the Endowment House in Salt Lake City when she was sealed to Orson Hyde in 1852. The marble marker lists her as Charlotte Staunton Hyde as does the Mt. Pleasant History Book. Perhaps the name Staunton came from another marriage. From the dates we find that she was fifty years old when she married Orson Hyde.
The following is taken from the book “Orson Hyde Olive Branch of Israel”
“Orson Hyde was chosen as an original member of the Council of the Twelve in 1835, when the Mormon Church first organized this governing body. Orson's most well-known accomplishment was as a Mormon missionary to Jerusalem (1840-1842) to dedicate the land for the return of the Jews. Because his words have proven prophetic in the many decades since his entreaty, a peaceful garden on the Mount now honors him and his supplication. In 1979 civil authorities in Jerusalem invited the development of a five-acre hillside garden in honor of Orson Hyde.
“Orson Hyde was a remarkable individual. He received esteem in many roles, among them apostle, teacher, missionary, orator, scriptorian, journalist, editor, lawyer, judge, statesman, colonizer, and administrator; also as the husband of eight wives, the father of thirty-three children, a friend of mankind, and a servant of God.
MYRTLE STEVENS HYDE,
During the years 1850-1852 Charlotte Quindlin Johnson lived in Kanesville, Iowa at the home of Orson Hyde as a domestic assistant to his first wife Marinda. She was already a member of the L.D.S. Faith. She had been divorced from a man named Johnson. She was described as a seamstress who also liked children. She helped Marinda with her children Alonzo, Frank and baby Delila. She was with the Hyde Family at Winter Quarters and as they traveled across the plains to Salt Lake, arriving in 1852. Marinda and Charlotte got along very well.

Orson and Marinda discussed the possibility of inviting Charlotte to become a wife rather than a domestic. Orson had also married Mary Ann Price who for a time was a domestic in his household. Orson and Mary Ann were married in Nauvoo in 1843. Orson talked with Brigham Young about taking Charlotte as another wife and Brigham Young approved. Orson proposed to Charlotte, she accepted and they were sealed as husband and wife in the Endowment House 22nd of November, 1852. She was the fourth wife of Orson. Besides Marinda and Mary Ann, Orson had married Martha Rebecca Browett, who he later divorced in 1850. Martha went on to become the wife of Thomas McKenzie who also divorced her.

In the spring of 1853 we find Marinda, Mary Ann and Charlotte all living together under one roof in Salt Lake. Charlotte, however, was having a hard time adjusting to being a plural wife and departed the family, a mutual decision between she and Orson. They were separated, but never divorced. Brigham Young granted official separation for Charlotte and Orson Hyde in 1859.

Charlotte came to the Sanpete Valley long before Orson shows his influence here. It was during the “big move” with the earliest Saints first to Fort Ephraim, then north to resettle Mt. Pleasant. The first pioneers had been driven out of Camp Hambleton, located one mile west of the current city of Mt. Pleasant. She first made her living as a seamstress then as a school teacher while the settlers still lived inside the fort. A schoolhouse was then built outside the fort. She was fondly called "Aunty Hyde" by her students. She inspired many of her students to become teachers themselves.

In Mt. Pleasant History by Hilda Longsdorf the following description of Aunty Hyde school: “In a little log house about 12x15 feet, on the south side of the street on First North, about midway between State and First West, (in the area where Mary Ursenbach now lives-2008) Charlotte Staunton Hyde taught school. The building was also known and later used for Lesser Priesthood meetings and similar Church gatherings. Mrs. Hyde was a woman who no doubt had earlier in life received quite a liberal education, and although described as “a little old woman who smoked a pipe and was quite deaf,” she was affectionately called "Aunty Hyde". Many amusing stories were told of her school, but with all her students there remained pleasant memories. There being no handbell, as in later years, the children were always called from their play to the schoolroom with her familiar call, “To Books. To Books. To Books.””

