OCR Text |
Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAI.J Friday, January 1, 1932 MercolizedWax Keeps Skin Young Get M OunC$ and we as diroat«<. Fine P&rtlcl1111 of aced ~ ~ off UDtU all defec~ •uch N gi.J:Dplee,liver IIPOt.. t&n a.ud hvel<J,., di.api)Oal'. Bkbl. i• then 1oft P el velve~. Y.,ur faoe looQ~yOuqor. M~ W ar brio.P 0111. lbo biddon bea.. t;v of your altin. , . _. wrlnklo...,.. one ouoee ~rad Te Su:oltte di81olved iu. o.o.o-hall pint "ffUb Jw;oi.Atdroc~ Agen ts. Something new. Fe.st se111ng alie auto accessory. Keep wlnd,hlelds clea.r or Ice, Sleet, or Snow, Be.mples 35c. Arcttc THE VALE OF ARAGON 'By Stor:., Wiper Co.,311 N.19th St.,St.Loula.Mo, FRED McLAUGHLIN Sunshine J:J:J:J: • .Autho~ - All W i11ter Long "The Blade of Picardy" AT the foremost Desert ReJOrt of the West-marvelous climate-warm aunny da ys-clear starlit nights- dry invigora ting a ir- splendid roads- gorgoous mounta in ~nes--flneat hotels--theldaal wint.,. home. W r'tt• of • Co»J'rf&bt by Bobba-!!errlll Co. (WNU Servlee.) 0,... & CII•"•Y PALM SPRINGS C alifornia L1ving Characters Used on Ancient Chessboard The Mughul emperors of. India ea.rrled out some strange plans in oon- nectlon with tbelr domestic U:fe, and a visitor to the fnmous fort In Agra will be able to see some or the beautiful bullulngs used as part of the zenana. One of the most interesting featureR is the open space tn the center of the fort, known as the Anlurl This space Is divided Into Bngh. many squares, marked off by marble slabs, and covered with green grass. There are broad marble causeways between the separate blocks. It 1s generally believed that the Mughul emperors used these as cbess-boards, and the ''pieces" used 1n the game were young slaves, who changed t11e1r position according to the directions of the players, who would be seated in one of the marble pavilions. The game played In those days did not correspond with the modern chess, hut was known as pachesl. The size of the Anjurl Bagh is about 280 feet square. IROWN YOUR HEADACHE In This Cup of Tea! Ltlu Intestinal mo'femeut cauaea pgJoful h~ache11. When the ayatem clogs. m11keyoucaelf • cus;ll ot fragrant. Garfield To:~.lt• errceu ue prompt:geatle but declded11 ccrtalu. Tbe sea~ or beavlnesaTanllhct: from:rou.cstomacb. GarDetcl Tea ta thoroullb11' b1Umlcsaaud the sure, ea.aao.-t wm:r to Bush bowels. .Jlt alld.rusllUI4 New F r eez ing Procesa Utillzlng intense cold at 50 degrees below z.::-•·o. a process has been perfected by wllfcll perishable foods are r-rozen so that they retain their original fre-sh flu. ,·or and texture for months ln a frozen state. :Meats, seafoods, poultry, vegetables and fruits n.re processed by the new method. Accol'dlrlg to Clarence Blrtf.seye, quick-freezing inventor, the foofls are frozen .so quickly that no harmful chemjcal or organic change can tah:e tllnce ln them. WE CAN SELL AT GOOD PJUC:E$ 500 horses and mu1es every Monday after January 1st, any kind, any age. Write or wir• for inlonnatiort. C OLORADO HORSE & MULE CO. Denve r, Colo. Stock Yards A Severe Teat Mrs. Howls-My husband says he has lmoekcd oft' cussing :for good. Mrs. Yelps--tnd do you think he · "ill !<old out? )Irs. nowls-·wen, we wlll see how be gets by this month's gas blll.New Bedford Standard. til A cCording t o Preceden t Suttendorf-I Invented a better rat trap. Pifl'enpoof - What's your next move? Slittend01·!