OCR Text |
Show 4 THE HrTAYKR COUNTy, WKEKI.Y PllE WHERE 1 1 ? . i ;.. JBEAVER. UTAI1 OKCE VEALTHY HUNGARIANS TAKE. REFUGE Christmno Gif b ypical - hnglisniRan or oenous Mind' t Yants Friendship of United States i By Lynn IlaroM Hough, President cfKort&a-cstc- ' 1 University f A t The typical Englishman of serious and informed mind believed Tery prtfotolfdly friendship.. Many men, Wit a air. Fisher, the president of the EnglisJboard of education, have been . .ready to ..express their belief that it is the hope of the "world. V,X'-;l;!;ii-::...l.:4i::i'l : 1: There" is v widespread anxiety about the economic situation.' With a great debt to America and the balance of trade the wrong Englishmen axe'Terj outcome. of the as In England, with they speak grave of than more, 40,000,000, there is the pos a population like i3,000,000 ;The rest of the sibility of producing food for something food must, in the long run, come from Exchange for English products which other countries desire. And a wtong balance of trade in this situa, tion is a serious matter, . t t , . .X.,iX ' fi Some meri with a dash of adventure in. their estiniateof 'the gtultiori - BOYD PARIC Anglo-Americ- an ;' MAKERS OF JEWELRY im uam nun tAUiAMcm ; '; V. x - way,-man- . '.Ka i s r.i kr J AH i'i. .rT-- ii -- I :. make Rented, RrnalrW, SoML pricM-S7.- 50 to aiOO. Writ for Utah Office and School Supply 32 W. 2nd Sooth, Salt tmkm City. Uta m inn - , lypeuriter 1 - y Xjr-x.- It la a pleur to buy fiHa from Boyd Park. Erarythlnf Jewelry, Sliver, Watch tha finest to b bad. Our reasonable prices easa tha way. 'BORN OF FlrtE AND dLOOD" Ttli of Circumtano Under Which Celenel McCrea Wrota' Xln Plandera Fields." Officer i that Englaidjwill take the tiew" that the dangers Tare" overestimated, ' ' ' quickly recuperate, 1; , "In Flanders FlfHs.', to quote tha wbJcn'iiitle' of Major Geursl Morrison, who words inwij has been said about matter a that is It probable commanded the brigade to which has had a long and successful experifluence the actual outcome. England Colonel McCrea was attached ence in international banking, and before even resourceful Americans at the time, ."wss literally, bora of Ira and blood daring the hottest learn the psychological trick; of it Britain will probably be competing Scene In Jbe pretty ami Yni6uaripwn of Carlsbad, ttthemiu. where tht notiillty and onfe wculthy people of phase of the second battle of Tpres. with America on more even terms. And this is to the advantage of uungary too it "My headquarters were In a trench muje wbi m rjcpiymunisi na otuer reYoluUonists gained; tue uppy band in their country.-- " ! T H . America. on the top of the bank of the Tpres '. 02'--canal; and John had bis dressing staNo business man able to look into the Jfnture. would want W Oreak UNITED-STAT- ES tion in FLEW AROUNDTHE RIM 0F-T-HE. dug In the foot of . the THEY; down England'a jtundamenM jeeomic EtrengUveten. if inch a. 'lBm$xsd Nnk. During periods of the battle WMii-- Uir ' VM g '. Tii. 'Cs i.mm UWJ men who were shot actually rolled m; dowaihe-hanInto his 4yj8lBg sta l tlon. Along from us a fewhundred yards was the headquarters of a regU ' . , f I t Lien-tena-nt : i t ' ' -- ole i ' ' I Physical and Mental Condition of Our Soldiers Was the Deciding. Factor ByUEU;COL.T.LHUSTOS . v J 5 :;xK , 1 , , J 1 side;-An- t ( "i t "J ill J. -' War as a general proposition is alHhat General Sherman said ji was, the brighter but like everything else in this world it has a better aide in the recent world-wid- e conflict was the general boom in all forms pf ' "5 J v ' V - ''I i kthletics for, which it was responsible and which in the years to come, par,:' ticularly in America and the nations allied with her, will insure a man-Jidfir more fit physically and mentally to carry on with the world's, work than ever before. ' There is no. question that the physical and mental condition' of the American tnJops was the deciding factor in the war' and thaVou boys were able tothrow into the "balance the fighting power which broke the h This Is the-cof the U. S. ilartln has completed a night "uronnd the rlin' of the United States, deadlock, sent the' Huns reeling back and ultimately brought about their starting from Wanhlngton. Left tojHght: LlenU Cou B. 8, Harts, Lleut. " E. O. Harmon, Lieut. U