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Show THE SALIN A SUN. SALINA, UTAH Coat That Christ Wore on Calvary The cathedral at Treves, In Rhenish Prussia, Is said to contain the coat Jesus wore on the day of Ills crucifixion. Tradition states that It was found by the Empress Helena vtliile on n isit to the Holy Lund in the Fourth century and was deposited by her father for safe keeping In the In the Ninth cathedral at Treves. century the coat was concealed from Invaders In the crypt of the enuroh, hut was brought to light and solemnly ex liihi ted In lliifl. It was not shown again until 1512, when, owing to the Mist crowds that Hocked to see It, Pope Leo X decreed that It should be exhibited only once every seven years It Is said that In 1811 the (hereafter. coat was viewed by one million pil. grims in the course of a single In ESDI, the first time of its exhildllon since IS 11, It was seen by nearly two million pilgrims. However, at least twenty 'holy coats are exhibited urd said to have been worn by Christ fiat day on the bill called Calvary. Montreal Family Herald. A comparison with other spark plugs readily reveals Champion superiority of design and finish. A new Champion in every cylinder means more power and speed and a saving in oil and gas. Champion X is 60 cents. Blue Box 75 cents. wr-k- Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo, Ohio CHAMPION DtptnMobtt or New Primrose At the famous Kew gardens In London a primrose of great beauty has recently bci II cxhild ed. It is the n-- xz m? Jmr a? Makes It Unexcelled For AUToilet Purposes Primula rosea, a beautiful primrose from the Himalayas, which bus been flowering profuse!;, at the foot of the dripping well In tin Hock garden. It has rich cumene pink blossoms, which arc very effective, paiticuhuh when Hewed from a short distance This new primrose rani s among the best of all waterside plants, hilt It b said to be equally happy in otln-- t situations. It will grow in almost any soil, but preferably In a rich loam that contains a slight mixture of peat. INFLAMED EYES Boy Scout Saved Brother Uttf Dr. Thompson's Kyewattfr, Huy at Tourdruguittt'sor llCl UlTer. Troy, JS.Y. Booklet. W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. Just as his had fallen through the seven-year-ol- 26-19- 24. Big Sardinian Dam The dam d brother wlm Ice on a pond near Kalamazoo, Mich., was being drawn under the 'surface by the curScout Carl rent, fourteen-ycnr-olat peril of Ids own Johnson, life, plunged into the ley wntei and, securing a bold on the litth to him safety. fellow, pulled The scout then extricated himself from the waters grip and the broken hole, and promptly hustled his small brother home to recuperate from tin lee hath. Application for an honoi medal for the youthful hero 1ms beer made to tbe national court of honor by the local council. on the Tirso river In Sardinia, ollielally opened April 28, creates as urtlllelul lake with a capacity of 450,000,000 cubic meters of water, which will give an estimated unnuiil output of 50,000,000 kilowatt hours of electric power and irrigate 75,000 acres of land. The cheap power created by this dam will permit local electrolytic treatment of zinc ores, which have been exported hitherto, and will fuvor the development of other Industries In the region. This Is the first of several similar Uncle Joe Stands Pat projects in Sardinia to Increase the of Mr. Cannon, writes Speaking of the E. agricultural developments S., would you care to know Uncle Island. Joes creed? It Is a striking one and I copy It for you from my scrapbook : i Quebec I believe the Almighty organized this Planting Trees A contract for planting 10, 000 trees big corporation known as Immunity, on the MontrenMjuebec highway was Issued all the capital stock and is reawarded to a lolleite nursery by the sponsible for Its maintenance at par provincial department of highways value; and Ill he hanged If Ill part and roads. Half of these trees were with my holdings. Boston Tranto he planted tills spring and the script. other half next fall. This number is in addition to the 2,000 trees to be Penalty of Negligence planted by the lands ami forest de"Mi.zus just told me that partment for the account of the Luin (law Tarpy fell dead a spell ago key roads department. A total of 200,(HhI while chopping stove wood," excitedly plants will be necessary to Improve cried Mrs. Johnson, upon her return the scenery along the principal highfrom n neighborhood cull. ways in the western section of the ! ejaculated Gap Coodgoddlejnlghty province. That pore Johnson of Uumpus liidgo. feller might have been alive right Land Area in Japan now If be bad begun breaking Ills wife Tnpnn proper has a land nrea of In to do her work when they was first 147,055 square miles, or about Kansas - City Star. married. of that of the United States, , Idle Its population Is about poverty may ne a blessing In disof that of the guise to young people, but not to 50,000, 000, or one-hal- f old ones. United States. A Novel of the Foothills CHAPTER j j X 13 Continued, I know vvbat you mean," she said. much servility in It. And There's too yet one may pay these courtesies and not be servile. I always sird your father, and he knew I did It because I wanted to, not because I had to. And I shall do the same with you once v. e Understand eadi other." I think we can accept that as a working basis," he agreed. She prodmed notebook and pencil. Very well, sir. L)o you wish to dic- tate? Grant found a little apartment bouse on a side street, overlooking the lake. Here was a place where the vision could leap out without being beaten back by barricades of stone and brick. He re-this eyes on the distance, and assured the inveigling landlady that the rooms would do, and he would arrange for decorating at his own expense. As he was arranging the hooks on his shelf a clipping wllh the account of Zens wedding fell to the floor. Hit sat dow n in li is chair and read It slowLater he went out for a ly through. walk. It was in his long walks that Grant found the only real comfort of lii.s new life. To lie sure, it was not like roam-- ! Ing the foothills; there was not the soft breath of the Chinook, nor the deep silence of the mighty valleys. But there was movement and freedom and a chat ee to think. The city offered artificial attractions in which the foot-- I hills had not competed; faultlessly kept parks and lawns; splashes of perfume and color;, spraying fountains and vagrant strains of music. He reflected that some merciful principle of compensation has made no place quite perfect and no place enHe remembered tirely undesirable. also the toil of his life In the saddle; the physical hardship, the strain of long hours and broken weather. And here, ton, In a different way, he was In the saddle, and he did not know which strain was the greater. He was beginning to have a higher regard for the men in the saddle of business. The world saw only tlielr success. or, It may he, their pretense of success. But there was a different story from ail that, which each one of them could have told for himself. On this evening when Ills mind had been suddenly turned Into old channels by the (hiding of the newspaper clipping dealing with the wedding of Y.D.s daughter, Grant walked far into the outskirts of the city, paying little attention to Ills course. It was late October; the leaves lay thick on the sidewalks and through the parks; there was in all the air that strange, sail, sweet dreariness of the dying summer. . . . Grant had tried heroically to keep his thoughts away from Translcys wife. The past had rome hack on him, had rather engulfed him, in that little newspaper clipping, lie let himself wonder where she was, and whether nearly a year of married life had shown her the folly of her delusion. He took it for granted that her decision had been folly, and he arrived at that position without any reflection upon Transley. Only Zen had been In love with him, with him, Ocnni.-n- n Grant! Sooner or later she must discover the tragedy of that fact, and yet lie told himself lie was big enough to hope she might never dis- ed Will blind confidence lead you to physical disaster at age 31? This is the experience of the average American, United States Life Tables, 1920, indicate For the average person, health physical freedom and full vigor extends only from age 18 to 31. Then the slump. After 40, earnings fall oil rapidly. What do these startling facts (taken from the United States Lifo Tables, 1920) mean for you! It is time to check up. It is time to take stock of the present, and face the future with open eyes. Blind faith in the jpower of the human body to absorb punishment has failed miserably. Unwise eating, stimulated nerves, sleeplessness; disregard of the simplest laws of health; the lashing of the overwrought body to new exertions by tho use of drugs physical decay beginning at age oil This is tho tragic chronicle. Nature provides a danger signal-fati- gue to warn when tho body needs rest Certain drugs have the power to deaden the fatigue signal. One of tho most common of these drugs is caffeiu & drug classified as a poison. Tho nerago cup of coffea contains from I Mi to 3 grains of caffein a dose equal to that often administered by physicians in cases of heart failure. Caffein, by deadening tho danger signal of fatigue, appears to give new strength. Actually, this strength is robbed from the bodys own reserve stored up for lifes emergencies. Coffee contains no nourishment. Its only virtues as a beverago, r,ro its warmth and flavor. A good, hot, drugless drink is a benefit with every meal Millions enjoy such a drink in Postum. A drink made of whole wheat and bran, skillfully roasted, with a little sweetening nothing more. A drink with the rich, mellow, full- - of this wholesome grain. 