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Show i ! They Were Great Wheelmen Long Years Ago WVr:M:f!ij'n j?v item .1 i ' "' 'V a(w 'Alky The annual Wbeelmens' reunion, marking anniversary of the bicycle, was held at Gwynedd, Pa. The photograph shows five bicycle champions of the old days with high wheel that they need. Left to right; Arthur , I A. Zimmerman, world champion In 1800; Charles M. Murphy, known aa "MIle-A-MInu- Murphy" after riding a bike a mile In ST seconds; George Gideon, first national champion in 1S81; Irve Wllhelm, Penn state champ, and Henry Crouther, president of the League of American Wheelmen. THEIR DAY OF JOY Eleven rear aa Nmw 11, Itle. lb WorW war ana eaara. Vanha. Vane, Cfcateaa TMrry eae ether (WW. where tha aaenboee' at the mrrlaa aarJeaa feU, ma leaser were to ham Iba maiaa at ounxUnf. Aa4 frith mr-Uiai- 4 tent, the wmrtd araa U to laugh again t!lm am Iku raw raara at itrita. Aad tack rw mloca, at In mum hew, tba warU Mapa ita haataaai tor tva wlDatoa to ray fet Iha aaaca at ma a.a haraaa mad far tha aaalwiwa aaaot at wa world. ' Pheta abawa aa AMarkaa aailor, aaa aa Aawrkaa Rai Craaa awaa, with hra BrWbh aaW Vara at Viaaaaaaa, Praaca, arJabratm Iha rifa at tha ArwJatica, HBSBBSBHBBSBIBBB9BBB People Read This Newspaper !We Want Yon to keep in mind the fad: thatin addin to printing thi$ news-paper we do job work of any kind. When in need of anything in this line be sure To See Us s ft TW why it would be Jfc profitable for yon to advertise in it If yoa mont a Job If yoa mant to hire somebody If yoa mant to sell something If you mant to buy something If yoa mant to rent your Bouse Ifyoa want to sell your house If you mant to sell your farm If yoa mint to bay property If there Is anything that you mant the quickest and best may to supply that mant Is by placing 1 an advertisement tn this paper I The results will surprise 1 jpSZ5ZSZ5ZSZSZSZ5Z5Z5Z525Z52SZ50 I We Are Ready j j To turn out that Job jj ; of printing when' c j ever you need it. ! C D j Our Prices Are Right QE5Z525Z5g5ZSZSg5Z5g525Z5Z5Z5ZSQ YOUB NAME Is it on our subscrip-tion list? We will guarantee you full value FOR YOUR MONEY 1 iPMUNGl j I T Good Printing I ; Is the Dress I ef Business. I That Is the if I Kind We Do. I I L- -l cum I I I p Let Us Show Yoa I i 1 Advertis-ingaSal- e! HeyThere! How about your letterheads, billheads, statements, enve-lopes, cards, etc. Don't wait until they are all gone and then ask us to rush them out in a hurry for you. Good work mrnm requires time "V . and our motto A ha any-N-k V thing that's r3 nj worth do-rT- V J ingisworth YSSljQ) doing welL La mm hoc that mntar aafulm ana Aosw tha (una to do yaa irmtmg mm at ahooU ma da H-y- OU don't lesva VJ your rig In tha. t" middle of tha road snd go to a fence-po- st to read a sale bill do youT Then don't expect tha other fe low to do It. PuttnadlntnUpepar.tbea, refardlMa ef tha weather, tha fallow you want to reach raada your announce mante while seated at bis fireside. If he la a propectlve buyer you'll have him at youreala. One extra buyer often peye the entire expense of the ed. and It'a a poor ad that won't pull that buyer. An ad In this Baper reaches the people you era after. Bills may be a neeeesliy.but the ad Is tha thin that does the business. Don think of having a apeclal aale without using advertising spaea In this , paper. One ExtraBayer it s nle eftca pin tie entire expose el the il Get That Buyer aaaaasaaiaaaiaaia I UPSTAIRS CLOTHES SHOP 275 SOUTH MAIN SALT LAKE CITY f f The Largest Exclusive y Wil Two-Pan- ts Suit V'S House in the West faf f For Men, foLr Young Men- Hats, Caps A i ft and Boys . Furnishings iMmaTMWaltWAraM THE WAY TO SUCCESS IS UNDOUBTEDLY a THROUGH TRAINING , 5 FOR BETTER RESULTS, GET YOUR TRAINING $ WHERE YOU ARE GIVEN PERSONAL ATTENTION 3 NEW CLASSES EACH WEEK IN DAY AND NIGHT SCHOOL. Call, Write or Phone for Information c Salt Lake Business College UTAH'S QUALITY SCHOOL 15 Vi E. 1st South Wasatch 7280 WWtltltlWtWlw BEE HIVE STAGES S Salt lake City. Pocatello, Twin Falls, Idaho Falls, Boise, Portland, and All Points in Idaho and Oregon. g Park City and Tooele. : BUSSES ALSO LEAVE FOR Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, Chicago, Reno, Ely, 2 Heber City, Duchesne, Vernal, Coalville, Grantsville, Alta, Union Bus Station 144 East Broadway I SALT LAKE CITY WAS. 6231 5 Sait lake floral, company Visit our greenhouse. WHOLESALE RETAIL CUT FLOWERS POTTED PLANTS FUNERAL PIECES & DECORATIONS EXPERT DESIGNERS HONEST VALUES DEPENDABLE SERVICE Very good express service on Tooele Bus line at a very reasonable charge. mmk, PHONE HY. 1118 NITE PHONE HY. 2339 f We telegraph flowers to all leading cities. I 1910 SOUTn STATE STREET I Water From Everglades Inundates Hialeah The business district of Ululeah, Fla., Inundated by waters from the Everglades overflowing Into the town after torrential rains. Hialeah Is a saburb of Miami. FLIES TO FISH 6 rr--v - . r.t . - aW 'J L ' fPMilaMdfcaftMtfjM-ihi- ., tt gt aw International