“Mrs. Hyde lived in a little log house west of the school. She often brought her bread to the schoolhouse to bake. She had a skillet with a tight-fitting lid and in this, by heaping on it coals from the fireplace, which was in one end of the building, she baked the bread during school hours. She was paid for her services as a teacher with any produce or garden stuff available.
Mrs. Hyde taught for some time in the log meeting house in the fort. Many attended school. A number of the pioneers were polygamist families and usually were large families. In some cases the entire family had attended her school as was the case in Abraham Day’s family, Joseph, Abraham Jr., Eli A., Ezra, and Ephraim, children of the second wife, all attended; among others who also in later days became prominent citizens were her students Emaline Seely Barton, Oscar Anderson, William Morrison Jr., Sylvester Barton, Joseph Nephi Seeley, Annie Porter Nelson, Melvina Clemensen Crane, Peter Johansen, Chastie Neilsen, Benta Neilsen, Peter Jensen, Allen Rowe, Henry Ericksen, Miranda Seeley Oman, Wilhemina Morrison Ericksen, Hans Neilsen, William D. Candland, Charlotte Reynolds Seeley, Sarah Wilcox Bills, Celestial McArthur Barton, William A. Averett, Amasa Aldrich, James B. Staker, Maria Tidwell Larsen, Libby Barton Averett, Morgan A. Winters, Eli A. Day, W.W. Brandon, Sarah Davidsen Wilcox, Maggie Peel Seely, Samuel H. Allen, Harry Candland, Albert Candland, Charles Averett, Hazard Wilcox, and Hans Neilsen.

Although records show that Mrs. Hyde was not the first teacher in the community, in the Mt. Pleasant Cemetery on the south side of the center driveway, is a little marble slab now yellowing with age, upon which is engraved: “Charlotte Staunton Hyde, wife of Apostle Orson Hyde, born in Penn., Died in Mount Pleasant, December 3, 1881, age 78. At rest now---Through the kindness of pupils of early days, this stone is erected to her memory, she is the first school teacher in Mt. Pleasant.” M.M.F.C.M.”

Many, many children benefited from her talents, from her love, and from her example.


Monday, November 10, 2025

VELMA MAY MOOSMAN


 

Velma May Moosman

January 9, 1940 — November 4, 2025

Mount Pleasant

Listen to Obituary

Velma May Moosman, 85, of Mount Pleasant, Utah passed away on November 4, 2025. Velma was born on January 9, 1940 to her loving parents Leroy James and Guelda Rose Bucklar Moosman. Growing up in Circleville, Utah Velma enjoyed a childhood surrounded by friends, family and the wonders of small town life. Her family moved to Mount Pleasant while Velma was a teenager. Over her lifetime Velma lived in many new communities and grew through the new experiences and challenges she encountered along the way. She raised four children teaching them the importance of family, self-reliance and hard work. Velma loved to share her stories of growing up, and of her many adventures wandering through the deserts of southern Utah with her sisters. Later in life she enjoyed cooking, quilting, sewing and helping with humanitarian projects. Her family will forever be reminded of her each time they see a jigsaw puzzle strewn across a table ready to be assembled.

 

Mom shares this message:

“Thank you to family and friends for the contributions you made to my overly filled cup of life. No regrets, No should haves. The day has come that there are no more tomorrows for me. I want my family to know they were and will always be loved.”

 

Velma is survived by her four children; Deborah (Thomas) Rees, Holly (Kent) Rosenlof, Chad (Charese) Johansen, and Mary Johansen; 13 grandchildren and 21 beautiful great grandchildren; her sisters LuJean and RoseMarie.

 

Velma is preceded in death by her husband Roy Daniels; her parents LeRoy and Guelda Moosman; her sisters Mary Elizabeth (Harvey) Madsen and Jeneal Anderson; her brothers DelRoy John Moosman, Foster Valdean Moosman, and George LeRoy Moosman (stillborn).

 

There will be a Service of Remembrance for her family and close friends on Friday, November 14th, 1:00 at the Rasmussen Funeral Home, 96 North 100 West, Mount Pleasant, UT.

 

Velma will be dearly missed by all who knew her. Her love and sense of adventure will live on in the hearts of those she touched.

To order memorial trees or send flowers to the family in memory of Velma May Moosman, please visit our flower store.