A.tSmtth, MeV... complete defeat. And the reason that the Americans, many of them but chanic Jnck Harding. Jr, nnd Electrician Jeremiah Tobias. . ; ; hastily trained troops, were able to make such a splendid showing was because of c bringing physical fitness, their ability SHE IS A REAL MINER RED CROSS WORK IN WAR IN SCULPTURE to think quickly and to act individually in emergencies. And these qualities they acquired on the ball lots, the gridiron and other fields 'where faui, muscle and brawn were' put to the test i,p.s, - ,., X i i ; j n a way. before wd went "over there" we realized what American sports, parfictilariy baseball, had done for the youth of the United States. Today we appreciate fully that it supplied most of our fighteTwith the pnysica! asset ,'wnich enabled them to do those things which caused the, ' German military' machine. tQ gasp in amazement from the outset. The American army heads and the directors of Y. If. C. A.'jud other agencies which operated for the welfare of the men in the camps here and abroad thoroughly appreciated the value of outdoor games, boxing and general athletic stunts, and from the moment the men began their military training athletics was made a part of the regular routine. '. . ment, and tnnny times during th 18 days of the battle, he and J watched them burying their dead., whenevet there- - wss a loll. Thus the crosses, row on row, grew into a good-size- d , cemetery. "3m as he describes, we often heard th nrk sfiiglng high in the air, between the crash of the'shell and the reports"bf tne'guus In the battery Just head us. I lipve a letter from hlui In which he mentions having written the poem to pass away the time between the arrival of batches of, wounded, and partly as an experiment with several varieties of poetic tnefer 'r, : y-The onit with which McCrae served, was the most sdvaneed of all the allies guns by a good deal, exrept one French battery, ' which , stayed In a position yet i more judvanced for two h days;' and thon hsd kpn nut ; 5, "AX t od ,, ; tKunber-whlo- re MANY' SEEK COVETED TITLE " tfieir-athleB- np-r-the- ir Jsff' , (- I II II J tl p 1 s I . ( Thousands of Young Chlnsmeri Un- dergo Severe Examination In Hope i f Becoming Mandarins. , Though Chinese 'education Is grad' ually undergoing change, candidates for the title of mandarin still gather at three-yea-r Intervals In Chinese cit' ies,' and the" examiners sit In their, robes of state under' their umbrellas end conduct the examinations. Many of the younger generation nowadays have Imbibed a western Idea of education ! hut many with the; Book of. Three Characters, the Book of a Hundred Families snd the Book of a Thousand Words, and pr--su- e aa educational system thst Is held to be more than 30 centuries old, to; the ultimate triumph of becoming mandarins and enjoying the ceremonial ' honors, distinctive costume and au In-- ! dividual reputation for wisdom and. learning, that go with the title. The examination consists In the writing of, philosophical and political essays, exposition of the Sayings of Confucius.. commenting on Chinese texts snd the; composition of sentences and maxims in prose and verse. The number of candidates at such; examinations still counts up Into the: thousands. Sometimes their failures, one might say, In the phrase with' which ' western editors return ambi tious contributions, have been ,1ue to no lack of n.erlt".fr the number of " vacancies to be filled at any one time In the list of mandarins is very small compared j1th the number of candidates. Christian- - Science Monitor. still-begi- n : ' .More Foreign Trade, More Home-Owne- d Home Industry Ships, Better-Ru- n , ' By A. I FERGUSON, V. 8. Chamber of Commerce ! SI ' Europe is clamoring for America's aid in her rehabilitation, and until her .demands are .satisfied we cannot lock for lower prices in this country. iVe toe chamber are now going after foreign trade in earnest We have appomfed a special merchant marine committee to see to it that German Kners are run to Davy Jones' locker and that the Stars and Stripes wave from the mnsts of the world's merchant. marine likewise we are cohcern- ca the ingiour8elves In the r "' " 'detfricifg ": ; : ) the representatives of England, Belgium, franca and Italy here, and foreign trade question