Gov. Alexander Parks of Alaska Is , both an aviation and a fishing addict Here be Is trying to land a few of the big fish In Lake Hassellborg. He flew to the lake and made his aviation costume Into a fishing outfit by don-ning a pair of rubber boots. I Light Fifty Years Ago and Now 4 :K Al f I yV , '.vJil Iju ' - ;: , - : j fn W..r!::.:: f? Thomas A. Edison, hero of light's golden Jubilee, exhibiting a replica of his first successful Incandescent lamp, which gave 16 candlepower of illumina-tion, in contrast to the ultimate in today's lamp achievement, a 60,000 watt, 130,000 candlepower lamp. War's Hatreds No Heritage of Americans To those who have observed wltb tboughtfui minds the changing char-acter of the American celebrations of Armistice day there will coma today a deeper onderstandlng of our na-tional Ideals and a more Illuminating conception of that essential spirit that baa set America apart. In Its alms and purposes, from all the nations of the Old world. When the news Oral broke upon a war-wear- y world eleven years ago that the day of peace had at last dawned, it waa but natural that we should join wltb the other al-lied nations, our brothers la the great struggle in exultant manifestations of triumph over victory achieved as well as joy at the happy termination of the years of storm and struggle. But the wild exuberance of those Brst celebra-tions baa diminished with eacb recur-rence of the anniversary of Armistice day. It is no longer In America a day of victory exultation, but a day of tender memories and glorification of the heroic dead for whom the day of peace dawned In another world. The malice and the hatreds of war, the delirium of conquest and the vainglory of military triumph, have passed like Incidents of an evil hour. In their place have come the effluence of those beneficent aims and purposes whicb were the corner stones of the nation's foundations and which, tn every national crisis, have risen to assert themselves, as the true notion-al Ideals, above the shouts of victory or the transient glories of military successes. It Is In this spirit that America proclaims to the world the ringing truth that It is not a militaris-tic nation, but the world's arbiter of peace. Victories Not Celebrated. This note of charity and healing peace has been characteristic of the aftermaths of all our nation's great wars. Jena and Austerlltz, Trafalgar and Waterloo, are still names that commemorate military achievements abroad and monuments and arches of triumph and days of celebration still perpetuate victories of the past over there. It Is characteristic of the American spirit that we have not fol-lowed that custom. Our greatest monument attests heroic defea- t-ever fought Lincoln In bis second Inaugural address voiced the earns message: "With malice toward none, wltb charity for all, wltb firmness In the right as God gives ns to sea tba right, let os strive on to finish tba work we are In, to bind op tba na-tion's wounds, to care for nim who shall have borne tha battle and for his widow and bis orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a Just and lasting peace among ourselves and wltb all nations." It was the same thought that found poetic expression In Francis U. Finch's "The Blue and the Gray"! No more ahal tha war cry aavar Or tha winding rlvars run red. They banish our angar forarar. Whan thar laurel the gravas of our dead. Under the sod and the daw. Waiting tha Judgment day, Love and tears for tba blue. Tears and love for the gray. Soldiers' Heritage. And so, on this Armistice day, there comes back a voice from the dead the voice of a poet British born, but adopted by the world, who died on the field before tbe dawn of the day of peace to remind us that Amer-ica's, as well as tbe world's, greatest gain from the war of the nations are the memories of the hero dead and not the selfish glories of victory: Blow out, you bugles, over the rlcb Dead! There's none of these so lonely and poor of old. But, dying, has made us rarer gifts than gold. These laid the world away; poured out the red Sweet wine of youth; gave up the years to be Of work and Joy, and that unhoped serene That men call age; and those wbo would have been Their sons, they gave their Immortal-ity. ... Honor has come back, aa a king to earth, And paid his subjects with a royal wage; And Nobleness walks In our ways again, And we have come Into our heritage. It Is thoughts such as these, ex-pressed by our own great statesmen and by this poet from across the seas, that should blend In tbe reflection of our hours of meditation today Into a torgetfulness of sll hatreds snd a re-newal of hopes for that reign of Peace which America, as a nation, bas al-- , ways symbolized. From the Kansas . City Star. . that of Bunker Hill. No national holi-day has ever been set aside to com-memorate a military victory. York-tow- New Orleans. Buena Vista, Get-tysburg, tbe Appomattox campaign, Santiago and Manila Bay are still patriotic memories, but they are per-petuated