-To a cabin In the woods, o! course. The Newlywed Heir Mother-When the baby starts cryIng like that ft"s a sure sign he Is teething. Daoghter-Oh, dear, cnn you recommend n good dentist? Liquid Air P roduction. About 800 cuhic feet of nlr at or-dinary temperature nnd pressure are required to produce one cubic foot of liquid alr. AU men are born equal, and when they dle they rench the s::une state ngaln. THE ST ORY In New Orleans, In 18 21 , Loren Garde. recently an officer u nder General Jackson, Is surprised by the appearance, In ancient Span· Ish costume ot two men and a woman whose beauty enchants him. Resenting thB arrogance ot the e lder ot the two men, Ga.rde tlghta wlth him and wounds him. H e learns his opponent Is Adoteo de Fuentes, colonel In the $panGarde Ish army ln Venezuela. overhears a plot to overthrow Spanish rule In Venezuela.. Dis~ covered, he fights. but Is overflOWered and made prisoner on the Santa Lucrecia, ship bearing arms tor the Venezuelans. On board are the consplratora, the lady ot hll!l love, her brother Polito, and De Fuentes. From the ~irl, Garde learn• her name ts Dulce Lamartina. He loves her, but does not reveal his love. The vessel Is wrecked. Garde reaches the Venezuelan shore, alone. He encounters a stranger and l!lees The stranger, Captain Dulce. Monahan ot the British legion under Bolivar, directs him to trlends In Caracas. There, supplied by Monahan with the secret sign ot the pa.triots, he Is welcomed at the revolutionary headquarter$. Garde attends the wedding ot Dulce and De Fuentes. Dulce recognJzes htm and leaves De Fuentes at the altar. She l.s torn tram Garde's arms. He escapes. Finding Gardo, Dulce tells him her wedding to De Fuentes was to have been the price ot Garde's Ute. They reveal their mutual love. Garde Is made prisoner. From De F'"u.entes he learns Dulce has dlsapl)eared. He Is rescued trom prison bY a revolutionist, Manuel, and with Polito sets out tor Bolivar's They are Intercepted by c~mp. Venezuelan soldiers. Garde discovers his COlllJlQ.nlon ot tha night hal:! been Dulce, and Is dismayed by his lack ot pet•ceptlon. Dulce escapes, but Garde Is His captor ts Colonel seized. Pint Garda Is brougbt betore Bolivar, CHA PTER V II- Continued -12"Man-c.el rides a horse as well as he does a ship," said Francisco, relief 1n his dark eyes. "Aye. friend of mine," I whispered. For I felt ''be is most opportune.,. that Manuel would save me. The sailor pushed through the erowd of curious Indians who had gathered to look upon tbe great general, and Bolivar, striding forward to meet Wm, threw his arms nround the broad shoulders. ' 4My ugly angel,'' he crled, deep aO'ectlon Jn hfs voice, ••r have not seen tltee tor months 1 Whnt brings thee ln such baste from Caracas?" Manuel grinned at the_ rest o! us. ncaracns, General, Ia boll.fng." His dancing eyes considered me. •'Where ts the Senorita?" ••Aye,'' said Monahan laughing, "did he not boast-?" "The next man who asks me about the Senorita, Manuel, shall feel the weJght of my fist." The sallor's keen Insight read the menace In the air. "This man, general, belongs to us, he ls one of t;e." ''Yet he comes in the garb of Spain.'' "A garb that I myself procured. He You should have seen me.'' laughed. "I am perched like a rooster, on the comb of a roof in the moonlight, a piece of heavy tiling in rey hand, waiti-ng for a tall Spanish officer to pass beneath me. I wns amazed to discover that Caracas 1s filled with short tnt officers." He stopped ·to laugh again. ''Finally one, a captain, approached. Upon his head I deposIted the piece ot tlling, and upon his flattened body I deposited myself. In two minutes he was mLnns the nnl~ torm the Americana now wears, which, 1n truth, Js grievously inadequate." Bolivar Jaughed, a rich, ringing lat>gh that meant life to me. "And the city,"' he said, "Js boiling because ot that? What more1" "There is little more, General. The beautiful Senorita Lamartina is lost, and all the forces ot Caracas have failed to find her. My part of the escapade ot the Amerlcano-who has aided us tremendously, and who comes to offer service to our cause-was too evident, so further stay In the clty was impossible. Lastly, La Torre plans a move against the armies ot Your Excellency.'' •jrt is good news. Manuel, tor we ehall be ready." Bolivar considered a long moment. j•whnt of the Span· ish officer who rode last night with tbts America no?" "'rhere wall no Spanish ofHcer, General. who rr. de with htm. T.he resemblance b~tween the Senorita and her brother, Lleutenant Pollto, Is a yery strtklng thing." ••You mean to tell us. Manuel, that ene--?'