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Show PAGE TWa THE DAILY STATE JOURNAL, FRIDAY, JULY 24, IMS. Newsy (Gossip ofi op-pns- :d h s will appropriate a sum sufficient to taka up tula work in earnest. Thera la in America no lack of Inventors. Gen. Allen, of the signal corps, has kept well In touch with If the army takes up the questhem. tion ther ia no doubt that in a few year the United Slates will be abreast of any nation in aerial equipment. USE BALLOONS FOB , sea or the Gulf of Lyons Every four years, accordingly, as tha moon which marked the Greek midsummer drew to its full, a pilgrimage of all that waa best and most vigorous in Hellas ended at the little plain of Olympia in Ella, the small state on the western coast of the Peoponneeus, a flat space, wi-- its natural barriers of mountain and river, some fifteen miles from the sea. Long before the beginning of the festival heralds went forth, first through Elia, thence throughout Greece, to proclaim a truce, during which all fighting between city and city, sate and state should cease, so aa to allow a whole month of peac during which the Hellenic youth should be able to travel unmolested and unhindered from the furthest settlements of the race, it might be from Marseilles or the Crimea, in order to make the offering of vigor and its piety to the Olympian Zeus in Ella For the festivsl was in essence religious. In times long antecedent to recorded history, tradition had placed the mint Important of the Hellenic festivals at th same spot In 884 B. C. Iphltua, king of Ella is said to have revived rites which had been practiced three time out of mind. Certainly in the year 778 Ft. C. began a series of games at Olympia which continued without Interruption every fourth year for a period of 1.17 years, until 894 A. D., when, in the reign of Thendoeiua hey wer abolished, and the Olympic games were added to tho other lega W Interest Progress Made Hying Machines. ce ! pancrat-developme- com-Olympl- fit. Peteraubrg, July 28. The as automobile in the New automobile race arrived here from iloaov at a quarter before 8 this afternoon and will leave for Berlin this evening. The car is in good shape and made a fine trip from Moscow. It will be accompanied to Gate-chiby a score of Russian automobiles. The travelers have met with a friendly reception everywhere In Tork-to-Par- ts na ! : BASEBALL FEVER SPOKANE. Wash.. July ;4. bane's Methodist ministers win aside their clerical garment to ,.or and, donning tha uniforms of b;itban players, will meet the city fau. r t, a contest for supremacy o.i th,. mond. Proceeds of the game mu j used for charitable and religious and NaUtoriuin Park win doubt leae be crowded with fane. Gr..;tt tt,n. fidence ia expressed in the &, tij.idtat camp, as the "sky pilot" havc siw,B up well in practice. The Rev. Dr. Henry I. Rasmus. tor of the First M. E. church, ami Rev Edwin B. Lockhart wiH be th.- battery for the gospelers. while Mayor C. , Moore and Ben H. .hlef 0f the police department, will do tlw twirling and catching for the adminl. tration. Asa V. Bradrick ha been selected to officiate aa umpire fur th ministers and Edward J. Cannon, roun-sfor the Northern Pacific railway, will hold the indicator for the M. cabinet. pur-poa- - Her-be- el occu-Olympl- ng 10 Schedule Off Run Time-- Will TOO BUST, I suppose you visited all th points of interest while you were abroad. Mis Wise No; we wer so busy addressing postcard to our friends that w hadn't time to do much Mlaa Howe Occidental at Murray on Saturday: Balt Lake and Murray at Lagoon, and the Occidentals at Ogden on Sunday. Rice Pudding and Marmalade. Trains for tile game will leave Salt Mix two ubleepoonfuls of rice with Lake City to Lagoon every hour, com- two of sugar, a good pinch of aalt and mencing at 1 p. m. A quart of milk; put thla In the oven and bake It, lifting tha rise from the bottom every 15 minutes or leas, and stirring nil well; when the whole ia Mr. calller Downe You're not at aQ oft .and creamy let it bake without economical. of lining for ten minutes end take it Mrs. Callier Downs If you don't cab out. Cool and spread with n thick layer a women economical who aaves her of orange marmalade and cover the wedding gown for a second marriage, top with a meringue made with the then what do you call economical? beaten white of an egg and a l Ho Marry me and you shall have at of granulated augur; brown the comfort that money can buy. She How much money? lightly in the oven and serve cold. EIID Cars Roll in an Hour Ahead a Tie Contest table-ponnfu- WASHINGTON, D. C July 24 SARATOGA, N. Y., July 21. Aeronauts and army officers who look the original schedule of the to them to develop the art of war in the fourth medium, the air era beGlidden 1908 tour, the competing ginning to center attention upon Fort rolled into Saratoga thla afMyer. near Washington, where the ternoon nearly an hour ahead of