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Show THE QRANTSVILLE NEWS, QRANTSVILLE, UTAH Dont Mix Types When Planning Your Home if You Seek career Is founded on a theme characterised by simplicity in every detail. The house which is overburdened with elaborate ornamentation is never beautiful In the average opinion. Take aa an example of popular opinion, the Colonial style of architecture. This style is now one of the most widely used of any applied to the American home. It stands for simplicity and do pefltts upon this quality for Its beauty .SAFE HITS BRIGHTEN SPIRITS OF PLAYERS You Get Full Value Everybody knows you get greater value for your money in a good jewelry store than anywhere aloe. Wo have run a GOOD jewelry store for 55 years. Our modest prices make buying easy. BOYD PARK Good Appearance. MAKERS OF JEWELRY MO MAM STREET SALT LAKE CITY BEST EFFECTS IN SIMPLICITY The Colonial Houao Properly Set Hae Plenty of Ground Around It Note Characterietica of the Model Described Here. Mr. William A. Radford trill answer auaeUoos and giro advice FREE OP GOST on all subjects pertaining to the subject of building, for the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as Editor, Author and Manufacturer, he la. without doubt, the highest authority 4 A QUICK AID GIVEN Rapid Treatment After Battle and New Cleansing Methods Save Lives of Many 8oldiera. en all these subjects. Address all Inquiries to William A. Radford,. No. 127 Prairie avenue, Chicago, 111., and only enclose two-oestamp for reply. nt By WILLIAM A. RADFORD. Everyone husheard of the term, architectural style," and Is more or less acquainted with Its meaning. Churches, large public buildings and structures designed to embody the character of the fine arts are modeled closely after some of the established architectural styles, founded many yeurs ago and brought down to the present age through the work of the architectural 4 J hlstoriaas and archaeologists. Architecture of the American home, like American modes of living and the language spoken by Americans, Is Influenced by the work, of leaders In the periods of the past The characteristics of the architecture of various .countries are widely copied In the American home. It Is not necessary, however, that the home follow the Dutch, English, Renaissance or Colonial architecture In order that It have A house modeled closely after the Colonlul style can hardly be successfully built on a lot less than 100 feet wide. The small house may be designed to follow this style, however, In such a maimer that It will appear well on a lot very much more narrow tliun this. It requires freedom In following the styld and extreme simplicity of outline. The example shown in the Illustrations is not a true Colonial type, but it Is in the class of small houses designed for a fairly narrow lot and suggesting the Colonial style In Its outline and arrangement The exterior of tlie house Is finished In a simple manner, with wide clapboard siding, large porch with turned columns across tlie front and heavy outside chimney at the side. Claplmnrds were originally made i Lieut Col. Gilbert Barling, C. B., a famous English surgeon who Is consulting surgeon to the great base hospitals at Rouen, which accommodate . HANK O'DAY. VETERAN NATIONAL LEAGUE UMPIRE. 15,000 jiutients, says thut since the war begnn Immense strides have been made dubs! Ball look good or bad, says tion. It just mopes along. It freHank ODay, when they are, or are quently slackens In its fielding, and Its In the surgery of the battlefield. Two Improvements that may be noticed aa not hitting. AVhen a club Is bunging pitchers get to working In a taken place since the outbreak having the ball, it seems good both to the fashion. of writes a corresimndent of hostilities, crowds and to Itself. The boys chirp "Wliat a world of difference the New York the Times, are In connection and chatter ; they couch Joyously ; they sound of safe hits can make In the make so much 'noise the umpire cunt spirits of bull fossera! Umpires have with the rapid treatment of the wounded after a big battle and the cleansing keep them quiet Everything Is happi- long since learned to be merciful with ness and good feeling, mid the good clubs that arent hitting. An umpire of wounds. Five or ten miles behind the fighting feeling i spreads to other departments stands a lot of gab from any liitless sufficient casualty clearing stations as well as the batting. team he knows their nerves are When a club Is on a batting ram- strained and tlmt they just cant help each holding about 1,000 men liave been organized to deal with all the page, it nearly always fields finely. But nagging. It's different when he Is dealwhen a ball club cant lilt; when