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I wuttomiikesthirt.r-da- y testof Tostum. Plrase wad me, without cost or obli&Uou, week s one nippljr of Instant Tostoi . . . d Chet trAtcA Fobtcu Ckuau . . . you frtfer yma mm R- t- WNU Suit Lk city 40 By ROBERT STEAD half-opene- d 1 ... ing TEAR THIS OCT MAIL IT NOW forget. Only, I shall see you off; I shall wave my handkerchief to you; I shall smile on you In the crowd. Then you will forget. . . . Author of 77;e Cow Puncher "The Homesteaders Four years of war add only four "Neighbors," etc. years to the life of a man, according Copyright by ROBERT STEAD to the record In the family Bible, If he happen to spring from stock In usual girl who vus not afraid of hlin. as he had never done before, that they which t Hat sacred document is prelie had found that she was what he were children; that here and there served. But four years of war add called a good bead. She could take In the mass of humanity Is one who twenty years to the gray matter bea detached view; she was absolutely was born to load, but the great inass hind the eyes eyes which learn to itself itiust he children always, doing dream and ponder strangely, and fair; she was not easily flustered. sometimes to shine with a hardness Her step hud fallen Into swing with as they are bid. his. lie managed to say, that has no part witli youth. When My friends, You do not often visit our part of ve suddenly find ourselves in tre- Captain Grant and Sergeant Linder the city, she essayed. mendous times. Borne of you know my stepped off the train at Grants old You live here? attitude toward this business in which city there was, however, little to sug-- . we are engaged. I did not seek it; I gest the ageing process that commonly Nearby. Will you come to see? He turned with tier at a corner, and tried to avoid it ; yet, when the re- went on among the soldiers in the they went up a narrow street lying sponsibility was forced upon me I ac- great war. Grant had twice stopped I gave up an enemy bullet, but his fine figure deep in di ad leaves. Friendly domes' cepted that responsibility. tie glimpses could be caught through the life I enjoyed, rlie environment in and sunburned health now gave no uiiblinded windows. which I found delight, the friends I evidence of those experiences. Linder This is our home, sife said, stop- loved. Well our nation is now in a counted himself lucky to curry only an It has to empty sleeve. ping before h little gate. Grunts eye somewhat similar-positiofollowed the pathway to n cottage set go Into a business which it did not They had fallen in with each other hack among the trees. "I live here t seek, of which it does not approve, but in France, and the friendship planted with my sister and brother arid niotli-e- i which fate lias thrust upon it. It has in the foothills of the range 'country Father is dead, she went on hur- to break ff the current of its life and had grown, through the strange prun-ing- s and graftings of war, Into a tree riedly, as though wishing to piaee be- turn it into undreamed-o- f channels, fore him a quick digest of the family and we, ns Individuals who make up of very solid timber. Linder miglit affairs, "and we keep up the home by the nation, must do the same. I have living on with mother as boarders; already enlisted, and expect that withthat is, Grace anil I do. Hubert is in a few hours I shall he in uniform. still in .high school. Wont you come Some of you are single men of miliin? tary age; you will, I nm sure, take He followed her up tbe path and similar steps. For the rest the busiinto a little ball, lighted only by ness will be wound up us soon as poschance ra.s failing through a sible, so that you may he released for (lour. She did not switcli on some form of national service. You the current, and Grant was aware of will ah receive three months salary in a comfortable sense of her nearness, lieu of notice. Mr. Murdoch will look quite distinct from any office experi- after the details. When that has been ence, as she took his hat. In the livin- done my wealth, or such part of It as g-room her mother received him with remains, will be placed at the disvisible surprise. She was not old, hut posal of the government. If we win It widowhood and the cares of a young will be well invested in a good cause; family had whitened her hair before if we lose, It would have been lost Its time. anyway. We are glad to see you, Mr. Grant, No one knew just how the meeting she said. It Is an unexpected pleas- broke up, but Grant had a confused ure. Big business men do