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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH !WhqreCoolidges 500 Words Will Be Carved n't p r pi t Ci v r -V - J p ' s' 1 Ai.iT lu ' &?' ''Jr. 3? ' L--rs!S ztthizO c-::- I jj .'! ! c ."I n:!il !! ' f2?K3 If' sIa' t Rushropre mountain' in the Black Hills of South Dakota, on he surface of which will ,be. carved 'tbea history ;of the United States which Calvin Coolldge Is writing. The mountain Is being made into a national memorial bearing colossal heads of Washington,) Jefferson, Lincoln jand Roosevelt designed by Gutzon Borglum. ?. "m This' 500-wor- t Infant Mortality n '' '" ' ' Gut in Ten States Ten Washlrigtbn. states and new records In the reduction of ' Infant mortality during 1928. Recent Plague - of Insects anf Moses. tnterceded with the Lord. And ' the1 JiiOrd'' turned a mighty Repeti tion of Scourge strong i.weat' wind.!? whfclC took away tbe::;lo;ut.s, and-- cast them into the Related in Exodus, Red Sea." Ex.: 19. fn,H s Oregon maintained its lead with only forty-sevedeaths under one year of age for every n 1,000. V Washington second with state was forty-eigh- t. , t., : x., -- Basra; Ira k.- - Centuries ago, . long before Christ, a swarm of locusts descended upon Egypt ravished.; the (and, and was ,, later swept into the Red sea. , The Bibliai listoriun responsible fqr the book ' of ESodus re ported thd locusts, as. a plague sent by the Lord td punish Pharaoh for ' lying to the children ,of Israel. Pharaoh repented-- and the locusts were destroyed, writes Ernest Main In the CliiengoTrlbune, Now comes : a repetition of the plague and the locusts destruction. For weeKsmijlicinS of locusts, exceeding In numbers any; ever seen by Arabs here,:htnf been making a steady advance against .all efforts to stdp thelrTprogress. Natives of Basra ol- mosfTiad resigned themselves to the i? ever increasing swarms. Pests Blown Into Gulf.' almost7 all hen 'iWdehiy' tile stoppfhg7 destruction had hope of tn upw,jam,a ftrongNyind which t)lew jthejnjv.fppiis, pestft Into, the .Persian gulf, where they were dfnw.npdL ,crip1uil;,s(holafs; pe, th,e parallel between (jii((flflsqii,t .day. plague.; anil the eUvetitnye, am the, plague and fleliveraiicp offJie Israelites centuries ago..,) They.! read n,, Exodus, how .the Lar'jj visited ,h!s xyriathl!oii .the .Egyptians because Pharaoh jmd brokena to free the children of Israel. promise .IigiT sjI;SoS-- I went .'up over 'ail the laixt ,,pf, .,Eg;ypO;, u vtfvtor-othecovered,, t.he. fac.e,, of .,jthe whole,. earth, so that he land "Was 'darkened,' and tBey 'dld eat 'evel-- herb of the land. II'I Bx..;k.. .o'Kj ! " , , ! . : , s T H 9. O' .t I . ;wReadipgft on the ucrlptunl fstildgflt lharps, tha,t) Iliarapti jepiept,e() t of Jii fai'sehop(, pesopgb t Moses, Jfnrgi yepess , . pleted his mission. The two children are now adults, one being Mrs. Florence Lange Rolff of Union City, and the other George Lange .of North Ber- Magazines for Protection. .Ono curious result , of the present locjist; Invasion 'is, that American magazines have been sold at hlghi prices to the Arabs, Kho,wer unable to read them, Cbut who bought them gen. bf the colored pictures formed an unscalable td the tumbling masses of inWajlif sects But the fields have fain un pfotfortpile.'.iMiipit' under the , THE WQNDER DOCTOR , t swanni ppComlng C) n e. oi Tn l.days neyed camel driver,' who Jour-- J King Ibn , frotii, Nejd, gauds stronghold, H ',-- ,1 Mini !nf JI6 ir of Juiik, Wagon Gets Hi Owners in Bad p't3etoit.-t-Th- enibl.l ?iil . S d uii.-i- i French-Riviera- nionths probation., The "trouhfe was caused by Etcel-- ' sior, which is a, horse and the firtp3 'Excelsior! 'President, chief' asset! Vymtsett ejiplafned to 4u3ge 0, K, foy breaking St'eljn,', . Although the medical profession refuses to take him seriously, Valentine Zelleis, the wonder doctor" of Austria, treated 14,000 persons durltig 1929, 'mo3t Of them cured, according to his adherents. The doctor s uses high In his treatments. - , S' rj Gall-spa'c- h,' e parts found lb the wagon of the G. I. B. ,R. &, S.L Cm ,JB, hich Excelsior dralx-s.- ' Blears. 2 Whksetf 3aBrPrecb- court of ett, '&V jgrods, told,, " their great surprise"" when officers 1i l' I.;ifv feartL1 both figured found fief Steamer Sights Giant who was It'!must!hkve,been Ekceisidr : .l ili; lint i to bfpme., Waterspout in Pacific Jso tlie 'partbers are free !6n' pr6ba-- ' A Tacoma, - Wash. waterspout, ti'on with fiiatrubti'Anli "jiee'.'teAt &i observed from the decks of a rarelj celslor Is made1 to understand' the' modern ship, was. encountered by the and break- - steamer Ruth Alexander en route (arceriy gravity 'of 'grand .,T i ii ' i ,i tijp entering. ing and from here .to Los Angeles. i t. 