only in glorious history and not in days of exultation. America's policy and spirit have always been characterized by a charitable forget-fulnes- s of the hatreds of war snd the extended band of renewed peace to the foe. Such was the last word that Wash-ington left to the young republic still cherishing memories of the Revolu-tionary struggle: "It will be worthy of a free, enlightened and, at no dis-tant period, a great nation to give to mankind the magnanimous and too novel example of a people guided by an exalted Justice and benevolence. . . . In the execution of such a plan nothing Is more essential than that permanent Inveterate antipathies against particular nations snd pas-sionate attachments for others, should be excluded and that in place of them Just and amicable feelings toward aJI should be cultivated." Lincoln's Great Message. Wltb tbe end of tbe great Civil war In sight one of the most bitter wars Professor Radio and His Class l fp 7C ' T Til ' lllll,MfMlll. J . Class In economic geography in the Crane Junior college, Chicago, recelv- - Ing instruction by radio. The loud speaker delivers the dally lecture. COACH AT MEXICO x , , fcfe?S'gv. jtmt.4 Reginald Dean Hoot, former Xale football star and line coach on the Tale team, who has arrived In Mex-ico City to take up his new duties as coach at the University of Mexico. THE NEWS IN CAMP Just ea exaaapta at sow tha Slats 3 aslaatry . want rUd arhaa tfcay ant am ef the Anna, nee. aaar ReaaoivUla, Mraaa, Fraaca. eu Empress of Canada on the Rocks I '" " " V ' " ' f " 1 1 ; " ' tmlmtmm I international An airplane view of the Pacific liner Empress of Canada after she had run on the rocks at Albert Head near Victoria, a C. The passengers were taken off safely but the Jagged rocks tore great holes In the steamer's bull. War Proved v Strength of Nation f g Joshua's day and in Hannibal's day, X was the human element the element C which In the final test of physical en-- 2 counter spelled victory or defeat So Jf In our celebration of victory, let ns 5 pay respect to those all Important at-- 5 tributes which are tbe enduring qual-- 5 Itles of our national strength loyalty, 5 patriotism, courage and unselfishness a the Indispensable characteristics In 5 our citizens whicb brought victory to our cause eleven years ago. MaJ. Gen. " Charles P. Summerall, Chief of Staff. As we look back to 1918 we find that time bas dulled the memory of many details. Our concern for am-munition, for rations, for relief, or for support Is less vivid. We recall less clearly the hardships, the discomforts and tbe restrictions. What do stand out, however, are the patriotism, tbe valor, the fortitude and tbe spirit of e whl.'h characterized our citizens and our soldiers. When we entered the war, science and human Ingenuity were engaged In the age-ol- race of producing new weapons of offense and effective meas-ures to neutralize them. Our trymen. despite shortages In new weapons and lack of experience In new methods, rose to the emergency through a fervor which counterbal aneed handicaps. The characteristic of Individual initiative again proved the strength of our nation. Today as we review our expert ences. we see thai though weapons and nieriiiwis had changed, the onp thing which remained as It was in Ancient Churn An ancient horse-drive- n churn, from Broughton Manor farm has been given to tbe museum at South Kensington, England. The machinery, with all its gear wheels, is of wood. The horse walked round In a circle about 15 feet across, and the churn held 60 gallons. It produced more than five hundredweight of butrer a week. SHORT ITEMS OF INTEREST El Taso, Texas, plans a subway sys-tem. Mexico City Is located at an altitude of 7,500 feet Chicago averages more than 4,000,-00- 0 telephone calls dally. WiM horses are being killed In Can-ada to provide meat for fox farms. Practically all the Iodine In the hu-man body is stored In the thyroid gland. I Seven-eighth- s of Japan la mountain country. American skunks are being sought by Swedish fur farmers. Motorcycles mounted on skis are proving useful In Alaska. The female of one species of spider carries her young on her back. An Intoxicating drink Is made from the sap of the century plant in Mex- - ICO. ., , 'i J Babies Always Babies Even babies of the Stone age had to be amused. Judging from a little rattle recently found near Budapest The handle Is In the elinpe of an animal's heart and It makes Just as much noise as any baby's plaything of today. la Lasting Memory TO YOU who spent weary months In barren, gloomy training camps In remorseless drudgery TO YOU who defied submarines and a nameless grave In the ocean and landed our army In France TO YOU who are still suffering from wounds and gas. shell shock and disease TO THOSE who dle- d- Oi:n PRAYERS, our love, and our tears.- - Chicago Tribune. Perfected Machine Cua The hrst modern practical machine jnin "vus Invented Dy Poctor Gulling of t'hU-aa- in IS62, and it was put 'lo getienil use about 1870. |