not often " remembrance of many handclasps and Mr. Grant is different, her daugh- some tears. lie was not sure that he I found him had not, perhaps, added one or two to ter interrupted, lightly. wandering the streets and I just re- the flow, but they were all tears of trieved him. friendship and of an emotion born of I think I am different, he admit-ed- , high resolve. . . . as his eye took in the surroundAs he stood in his own office again, ings, which he appraised quickly ns frying to get the events of these last attained through few days Into some sort of perspective, modest comfort, many little economics and makeshifts. Phillis Bruce entered. He motioned Elivllis is a great help to me and dumbly to a chair, but she came and I hope stood by bis desk. Her face was very Grace, the mother observed. In white and her lips trembled with the That Was When They Potted Him she Is a good girl in the office. No Mans Land. At this moment Grace and Hubert words she tried to utter. toI cant go, she managed to say at have told rame in from the picture-shoyou of the time his captain to length. turned and conversation the found him with his arm crushed under gether, Cant go? I dont understand? a wrecked piece of artillery, and Grant lighter topics. Mrs. Bruce insisted on Hubert lias joined, she said. could have recounted a story of being serving tea and cake, and when Grant found that he must go Ihyllis accomHubert, the boy Why, he is only dragged unconscious out of No Man In school panied him to the gate. Land, but for either to dwell upon He is sixteen, and large fop his age. these matters only aroused the resentThis nil seems so funny, she was He came home confessing, and say- ment of the other, and saying. "You are a very remarkable frequently led man. ing it was his first lie, and the first to exchanges between captain and I think I once passed a similar important thing he ever did without sergeant totally incompatible with consulting mother. He said he knew military discipline. They were conopinion about you. She extended her hand, and he held he wouldnt be able to stand it if he tent to pay tribute to each other, but I have not changed told her first. it for a moment. each to leave his own honors unherhe said, as he reFoolish, but heroic, Grant com- alded. my first opinion, leased her fingers and turned quickly mented. "Be proud of him. It takes First thing is a place to eat, Grant more than wisdom to be heroic. down the pavement. remarked, when they had been disAnd Grace is going to England. She missed. Words to similar effect had, was tnking nursing, you know, and indeed, been his first remark upon CHAPTER XI so gets a preference. We cant all every suitable opportunity for three ' Grant's first visit to the home of his leave mother. months. An appetite which has been He to difficult was found his not it last, speak. You four years in the making is not to be private stenographer and the news leaked out, as It Is sure wanted to go to the Front? he man- satisfied overnight, and Grant, being to do in such cases. The social set aged. better fortified financially against the Of course; where else? confessed to eing on the point of bestress of a good meal, sought to be Her hand was on the desk; his own always lirst to suggest it. Linder acing shocked. Two schools of criticism developed over the five oclock tea slipped over until It closed on It. cepted the situation, with the comYou are a little heroine, he murtables; one held that Grant was a placence of a man who has been four gay dog who would settle down and mured. years on army pay. Im a little fool to No, Im not. Got any notion what you will do?' marry in Ills class when be had had his fling, and the other that Ihyllis tell you this, but how con I stay said Linder, when the meal was finBruce was an artful hussy who was why should I stay when you are ished. Not the slightest. I dont even quite ready to sell herself for the gone? She was looking down, but after her know whether Im rich or broke. I And there were so Grant millions. many eligible young women on the confession she raised her eyes to his, suppose if Jones and Murdoch are market, although none of them were and he wondered that he had never still alive they will be looking after known how beautiful she was. lie those details. Doing their best, doubtdescribed ns artful hussies! Grant's behavior, however, placed could have taken her in his arms, but less, to embarrass me with additional him under nc cloud in so far ns social something, with the rower of Invisible wealth. What are you going to do? Dont know. Maybe go back and opportunities were concerned ; on the chains, held him back. In that supreme moment a vision swam before work for Transley. contrary, he found himself being showThe mention of Transley threw ered with