~ Aye. Gf!neral." The swarthy sailor laughed. "Sbe used Pollto'a broken head, and W.. cold, and the all-enreloptng cloak to hide her identity; and she rldes a borse as well as any• ua."' 10 W. N- U, S al t Lake Clty, No. 1- 1932. BoUvar smlled. ~Yet the tale that words of Bolivar t» him who eom· manded the center ot our a t tacking be brought ns was so i mpossible." I turned t o the Liberator: "I! IDs Unes. He had embraced our colonel Excellency, ha vlng forglven me. cares nnd had f8.id, "Remember, Ptnl, we to make use of a stupid clod I would take the town of Maracay-and hold offer service to him. I can, at least, it." And Colonel Plnl, had ssluted, proud of thls glorious mlsston, t or furnish a man's portion ot brawn... Now Bolivar took me by the hand Pinl, however much he may have and smiled into my eyes. "Francisco tailed, had no lack of courage. On the broad fertile valley that lies has told me much of you. I! Andrew Jackson bas looked upon you wlth to the enst or Lake Valencia we met the enemy; Paez, enat ot us, and favor-" Francisco Interrupted. ..I bn ve the Plaza, to the west, attacking at the proof, Excellency, here In my pocket." same time. The history of Venezuela He drew out the thin lealhern wallet calls this battle only a skirmish, for that bad been in my possession when It failed of Its goal because the body I had played so poorly the part of San cannot go forward lt the wings are Isidro. In that wallet I had carried, dragging. In our unit were two bun~ since a few days after tl1e battle ot dred of the British legion and over Chalmette, a piece ot paper torn from four hundred Indians, and despite the the fly-leaf ot my ~,rench grammar, dragging wings, we pushed onward upon which Gen. Andrew Jackson had until we touched the town, which, wrlttPn a stat~ment the night he had after an hour of fiercely contested stayed at my father's house; a state- fighting. fell. Our Indian soldiers, out of hand ment, which, worthless In itself, has been my dearest possession. "May I wlth joy over this hard-won vfclory, read, Excellency, what I have found In ran, yelling and shooting, through the narrow streets. In an hour they bad the wallet of young Gnrde?" Bollva..r turned to me. "Ase, Excel- found wine and rum, and other drinks lency, 1f it wlll make of me a soldier to satisfy them, and so became, at last, more tractable under the comunder your banner.'' So F rancisco, bearing ln mind the mands o! their officers. I had given strict order• to my batgeneral's limited knowledge ot Engthat no cnpth~es , wounded or talion lish, read it very slowly: be murdered, whlch had shou~d well, ''Major Loren Garde bas o1fered valiant service to h1s country; be has been, up to this time, the general fought with conspicuous gallantry at procedure 1n the trl~;btful ••war ot Talladega, ~tt Horseshoe Bend, at death" that Morales had Inaugurated Pensacola, and at Obalmette. A and that both sldes were waging; so worthy son of a worthy soldier fa. squads were roaming over the city, carrying to the nearest ava1lab1e ther." "It is signed, Excellency," Francisco houses wounded men tor treatment. At one ot these houses I found Capsaid, .. 'Andrew Jackson.'" He was leaning Monahan. tain "One could not have eome to me," said Bolivar, "more highly recom· against an adobe wall, bands in the mended. If General Jackson has seen pockets or his tan and gray jacket, fit to commission you a major, surely noisome pipe tflted at a raklah angle, and idle eyes upon a western sun. I can do no less." "\Vhy do you stand there," I ..But, Excellency," I cried, ••tt is too "wlll the poor walls fall it laughed; I deserve. moch-tt is more than I your support?'' remove you ' cannot hope--" said be, disregardwaiting,'' am "I ''lt sllall be done, Major i Francisco has said you will make