'T lti Hi (apt. Fred Newton reported that he 4ii it i3l M H the, waterspout, of .ascending sighted Sister Get Keepsake s of ,a mile ;from type,, 12 Years "After "W the, vessel, yhe disturbed water, al the base formed a cone 50 feet wldje etrrs: ao In Kew and 100 feet high with a spiral con theArgoppei Joseph HasseuforclerjOf nection from thence to a cloud. Secaufiusnk- J gave- Le Gmnd .Charter.i ;lds sergeant, a locket containing at thet Plctnre of. ,twoi Children which; heis Deaf Mutes Are Married asked him; ito. take i pack to hie, sifter,,, al: Wordless, Wedding ti Charter, who now olives, at West. Orno Jm idea had N. AJont. Absolute but signifi.who;ithe l3te.r: .Butte, ange, iwas or where nhep, Jived, ..put, be.; cant. .silence reigned, from ,the beginjbnought the locket back to .the United; ning to the end of the marriage cereStates. mony which made Clarence W. RichRecently he read a newspaper item ardson and Blanche AL, Spavy man mentioning the" Hassenforder post of and wife. Both were deaf inutes. The 'the Ahierlcan lieglon, and from that magistrate wrote out the questions bn ' a .'sheet of paper, and in eabh casb source be found . that HassOnforders sister was Mrs, Maty Lange of1 North' the answer came' 'back trerimlousIy-- 4 ' Bergen. So at a meeting of thb' post as 'the"' wavering pencil revealed fcom-Charted ' In Setaacus recently ye I , J of-p- ,4 1 4111!;-- . . i y m i i . ! 1; ; three-quarter- ar fXockt-wifly- i , fi - - ; ; -, , , , nDf Wlllfdm Henry Welch'', whom tiie mlsdltialpfofession slgnnlly honored on h&TdlgiUietb birthday recently, boctor Which, who is a professor fit Johns, ; Hopklhs bhlversltyi' is khown as tbfi ' Dfeai 61 A mericaa Medicine." ' . .iTT A (I III,,,. 1. 1 t , , . . ( . ! ; ; , , , ilq . , , n 'f J , ; wns,,j-espj)rihl- i pt , - ) well-ke- . Bottle'1 Rag and !Sdrap Irbh Company oNirth; America1 ahd Eutope, 'Willie Whitsett, president, and Gantlln Pr-- ! chett,- 'trcfl silver, Isi tinder a cloud with its''owWrA1 abd bpeCat6rsHl on' 'six I j, little-know- ; frequency-apparatu- PR. WH, WELCH HONORED because of its change of but It is cbiefiy, the Spain of Madrid and the well beaten path between the easily accessible cities, that most tourists travels Most travelers have their first experience with the Spanish carablnero either at the customhouse of Iran, south of, Biarritz, or at Port Bou, on the Mediterranean side. Then they hasten. to Sun Sebastian, on one end of the Pyrenees, or to Barcelona, on the other, and after a brief stay, proceed to Madrid. Later, tf there Is time, to Toledo, and southward to Seville and Granada. Thus merely the high spots are touched, while the unlimited beauty and interest of Spain lying along the bypaths remain scarcely known and are still waiting to delight the venturesome traveler. n In seeking Spain one of the best places to start the quest Is on the Spanish Riviera, along the Mediterranean coast from Gibraltar to Almeria. The center of this district is the seaport of Malaga, a city of 150,000 Inhabitants, surrounded by a semicircle of mountains which forms a natural rampart against the cold from the north and gives to this delightful spot a mildness of winter climate unequaled in all Europe. As a general description of Malaga today, one need employ only three words : clean, modern, charming. Polite traffic officers perhaps one should say because they are dressed bobbles, in neat uniforms of British pattern direct the stream of automobiles just as they do in London. There are broad avenues, lovely villas, and i parks,, in which an, endless variety of bright (lowers is always in bloom. Indeed, this Andalusian city, nestling 'on the blue Mediterranean, has am hition and is exerting effort toward ;lts accomplishment to attract the ; tourists, or at least some of them, who '.have grown tired of returning year after year .to the In the Market Place. One center of interest is the market place, a large covered, building built around r picturesque Moorish arch which serves as its entrance. There are aisles of stalls devoted to meat, fish, vegetables, .and fruit; but the market, has overflowed Its banks and now extends out into the adjoining streets,; where,, in., opeu air there are rows of fruit and vegetable stalls in Jcharge of.rpeasant men and women. APart from the fruit stalls is a Jstand 8eiling earthen water jugs, of (various sizes,, arranged along the sidewalk, These, are open at the neck. !but have a tiny spout, in, the side. The jpeasants drink by holding the jug well above their heads and lotting the tiny stream of water; fall into their open mouths., A novice at, this method ihas considerable difficulty not., only with the aim, but also with swallow ing against the steady strearn qf. liquid. The crescent of mountains which surrounds - Malaga - is about 60 miles (from point to point and I5 formed of five ranges. .They stilj bear their quaint Moorish names: Sierra de All jus, 'sier-ra- j de Abdalugis,, Sierra dq Alhama. Sierra tie Tejeda,and the Sierra de A!mijara,ijvhich drops, suddenly Into he sea near A1!11.118 i,;n o ,,The, old (word ierrai( means,. In Spanish! ,,a say,;;i'andl,lt.. is, vividly descriptive of these Irregular, sawtooth uionntain, lines alog the sky. Each grange, itself cut apd scarred Into jagged peaks, apd precipitous chasms, the tops peing of baapen apd forbidding rock. Then, lower down, Is a covering of palmetto grass, thickly Interspersed with .aromatic herbs thyme, rosemary, and lavender and on the lower slopes. In symmetrical tows! 