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Show THE BLUE AND THE QRA1J things to understand about used car allowances The Phantom Parade tell me that march k On Memorial day In the big parade, In uniforms that are stiff with starch, And with shining .button and flashing blade, But I emile In a sort of auperlor way I know who parades today. pink-cheeke- THEY ) 1 When you trade-i- n your used car for a new car, you are after all making a purchase, not a sale. You are simply applying your present car as a credit toward the purchase price of the new car. bugle, frail and SOUNDS the last blue as ELMO SCOTT WATSON U ONE knows where he was born. It may have been In Maine or In Cali- I VX 3 fornia. Minnesota night or III I claim that honor, I I IK Louisiana. But the name ' of the state doesn't mat ter, after all. For he was an American. No one knows In what outfit he erved. It mu.v Intro been the Infantry, the cavalry or the artillery. Or ho mny have worn the sliver wings of nvin-tloBut the branch of the service doesn't matter. He was a soldier a fighting man. No one knows where or how he died. It may have been In Belleau Wood or at St. Mlhlel, or somewhere on the Somme that he "got his." A hand grenade may have dealt him his death wound daring some trench raid or It may have been a burst of shrapnel, or a bayonet thrust when the fighting was hand But that doesn't matter, either. The thing that matters is that "he died fighting" and the flag for which he died was the Stars and Stripes. No one knows his name. It mny have leen Smith, or O'Brien or Cohen or Schwartz or Suicdjkl. Or It might have been Paul Two IHHcoh the name by which he was once kuown In the day school on some Indian. reer-vatloout West. Bui his name and the nationality of his parents are not things that matter. He now bears the proudest name that any man can boar. It's "The Unknown Soldier." Five years ago they brought his body back across the Atlantic ard on November 11, 1J122, they placed It In a white marble tomb In a famous cemetery near the nation's capital a soldier homo from the wars. Since that time the great men of his own country have bowed their beads reverently before his last resting place. To It have come the great of other binds. A queen of royal European hlixnl, prlntvs. gcnernN. admirals. Hatt'smen. have laid their wreaths upon his tomb. But all of this homage Is its nothing compared to that which Is tillered up In the hearts of all Americans on .May !V), BC7. For the tomb of the Unknown Soldier In Arlington cemetery Is a national shrine to which the thoughts of nil Americans are turning on Memorial day this It Is more than a svmlol of year. the 4,im American soldiers killed In battle "over there" whose names and personal hUtorlsn were unknown. The honor paid to this one of tbe 4.(i, be whose Identity will forever remain a mystery, symbolizes more than n nation's grateful remembrance of the thousands of men who 1M tr,Mrllc In the World war. It Is tU-- Incarnation of the spirit of Memorial day. n day observed by a nation In witch the word "united" In Its natne has h new significance, n nation pausing In grateful remembrance of nil the soldiers who gave their lives In all the wars In which their country Ins ever been engaged. And It Is here In Arlington, where the Unknown S'J dler sleeps, that President the command r In chief of nil American Mdlcr and the flrt dtl ren of the land, will voice America's tribute to her soldier dead on Memorial day this year. The tirst memorial to the unknown dea l was erected In Arlington Inl'V. It was tho Impressive tnonusm r.t of sdMied roiighhcwii granite and Oiariile (pictured above) which the following Inscription, "Itinesth this Stolie repose the Irf.nes of 2.111 unknown soldiers gathered af'cr the war from ltn fields f Hull Putt and the route to the liiippabannock. Their remains could Hot .e Id' Milled but Ilu-l- r names and deaths ur recorded In the ard Ives of thrlr country; and hotwr them as of Its grateful their tol.le unity of martyrs. May J'W SSSwJJ KS1 . v '"f :5. 4nh K D i ' J M&-Xf&- srTwtts.0FTiw I the wisp of smoke That curia from tha mouth of a gun defiled, To dance with the echoes the shot awoke, And wild as tha scream of a welt of soul Impaled on a phantom pole. U x? J-.