Invitations, most of which him ; a vision of a mountain stream he managed to decline on the grounds backed by tawny foothills, nnd a girl Grant's mind back Into old channels. When such as beautiful as evei. this Phyllis, who, He had almost forgotten Transley. of pressure of business. had wrapped 1dm In her arms . . . lie told himself he had quite forgotten an excuse would have been too transparent lie accepted and made the best nnd said. We must go and forget." Zen Transley, but once he know he lied. That was when they potted him of It, ami he found no lack of encour- And he had not forgotten. . . . When he did not respond she drew in No Man's Land. As he lay there, agement in the one or two Incipient Y'ou will hate waiting he knew he had not amorous resulted. herself slowly away. flurries which And he had thought many From such positions lie always suc- me, she said. forgotten. That is impossible, he corrected, times of Ihyllis Bruce. At first he ceeded in extricating himself, with a I nm very sorry If I have had written to her, but she had not quiet smile at the vagaries of life. He quickly. had to Admit that some of the young let you think more than I intended. I answered Ids letters. Evidently she women whom lie had met had charms care for you very, very niuoti indeed. meant him to forget. Nor had she of more than passing moment; he I care for you so much that I will not come to the station to welcome him let you think I care for you more. Can home. might easily enougli find himself chasPerhaps she did not know. you understand that?" ing the rainbow. . . . , Many tilings can happen Perhaps Yes. You like me, but you love in four years. But his attention was at once to he turned to very different matters. A some one else." Suddenly it occurred to Grant that stock market, erratic for some days, it might be a good idea to call on He was disconcerted by her Intuiwent suddenly Into a paroxysm. Grant tion and tbe terse frankness with Ihyllis; He would take Linder along. That would make it less personal. He escaped with ns little loss as possible which she stated the case. I will take you into my confidence, knew his man well enougli to keep his for himself and his clients, and after three sleepless nights called his staff rhyllis, if I mny," he said at length. own counsel, and eventually they I do like you ; 1 did love some one reached the gate of the Bruce cottage, They crowded into the together. hoard-room- , else. And that old attachment Is still as though by accident. curious, apprehensive, almost frightened, and he looked over so strong that it would be hardly fair Lets turn In here. I used to know It would be hardly fair them with an emotion that was quite these people. Mother and daughter; new to his experience. Even In the Why didnt you marry her? she very fine folk. , aloofness which their standards had demanded. (TO BE CONTINUED.) made it necessary for him to adopt "Because some one else did." "Oil !" there had grown up In Ills heart, Satisfactory a tender, sweet Iler hands found his this time. Tm So you want to marry my daughquite unnoticed, men these foliage of love for sorry," she said. Sorry I brought ter? What Is your financial standing? and w omen who were a part of this up sorry I raised these memWell, sir. Ive figured out every exIlls machine. Now, as he looked in ories. But now you who have known emption possible; I've had the best tlielr faces lie realized how, like little will know legal advice that money would secure; "I know I know," he murmured, Ive done everything I could do to children, they leaned on him how, like little children, they feared Ills raising her fingers to his lips. . . . dodge It and I still find that I cannot Time, they say, Is a healer of all escape paying an Income tax." power and his displeasure how, perTake her. She's yours." Boston haps, like little children, they had wounds. Ferhaps " oo. He realized. j learned to love hi No. It U better that you should Transcript "Oh, Miss Bruce, I Beg Your Pardon. I Am Glad to See You. cover it. It would be best that she should forget him, as lie lind almost forgotten her. There was no doubt that would t best. And yet there was a delightful sadness in thinking of her He still, and In ping that some day was never aide to complete the thought. He had been walking down a street of modest homes; the bare trees groped into n sky clear and blue with tbe first chill presage of winter. A quick step fell unheeded by bis side; the girl passed, hesitated, then turned and spoke. You are preoccupied, Mr. Grant." Oh, Miss Bruce, I beg your pardon. I am glad to se you." Even at that moment he had been thinking of Zen. and perhaps he put more cordiality Into his words than he intended. But lie had grown to have considerable regard. on her own account, for thla un- - |