schedarmy signal corps is soon to deteruled time. Tha days run, however, did mine by actual experiment what part not result in breaking the tie existing aerial maneuvers can be made to play in the contest for the Glidden and In tha American game of warfare. Hower trophies, and, as a result, the Captain Baldwins dirigible balloon teams will retaining perfect scores will which ho haa built according to army not be completed until a winner has specifications, has been shipped and been decided. The surviving care for la being assembled. i a few daya It tha Glidden trophy are the three INCOMPATIBILITY. will foe put through, the paces preColumbus (O.) Peerless and the three Ethel So brokscribed by the signal corps. It Is not your engagement la Pierce care from the Buffalo club. The built on eo large a scale as the Zep- - ,nT runabouts having perfect score and FYed we couldnt agree. I like Tea; pelln dirigible, nor la It expected to establish a record for air craft Tet watermelon cut In round allcee, and contesting for the Homer trophy, with tha trials If successful, will be Im- she always cut watermelon In long their driven, are aa follows; Pierce (J. 8. lyilllama), Fierce (E. portant as marking tha beginnig of a slices. A. Retting), Premier (G. A. Weedely), period of development of air navigation Stoddard Dayton (J. F. Runkle), Stodby the army. dard Dayton, (R. G. Cox.) Next morning the Herring and Both of the Glidden competitor have will unout be tried aeroplanes Wrlgh announced their Intention of fighting der the most exacting conditions. to an end, and tha participants In the These trial flights are expected to be tour tonight predicted a long and exthe longest attained, the specifications haustive contest. for remachine a calling that will main in air for an hour. Th trials will also be the first notable public demonstration of the Wright machine PLAYERS OF COLOR which ha been the great myatery of the aeronautic world. IN STATE LEAGUE Gen. Allen and officers of the nal corps are counting upon these trials to bring homo to congress the practicability of air navigation. If sucAll Utah league games scheduled for cess la attained an appropriation will t Salt Lake for Friday, Saturday and be asked 4 enable the corps to devote Sunday will be played at the Lagoon. Its energies to building up an aerial Arrangements for the use of the fleet and encouraging Inventors In perhav been made Manager fecting mechanical aerial flight. and the diamond and out-- 1 flergerman, This feature of the trials Is by far field are being put into conth moat important, filnee the experidition. No will be games piayed on Jack Whos that bobbing up and ments of Prof. Langley on the Potothe Walker field this week, owing to out down there? mac. which, although they did not solve f in of the dog quartermlle Jim Probably my wife. Shes al- the the problem of flight, went far toward race track. when ways she's not bobbing up perfecting th necessary mechanical The Occidental team has posted Its apparatus, congress and. as a conseft.noo forfeit with President Tobin of quence, the army have looked upon the league, and the team is now a A Contented Woman. aerial flight as a chimerical notion. member starting with a thousand per The ridicule fo lowng Langleys exner- - " in the same house cent, and will play its first game In found . Imen-- s had much to do with his death with Ballard's Snow Llnlm-n- t. , It the league agalna the Murray tram at Ml (ti9 ffumequcnt prat Me of hfi work keeps every member of the family j Lagoon Friday afternoon. The Salt by all scientist has tended to make free from, aches and pains, u heals Lake team will to Ogden to play, the national legislators more charitable cut, burn and acald nd cure rheu- - The schedule go for Friday. Saturday and less cocksure. I aa follows: matlm, neuralgia, lumoago and all and If the aeroplanes and dirigibles are muacular soreness and atlffness. 25c, SaltSunday Lake at Ogden, and Murray with Wr)y successful in answering army re- 50c and 81.00 a bottle. Sold by Geo.! she Occidentals at Lagoon on Friday: quirements It la probable that Congress F, Cave, 8alt Lake and Ogden t and Com-pletl- ng auto-mobllls- J dla-imo- nd h I ts GRAND OPERA HOUSE ORPHEUM STOCK COMPANY HlggaL-- i SAFEST WAT. never want to again. Diggs That' easy done, a fly spot Manager Grant of the Grand Opera house Announces the Appearance him SUNDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS Lend him ... : : of the Orpheum Stock Company Latest Fad f tha Smoker, Tha latest fad of tha cigarette amok-ker- , according to a large manufacturer, la to vary tha strength of th clga retta with tha season, in tha winter h says that tha smoker now demands a much heavier article than he doea for tho summer. Somehow, the manufacturer declares, the cigarette amokei haa found that ho can not amoke anywhere near ao strong a cigarette la the aurnmer aa In the colder month