a good soldier, Ing my levity, "tor Colonel Plnl to nod Francisco's judgment is never at come to hls senses." "Then you ha,ve a long watt, my fault.'' for Plni wlll never arrive." captain, Such was my first meeting with the "The Lamartina boy is inside." He Liberator, to whom hal! of South America owes its Independence. and pointed over his shoulder wlth an in· all of the western world offers homage. different thumb, "He wants to see Colonel Plnl, the sot>blst, extended you." "Is he wounded, :Monnban?" hls hand. "I congratulate you, Major.'' "Not much.'' Intuition told 111e that Plnl would ''Did he say anything about hls-'?"" never be my friend, a contlngency me?" The Irishman grinned "To wlllch worried me not at all. again. 4'l'm not chasing moonbeams, • • • Garde, I'm no sighing R~eo; I'm a The weeks that followed m.r first solcller.'' meetlng with General Bollvar were •'And a good one, my friend," said busy weeks lnd.eed, tor La Torre wns I, stooping to pass the portal. massing the forces or Spn..1n to break Polito-very po.le, very frn.ll-lay the ever tightening republican lines, upon a crude bed of straw. His eyes and the Liberator ruove<j to meet him. lighted up when he saw me, and as he Uy days, filled wftb feverish activraised a left hand, I assumed that his Ity, went b:V, and quiet nlghts uuder right was useless. ''The--the moon~ the stars were given over to worship wraith/' he said. at the shrlne of Love, tor the face of I opened his jacket, thrust. the shirt Dulce was ever before me. She and tot1nd a bullet wound beaside, semed to be cnl11ng, calllng, and I low the collar·bone. "Not so bad," I have awakened--crying out her name Polito i "lt missed the lung, assured -!rom dreams thnt were so real I You should be out In certain. am I could almost have touched her. And, was ln command ot Who month. a because of the desperation or my love, this sector, Polito'?" I became a better soldier, knowing ".Adolfo." He tried to smile .• , a that tbls nightmare of murder-as she sorry ettort. "'Vhy did-did you very called It-would be over only when not keep .her, Senor, when you had the Bolivar had won, tor be was not a chance? She rode away from Caracas man to stop short ot victory. Then 1 with yon.'' eould seek her out "And I sent her back to the llnes I met, during those days, Gen. Dan~ ot Spa.ln, realizing too late that she fel O'Leary, Irish soldier and outstand- was not yourself. The revolutionists Ing figure of the Brltlsh !eglon, to ap[Jf'oached, and her llfe would have renders been endangered. My love tor her today Venezuela -whom homage; 1\loore, Bolivar's doctor, a should have seen through so simple vivacious English gentleman; Marino, a masquerade. I seem always to faLL his chief of statr, Gen. Belford Wllson, Dld she"-I had some dlfllculty with veteran, and son ot Sir Robert Wllson my volce-"did she marry Colonel of Peninsular fame i Paez, chief of the Fuentes?" llaneros, and later President or VeneHe shook hfs head, slghfng the zuela more than once, and Cedeno, while. "Adolfo watts." He otrered Bermudez, Plaza and Urdaneta. The another feeble smile. "Dulce !s dlffi· high-sounding rnnk and tit1es that cult, Senor." they carried took the place of pay 'l})oes she speak of-of me, Polito'?" they clldn't receive. He nodded. "I think she feels that Under us were Engllsb, Irish, Portu· your regard should have read a mere guese, negroes, half-breeds, Indians, disguise." lean llaneros, the mixed rlffratr or "And so It should Senor, had I cities, and a few American adventur- been thinking less ot 1my own affairs. ers from the States. A motley crowd Forgl ve me, Polito, I am thinking, as Indeed, and hardly one that n man usual, only ot myself. I shall see that might pick to wln an empire, yet the a medico comes to attend you a t genius of Bolivar won them O\~er, once." touched them with the divine spark or ur would repay you." He thought patriotism, and made of this