'like' soldiers," thousands upon thousands of sliver-greeolive trees. i brand international e SPAIN , .. h . well-inform- ct December 9, 1466. King Henry IY conferred the title of Very Noble up- -. on the city of Antequera, Province of Malaga, showing proof of his affection and consideration foe the heroic services rendered by its inhabitants. . In central Arabia, filg camel .yvalked on ,fhat eiQijt H grasshoppers ,, tfiroiighouit, the trip tfmt JiJs; saddle. sandJs and by the hungry ' . M.r r Irak, s now perturbed, however, be-- , caus, the Tigris and Euphrates river, floods, ,pn:,!whipb agriculture .depends, ftre, the Jpwest ,thi spring that, ;they have been in 25 years. I! , ... 0.0! the worlds Society. Wauhlngton. Is once again In . the 'THstrlct of Columbia set - Here and there, on steeper slopes, the olives give place to almonds, and in January their pink and white blossoms, which appear before any of the green leaves, make a little picture of fairyland. The valleys are all yellows and greens orange trees, lemon trees, grapevines, and sugar canes. Artists who see this lovely country for the first time exclaim that every-thing Is palntable" every tree, every building, every mountain top. Alalaga has a dally paper, La Union Alercantll, of which In all justice It may be exceedingly proud. A large double-dec- k press of French make turns out Its 12 to 10 pages every day. Ih the composing room four linotypes click busily all night long. Modernity in the extreme is the keynote of Its production ; yet" in every issue there is a quarter column headed On This Same Date. Thereunder appear items that have happened in the province on the date of issue, but in previous years. Generally, there are six or eight years picked at random by the chronologist, but often these go back before the discovery of America and refer to family names still existing In the city! One reads In quite a matter-of-far way: (Prepared b; the National- Qeograpnle d ) . Turkeys Driven to Market Through the Streets of Malaga. Is Y fni ifT j December, 1618. After more than a whole year of drought. It rained today1 in Antequera, but It was only a little shower, so the hunger and diffl- -' ; culties still continue. . And these Tittle pictures themselves, sometimes gay. but more often grave, (bring the distant centuries, with their odd customs and strange superstitions i very near to us. The narrow streets in Malagas center which one passes every day are mentioned often. ' Where Phoenicians Lived. In the very center of the city Is the jGibralfaro, r . miniature mountain, which rises straight out of Alalagas principal streets to a height of 560 feet. Halfway up the approach is the AlcAzaba, which was the site of the It original Phoenician settlement.' pasefi through the hands of Romans, Visigoths, and Moors, the latter it In the year 711. They made vantage spot half palace and half (this" (citadel and it was not until August 18, 1487, that the Spanish standard was flown over Its battlements. The Atcazaba was one of the very last of the Moorish strongholds on European I I j J cap-Ituri- : soil. ; ' Today there are a few tortuous streets, steep and narrow, leading between old houses, many in ruins, and a group of gypsy huts. At one of two iplaOes the streets pass through arch-- I ways with the houses built over them, Formerly this part of Malaga, which its the most picturesque and tnterest-jlnwas ro dirty and the gypsies so meuacing in their demands for One jpenhy1 please;," that tourists were ad-- ; vised to leave It out of their itinerary. Now It has, been cleaned np to some extent and the inhabitants are less tm- -' portunate. In Malaga, as elsewhere In Spain,1 one' sees' many apprentice boys dr twelve to fourteen years. Every plumb--1 er,1 carpenter, and electrician has a small boy to carry his tools and help1 with the job. :V fa,In many cases taxi drivers have a boy, to do the cranking ana other onerous tasks. The hairdressers boy! accompanies him to the house, carry- -' Ing a little bag, and sits on the steps ' while Madame is being marcelled. In" fact, even for the ordinary civilian,' to ' carry a small parcel of any sort Is not quite the proper, thing. A' boy, should tag along behind, bearing the harden, lowever small. j g, - |