FINE AS HOG’S HAIR
Among the personal papers collected by Vera MarsdenWilliams were several
newspaper write-ups about her husband, Joseph Elmer Williams, who was a prominent figure in the L.D.S. Church, the Blackfoot community, and the State of Idaho. One of the articles, in particular, revealed things
about Elmer that were new to me. I thought you would be interested in seeing this column that was probably printed in the Boise newspaper after Elmer began serving his
first term as Idaho State Senator in 1938. Since the
photocopy of the article is difficult to read, the transcription follows:
“If a one-word description would be applicable in the
case of the senator from Bingham County, he might be termed ‘different.’ Two hundred pounds of well-trained bone and
muscle with a capacity for tongue lashing when the occasion arises, Senator
Joseph E. Williams stands out already as an able legislator, although this is
his first senate term.
“As evidence of
his willingness to stay in the background, however, many senators didn’t know
about Williams for some time, not until he got up last week in opposition to a
bill which would raise salaries for the public utility commissioners. Then in
forceful language, and with the scowl of a wrestler which he has been for 25
years, he pounced on the pay raise issue with all fours as fellow senators sat
back in surprised admiration.
“Practically everything about this amiable senator is
different, from his closely cropped pompadour to his ability to sling the king’s
English. When you ask the senator how he
feels, he doesn’t resort to the common place, unimaginative ‘okay’ or ‘first
rate,’ but tells you ‘as fine as hog’s hair.’
And as for his nationality, he tosses this forceful phrase back at
you: ‘I’m a Scandinavian Welshman, and I
sing Irish songs.’
“After he left the University of Utah, it seems young
Williams asked his dad for a team of horses and a wagon to get started in
farming. His dad refused and told him
instead, ‘I’ll give you the whole state of Idaho to make a living.’ As it developed, Williams took the whole
country, moving about as a wrestler from match to match and city to city. But a sense of sportsmanship turned him
against many of the phases of the modern theatricals of the grunt and groan
business, and eventually he was back in Idaho running a ranch and dealing in
livestock.
“Meanwhile, came marriage and subsequently four little
wrestlers and two girls. However, only
one of the four boys actually turned to the mat game, and he, Marsden Williams,
went far enough to win a couple of amateur crowns.
“The Senator, president of the Blackfoot LDS Stake, has
been a member of the school board for many years. Out of the campaign he has coined an
expression, based on the lines made famous by Bottolfsen[1]
during campaign days: ‘I have observed,’
declared the senator, ‘that honesty and simplicity go together. Complex methods bring corruption.’”

I love it! I've always believed in simplicity.
ReplyDeleteloved this!
ReplyDeleteYou look like your mother! And your grandfather sounds as if he knew just when to throw his weight around or when to simply stand strong!
ReplyDeleteGreat blog Cathy, loved your article about Joseph Elmer Williams!
ReplyDeleteThe picture of him in his woollies hangs in our dining room. What a man! "Fine as hogs hair".....I'm going to use that in conversation today. :) Thank you so much for doing this blog. What a blessing!
ReplyDelete