composite a long ruoment. "You cannot hold the crew an army that finally crushed the artvantage you have galned, Senor, tor power o! Spain in Venezuela. Paez and Plaza, ha vJng faUed, wlll One mild May morning, as the s~n permit our wings to elose 1n upon tha stood an hour above the heights or city." San Casimiro, we broke through the I nodded. Carabobo bills and descended upon "Your lines ot communlcatlon. once the little city of Cura. Ha vfng no gar- broken , . •" rison 1t fell readlly toto our hands, I nodded again, for I knew then why then we deployed, east and west and Monahan a wnlted the pleasure of north, to invest the to\vn of Mnracay, Colonel Pint, and I realized the dan. for that wns our goal, that the first ger of the dlllatory tnctlcs G! our long etride In the 1·ace for Puerto colonel. Cubello. I remembered well the last (TO BID CONTINUJ!ID.) • • • • <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><:><> THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STORY Sally Sez -By Jemet1 I'll begin the New Year with a Solemn vowNo ntail order goods, or ther e'll be a rmv• We'll furnish our larder, wardrobe and farm, With Intermountain Products, from house to barn. 1\IILTON D. SMITH, Roosevelt, Utah. E U.K:.. B R_A~D •· p"i:( ' i< LES Hot tamale! here, again, It's Leap year 1 Rush the extra men, And tell what lovely wives you'll be, To Patronize Home Industry. should have first clnlm to hls fonnor belongings. From this developed the customs and laws of Inheritance which haTe taken varied, and 1n eome cases, very complex forms, tn d.U'rerent parts ot the world.-National Geographle S<Jciety Bulletin. Curiosity of Nature The famous "Jca mine" in Pennsyl- vania Is located at Coudersport. It Is located on a mountain side and mystl· fles scientists. The lee does not form fxom water but because of a peculiar mist coming through the openings; and the hotter tbe day the taster It forms, until hug~ icicles appear. S ecret of SaleHDanahip Salesmanship isn't primartly a matter of goods at all, but of knowing alld understanding people.-Am9rlcan Maa-· azlna. Drum-Beat of Duty One sound always comes to the ear that is open; it is the steady drum-beat of duty. No music in it, perhaps-only a dry rub-a-duh. All! but that steady beat marks the time for which the whole or· chestra of earth and heaven. It says to you: "Do your work--do the duty nearest you!" Keep step in that drum-beat, and the dullest march is taking you home.-Exchange. Old Expression Akimbo is a contraction of in keen bow, meaning at a sharp bend. It is an old expression meaning with hands on hips. Funeral Eulogies Barred A pastoral letter issued by the bishop of Avranches, Normandy, forbade all eulogies of dead people at funerals. Good people do not need to be eulogized, he wrote, while the bad ones do not deserve praise. The bishop, therefore prohibited them all. Aak Your Dru~nrUt For APEX- K- HAND LOTION AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT Source of Birdlime Birdlime is a sticky substance prepared from the inner bark of holly, the berries of the mistletoe and other sources. It may be made by boiling linseed oil. It is used in Europe for trapping birds, the substance being spread on twigs. CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS ELECTRICAL Paooucrs Coi\PORATION Salt Lake City 1046 So. Main MOTOR OIL Free From Carbon Fragrant Herb Waldmeister is the German name for the herb Asperulaodorats (woodruff), and is used in May '\'\-'ine and other summer drinks. The dried leaves have a haylike fragrance, lasting for years, and are often kept with It has many small clothes. flowers, produced freely from May to July. Harmless" Liar A popular term for a person who tells pointless lies is inveterate liar. The technical term for a per~ son who lies without appal'ent ob~ ject and for which he seems to have an irresistible impulse is pathological liar. 41 Odd English Weathervane Perhaps the