and the makers now are putting out special milder cigarettes for summer demands of SALT LAKE When They Will Present at Popular Prices 25c, 35c and 50c The Buxton Burglary and The Butterflies Tbo Eteohant gar first-cla- n pu-tin- We carry the Finest linefof g Domestic and Imported Wines, Liquors and Cigars in the city ! i I Our Service Is the Best J. F. SMITH & COMPANY PROPRIETORS Lagoon, Tickets now on sale at Goddard & Harrops Cigar Store 366 it aawgs rt RU-e- four-in-han- COMES By LEAVE EOR BERLIN cies of Hellaa its plastic art, archi-- ! record made In England lg 24 feet 11 tecture. poetry, drama, philosophy and inches; so modern athletic opinion in- political science, which together have! dines to the belief that the leap was had so mighty an Influence upon the a hop, step and Jump, for which there evolution of western civilisation. is n modern record of 48 feet 1 inch. As might he expected In an Insti- - Boxing and horse racing were adJed to ration which had n continuous exist- - th twentythlrd Olympiad; chariot rac-enfour fuligrown horses at the of nearly twelve centuries. Its nth- - n Later came the iettc side, at least, had had a gradual twenty-fift- h. Thus tor the thirteen um. or wrestling and boxing following the first la 778, blned- - Subsequent additions to the that la during a period of liftytwo ; program were tha foot race for men years, a short rac is the only athletic j ln armor, which was introduced in the event of which there Is any record. This i "istrAfth Olympiad, and the compe-wa- s run over a course of 800 Greek j tltlon f heralde and trumpeters, which celebration. feet, which comprised th length of came in the ninety-sixt- h th stadium. The Greek foot being only The other items which came afterwards alx millimeters short of the English were mainly developments of some of foot, this race may be compared for these, in which the extension of a all practical purposes to our 200 yards. whole series of contests f boys waa From the next Olympiad, the four- - j included. Thus there were chariot teenth, onward, was added a race of j races with mules, with mares, with d, two stadia, or say 400 yards. With th foals, boh pair and and fifteenth Olympiad were Introduced j horse races for foals. Most of the i adult exercises, ilk boxing, foet rac- longer races from alx to twenty-fou- r stadia, that ia to say, race which, with in g, wrestling and the pentathlum were thos already included, would bring thrown open to. boys, and by the one into the program moat distances from hundred and fortyflfth Olympiad, that 200 yards up to two milea and three- - is. In tha year 198 B. C., the program events and Only at the eighteenth included twenty-fou- r quarters. seventy-tw- o years after th pled abou five days. The poorest cltl revival of tha festival, were general sens could compete la the games, and athleMca Initiated by tha Inclusion of the noblest and the lowest of the and the pantathlum or flvejienlc race met side by side and were eyerclae that is, a leaping foot race, i held to have honored each other by throwing the discus and the Javelin ; their rivalry, though tha equestrian and wrestling. In that year alec came j exercises were necessarily confined to nine sor of long Jump In which Oro- -: thoae of the richer classe. National ten la aaid to have cleared 58 feet. The Review, SUDDEN TOUR Uncle Sam Watches With Deep SKY PILOTS GET AMERICAN CAR WILL ORIGIN OF THE OLYMPIC GAMES There In much In the lone story of the Olympic games of the Hellenes which appeal strongly to the imagination, and distinguishes those festivals from any other of which there Is record. In one of their aspects the games at Olympia In Ells were the repression, throughout shat is practically the entire history of the Hellenes, of the Hellenic religious piety, and the Hellenic pride of rare. The modem feeling of national solidarity was unknown to that people; the political system under which the race developed with i'a resulting congeries of small states with separate Interests, perpetually to each other; ita islands and settlements, spread along the Ifediter. ranean allures of three continents, in a iierpetual state of political combination, disintegration and recombination rendered national solidarity, aa w understand It, Impossible. But there was an Intense feeling of racial solidarity, common to all the Hellenic peoples, which found lie chief expression in thoae festival of the Olympic games, when onci every four years, during a period of nearly twelve centuries, the flower of lb Hellenic youth flocked to the sacred plain at Olympia to dedicate ita manhood to the Hellenic deity and to bear witness to tha blnodle which united the Hellenes of Athena or H parts, of Aegina or HoeotU, with the dwellers in the furthest Hellenic settlements on the coasts of the Black WgmtM pipffliin Twenty-fift- h THE ELEPHANT 30S Twenty-fift- h St. Offden, Utah Street for the m |