It ing with a crowd of successful hitters.1 casualties that may reasonably be exIs goes In there day after day and raises They have no reason to kick, and he pected, so thut once a man picked up he receives bearers the stretcher by a lot of pop flies, then theres no life, chases them out in Jigtime when they adequate treatment within a very short no pepper, no spirit In that aggrega need It." time. Here also Is a special hospital, perhaps of 50 beds, for uhdominul cases, which are the most urgent. WHITE SOX. LOSE JIM SCOTT In the old days such wounds, because of tlie delay before they could be treatChicago Pitcher Applies for Place In ed and cleaned, were generally considOfficers' Reserve Training Camp ered to be fatal; but under the new at Aeon Springs. conditions, by which a man so hit Is Jim Scott, pitcher for the Chicago plnccd In an ambulance and apnt off . Aragon, left fielder for New York, without Immediately, If necessary, Americans, has applied for a place In the officers respve training camp at Is plnylug out of position, ne Is an waiting for other wounded to be placed In with llin, the dangerous delay Is . Leon- Springs, TOu It vos made known lnflelder. overcome, and the wound kept aseptic the other day. Charles A. Comiskey, Germany Schaefer, the veteran playand more amcnnlilp to treatment president of the Chicago Americans, and B. B. Johnson, president of the er, Is doing scout duty for the Giants Lallah Rookh Centenary. league, indorsed the application, so it this year. Is the war holding back any poem is felt that Scotts days as a major Wally Schnng of the Athletics hits comparable with Lallnli Rookh.Vthe leaguer are numbered. Scott la playing his ninth year with the ball a terrific blow, but hits In publication of which was delayed by the Waterloo campaign, and took place the Chicago Americans. lie came from hard luck. Just a century ngo? the Wlcliita team of tbe Western The Browns und Athletics are havPcrhups few rend the famous Oriing a lot of fun flirting with the cellar ental romance nowadays, but Moore's championship. reputation when he wrote it was such that he was uble to sell It when ha Its a fine tiling for Dutch Leonard had scarce put pen to paper. Murray that the Red Sox pay for pitching and offered 2,000 guineas for It, but the not for batting. poets friends thought this too little, and upproached Longman, stipulating Bernle Boland, Detroit pitcher, has that the price should be not less than Ret back the New York Yankees eight the largest amount ever paid for a was times In a row. Tlmt, said Longman, poem. the 3,000 paid for Rokehy, and on With Johnny Evers fighting his bat- that busts a bargain was struck, the tles for him, Pat Moran thinks he can publisher's only stipulation being that Moore's poem should be equal to head off tha Giants. Bcotts In length. Even so, Longman The mis reason that Schupp is such had the best of the bargain. Seven a great pitcher Is that he is not large editions were sold within a year, In the head. and a quarter of a century later Longmans still regarded Lallah Rookh as the cream of copyrights." ManchesBirmingham has a pitcher named Loveless. He ought to be an umpire. ter Guardian. Nobody loves an ump.. ManlpuSating a Blanket how to manage a blanket Learning Benny Kauff Is fitting .815, but the Violet la not setting the league on that Is a little short at one end and not quite long enough at the other, fire, which he vowed he would. with similar deficiencies in width. Is After Ty Cobb could hit In only 85 one of the first things the young solconsecutive games. It Is quite likely dier should be taught If lie la not taught It he will probably have an exJennings will ask waivers on him. Jim 8cott perience like that of a western recruit Fred Mitchell Is as big a favorite In who says that In his first week In camp years old, league, and is thirty-on- e as was Frank Chance when he lost a great deal of sleep at night Chicago more than six feet tall, and weighs When he lay on his back his stomach about 185 pounds. He has been a star he was called the UTeeriess Leader. was cold; when he turned over his pitcher for several seasons, having It is hard to say which is the tough- back was cold; when he pulled the failed his team only In 1916, when he was suspended late In the season for est Job being czar of Russia, king of blanket up around his shoulders he got Greece, or president of the National cold feet and when his feet were unfailure to obey dab rules. der the blanket his neck was uncomfrom that episode league. His A veteran's recipe may, fortable. this year has been notable In baseball He worth considering. be the however, Bates, slagging circles. Latest figures show he has Philadelphia says the only' way