most curious weath. er-vane in England is the one over the old deanery at Sonnlng-onTbames. It depicts a clergyman preaching to a row of empty chairs -a fanner rector of the town is said to have driven away hls congregation by fault-finding-while his gown is blown by the wind. When You Come to Salt Lake Western Made for Western Maid Use The .Always ask you_r de!aler for NEWHOUSE HOTEL Intermountain 1\-lade Brooms By Name Blue Ribbon • Black Beauty Gold Crown "All Rates Polo Ponies American polo ponie-s are usual. ly about 15 hands higb and weigh in the neighborhood of 1,000 pounds. In this type of horse a sbort back and big barrel are encouraged, since these give wind and endurance for a horse which must carry weight at speed. Polo ponies usually have some thoroughbred blood. A good cross is threefourths or seven-eighths thoroughbred with some other stockier breeds. PLANA (Good Week·ends Only) 2 Persons Days $750 - Including the following accommodations a.nd entertainment: Choice f~ont room with bath; Sr.turday mght cabaret danee; dinner; ear storage: breakfnst. PLANB (Good Any Time) 2 per week will be 00 paid Q5 for the best t1' • Persons Days $10 Including the following accommodations and entertainment: Choice front room with bath, 2 daya and 50·word arti-cle on "Why you should us e Intermountain made Goods" - Similar to above. Send your story in prose or verse to Intermountain Products Column J'. 0. Box 1545, Salt Lake City. U yonr story appears in this column you will receive check for.- tl' • storage: dinner, b~ak faat and luncheon : two theatres, 1 night: ear Publix or R. K. 0. "Cheapn Thall Staying At Home" HOTEL NEWHOUSE w. Q5 00 N. E. Sutton Gen'l West C. Ass't Geo'l Ma-r. Salt Lake City, Utah M~. ~ AMBASSADOR HOTEL -::--~~!! Inheritance Laws Born in Private Ownership Among our prlmltlve ancestors there were no soch things ns a will or elen lnherltance by a limited number of heirs, because there was noth· fng to Inherit or to will. All property was community property. When a man dietl he simply ceased to use the comq1.0n property "pool," and without any formalltles the surviving mem· bers o:t the group contlnncd to make use of tt. \Vhen private ownership ot things and laud cnme to be recognized, the governing unit-vHlnge, tribe or state -found that it had to take some ac-tion '"ben a man dted, leavlng property. If nothing were done, anyon~ who happened to be nenr or strong might seize the ownerless p.roperty, even though he were a totnl stranger to or even an enemy ot Its former owner. Tribal concepts of fair play came into operation, and 1t was rec· o&nlzed that the dea d man's fam117 Gee-whiz! Johnie's train has a broken track, Ma's mirror a flaw, J ennie's doll a crack. The blankets are faded, the barnes brokeThe whole darn'd order's a p r ac~ tical joke. Juat • atep from the! bnslne,.. c(!!lter. Quiet an• Homelike. Pollalar p r I e e d meals. Ratp JUiO and ap. Commercial Ratea Seniee Garace In ConnM:Uon4 JOE H. PEPPER, Manager Salt Lake City, Utah Phone Was. 3965 145 So. 5th East Salt Lake's Only Family Hotel !IIentality of the Sexes The public health service says that mental capacity and intellectua-l gifts of human bejngs is not restricted to either sex. The-re are highly intellectual women as well as men. It should be remembered, however, that the mental traits of the two sexes are different. Early Chautauqua Course The first eorrespondence couTse in art was a feature of the old Ohautauqua cow-se and was taught by Frank Fowler in 1880·1888. Rat Twenty-Nine Inches Long A rat found and killed by a native of Bulawayo, South Africa, in outbuildings adjoining an official's residence was :found, on bein~ measured, to Qe 29 inches long from nose to tail. Uncle Eben "Tain't no use cxpectin' to be puffickly comfortable," said Uncle Eben. "When de climate is pleasant you has to worry 'bout what de unseasonable weather is ¢neter do to de crops."-Washington Star, |