swill he. ttraahed, out "with .'theiir We want to see an American fleet on every side. Why, the " Padficrtoday irmefeTy iTapanese lake'f "And" u for theAtlantic, look at the Georgfl Wafhington, the Martha Washington, the President Grant, the President Lincoln,' all German ships, so German that you've got to ' '; have an interpreter to get a stateroom." utheaituation that tho national chamber of commerce we want more foreign trade", more "' to rectify home .REtESTABUSHING:INDUSTRIES1 law V industries - home-owne. ships, d . " is out better-"tu- ' ; There mus be. a. eeyngf brotherhood between. America and Great Bntain,; wnoiga the alUcs.JCommcrcial leaders pf England must come here and our big business men must go there. ' In that way an understand ingVilt' be reached tinat will "mean much for both nations. Peace-habrought its' "great'Jjroblems of readjustment, and the situation must be tiiet ' by the nationi'foV the good of the "nations. : s " - .'.! (.. ' ; licrewntatita ifartin pics of Tciia I j i Wish tho farmer! of thii tonntry and the taxpayers of our land might have a return of the old Dnmorraticand Krpnbiiran thpory lAfltWCTtimcntli' not created U'iup port the people, but that it is a creature to be supported by the people. We'ire leading them'tb' believe that tlie gorernment can support them and (iit them by their boot'itrspi out of tlieir financial difficulties when, as honest men, we should taj to thr.m that all that the goternmcnt can do ia and lifV their their liberty and tax them to aafport the got. protect ' irncient.rf v. t; Mabel J. Gray, an' attractive1 oung bmriness "woman of Tonrfpah. 'tNerr Is probablj' the only jyoma president, of a mining company. Mie is snown nere st work on one of her claims. . Mrs. Gray wears a manls clothing while on her prospecting and mining trips, and she Is a familiar figure In this garb' on ' tho streets of Tonopah. Marine Corps Drum Honored. Glory was not won by men alone on J he battta fields, of the .world, .war, says the t'opniar aiecnanics siagasine., To lUustrate, .there s the bass drum which returned from France recently with a regiment of the marine corps, decorated with a wound stripe and four service r heyrona. These marks of honor were painted on one head of tha, instrument, as shown In a photograph Illustrating the article. The wound stripe was considered appropriate after the. drum had been damaged by a bursting shell. n n ' , ' This striking croup, a memorial to the work of the Red Cross In the war, Is n the masterpiece of Onorio ttuotolo, an sculptor of New York. , That r' 5 Italian-America- We are going to entertain f ";: if ' The Interior of the sniiual exposition' at Frnnkfort-on-Maln- . Germany, now that the wnr In over. Germany Is making rapid strides toward Its Industries. ( resuiiud t acs vP: r 'l : Young j Lawyer If your honor plesses, we will show that appellate courts have- - ecldd on similar plead-- " ings tbst wherein plslntlfTs wltnes hsd appeared with evl()ence after having been subpoensed duces tecum Ills llooot (secustomed to hearing a gamblers In police court)--W- alt minute there, Too say, "deuces take tm.. Well, this court decidedly win net admit .'deuces Uk 'era." m, Generally speaking. It slways has been held thst aces beax.'enu jt - ' '. : - .- ., '- ' Got .Him Quasslng. y got my tcaubles4,, rV piled the new , . ?I wsjter. "When men have friendly acrsp about paying the check 1 can spot the right man to hand It to every nitike alt time. But with .women kinds of twA mistakes." LoulsvItU t Courier-Journa- l. Dolls Long Popular. There Is ample evidence that the use of dolls ss an assistance to tho . rpe rations,, of the,. joung,, jnliiii .dates . from the mot remote times. Among the native tribes of Africa It ws tha ; fieoognlted Her. .... . Some ooo went by our house In a custom of married wemen to carry a car and spoke to my little sister, who doll with them until thry had a child, when the doll wan (l!rnn!.vt. was In the rsrd. She did not recognize the person at the time, but later found Ondttattck for Campers. out H Was an acquaintance and said: The bracket of a candlestick ! knew It was Eva. I Juat knew It for Campers tennlr.i.tcs in wss her tuns' (meaning her voles). barbed points to grip a tres trunk cr Exchange. other urrtgiit sur;ort , |