to manipulate an been in fifteen games, winning five and thlrdaacker, Is a Pacific Coast He has been hammering the ball army blanket on a cold night is to losing four, and giving only 1.63 earned pull your knees up to your chin, lie runs a game. Htf ranks fourth in the for Connie Mack. downward, and hold the four corface effectiveness. in league of the blanket In your teeth. ners Roger Hornsby, the Cards lnflelder, Science Monitor. called flash a was In Christian the Races. pan, by Interesting The International league and Ameri- some of the critics. The flash keep! Laws of Old. can association races are very much burning rather brightly. famous of one the In English cases more interesting than those of the NaIn Chittys Criminal Law to referred one reason he says Huglile Jennings There American and tional leagues. rumors seems to be much more ginger In the Is low In the pack is that In three it was decided that spreading of a parthe to raise Intent with 14 price ha& 16 men he men, and then games In former than the latter. 12 men left on the bags. ticular species of product endeavoring to enhance Its price bjr persuading Has Faith in His Team. from abstaining from bringing others Gene Dumont of the Washington Pat Moran refuses to give out any to and engrossing .large it one as looms market of club the up packfinish of prize about the Interviews race, the to resell them at In order In the minors. He has quantities but he believes he has the best team In ages picked up occasioned by exorbitant the fine season. ball all prices pitched the league. their own artifices, are offenses indictThe Cards paid 815,000 In cash and able at common law, and subject the Detroit Gets New Pitcher. Joe Dailey, pitcher, has been sold by players for Pitcher Goodwin of Mil- party so acting to fine and Imprisonof the court the Belittle team of the Northwestern waukee. When the Cards give $15,000 ment at the discretion convicted. Is which he be to a In Goodwin. a hurler hes for got league, which la disbanding, to Detroit dead-arm- ed DIAMOND NOTES - - ' . ' Any architect who lias the style. requisite skill may. produce a house which embodies an architectural style of his own conception, but It Is hardly possible for any man to so design a bouse that It does not show the tendency of some style already established. Perhaps the efforts of inexperienced architects to produce sorne- - ') I Ji : wide because of the difficulty In cutting them out of the logs, fewer being required to cover a given surface when cut wide. At the present time wide clapboards may be obtained and are used to reproduce the appearance of these earlier aiding boards, especially In the Colonial atyle house whefe their use Is most appropriate. The large chimney Is of brick and tapers slightly above the first floor. No porch rail Is used, which makes It possible to easily Inclose the porch entirely with screens or storm sash. The hooded windows with their shutters form a distinctive feature of the ex- terior. True to ftie typical Colonial arrangement, a hall runs back through the center of the first floor to the stairImiutoon way. Cased openings lead from this liiill to the living room and the dining fun room. The living room is a very pleas:: DmiruLoonl back from the ant room iroxn-ctorn front along extending the aide of the house. A jiuni! fireplace Is built Into the outer wall i I near the center of the room. The dining room, kitchen and pantry are situated along the other aide of the house. There is a buffet in the dining room and the pantry is fitted with shelves and a work table. The refrigerator la placed on the back porch, but it Is arranged so that It opens from the pantry. The stair leading to the basement First-FloPlan. Is entered from a passage between the and the porch. kitchen thing original is accountable for some floor Is pleasantly arsecond The of the houses lacking beauty, characbedroom above the One ter and the evidence of common sense, ranged. room large Is especially living pleasant comwhich may be seen in almost any There la a fireplace In this room. The munity. a front window. The recognised architectural styles closet Is lighted by on are used with varying degrees of modi- Two other bedrooms Isare provided fitla and bath The floor. this large fication, in bouse design. built-i- n medicine case. A The greatest success Is ordinarily ted with a rooms Independall makes hall large The great attained in ' simplicity. . master In tbe fine arts spends years of ent his life In attaining perfection in the true Sweet mercy Is nobility simple thing! and It la not uncommon that the masterpiece which crowns his badge. Shakespeare, 4 W-'- . r t or WOUNDED left-hand- ed - come-bac- k phe-no- - Anti-Tru- st ! |