- .. ' I Rtilvilftf( AitttVCSVralftW: 7HC , to,-1- B SSjSiM4lllylll- UiW. tf - i. It- - brasses AND the below. is Clllcla was the name of a maritime province In the southern part of A!a Minor. Il lay betwven the Mediterranean sea and Syria, and through It rHtt the great highway from Vyrla to the coast. This gave (Tilda great rommerclal Importance during several centuries when It was part of lbs Unman empire, ns were the adjacent districts of ramphjlla. Lycannta and CappodoctA. Tha principal city of The largest allowance is not necessarily the best deal for you. Sometimes it is; sometimes it is not. 5 blared In An excessive allowance may mean that you are paying an excessive price for the new car in comparison with its real value. First judge the merits of the new car in comparison with its price, including all delivery and finance charges. Then weigh tha street While an angel chorus walled on high. And burnished swords flashed to and fro On the ground while gray ghosts lit the sky With the flash of a thousand banners massed. Over graves of a glorious past. 6 any difference in allowance offered on your used car. G E N E R AL A' ND from early mom till the sun was low The thin, gray column filtered by, Until on a sweet, wild bugle blow It melted as melts a reluctant sigh. my heart was ashes that some how burned With the glow of a light returned. MOTORS And n Cilicia Ranked High 4 VW-' ;V- - 1 street, overhead, Wan as a shaft from tha paling moon At the death of an afternoon. OMUtS Your used car has oniy one fundamental basis of value;' i. e., what the dealer who accepts it in trade can get for it in the used car market. Your used car has seemingly different values because competitive dealers are bidding to sell you a new car. 3 And the air grew thick with the muffled tread Of a host of flickering, shrouded feet, And a column of ahades floated ft n. 2 sudden a whisper cleared the A OF If thty rest III peace." Undcrnei.ih i cemetery was estahllbhed near ever me that a great vault of solid masonry, lit) battlelleld Qtid each grave was marked THEY may tell march feet deep and feet square, In with a temporary headboard giving On Memorial day In the big parade which are stacked the bumble the name, rack and name of the orcofllns containing the bones of ganization of the man burled there. In uniforms that ara stiff with starch And with shining button and flash the soldiers. Nur are these the only 'Hie company ofllcer was made respon-blhllng blade. iinknvn dead In Arlington. It was for this and he was required to smile In a sort of superior way But before this monument that th first furnish the War department with a hnow who parades today! formal Memorial Iuy exercises al- sketch map of the gruwa. B. A. Helmblnder, In the New York In contrast to the amall number though the day had not yet been thus Times. on In were held World otlicially designated the of unknown ded war, IN FLANDERS FIELDS May 30. 18W. as the result of the the record of the Civil war Is appnll-lnfamous General Orders No. II, Isnational There are eighty-thre- "A plnk-cheek- 2t car for every purse and purpose" t OLDSMOBILB t OAKLAND LaSALLE t CADILLAC PONTIAC CHEVROLET plne-woo-U BUICK e CMC TRUCKS t YELLOW CABS AND COACHES Tkt Eltctrie Rtfrlttrator FRIG1DA IRE I I At Utual g. comsued by Gen. John A. mander of the G. A. It., calling for 'the strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of com radii who died In defense of their country." War In Its very nature Is a trag- edy, but saddest of ull thlugs con-m- i ted wl;h war U the tragedy of the For some soldi rs unknown dead. war means moments of cxaltatiou In the knowledge .f a sacrllice worth which will send his while, of heroi-and of tiatne ringing down the ye-trtender i aie of the nr shell of his tody uftcr Hi spirit las lUd. But to others It tnej.ni prhatlon. pain, the same exaltation, the snine heroism but with It death, bis name forgotten, and only a headstone tvrrked known" li tduMV where this bit of l.umsiu wreckage wu consigned to Mother Earth. the vat Hrti lcs which the United States put into the t'cld in the World wur, there w;;s u surprisingly small number f tinknown dead, of approximately t killed hi that coiitll I only were listdl its "unknown" at the Utile the l.dy of one of them was selected for the tiiitloii's highest honors to be burled In Arlington as "The Soldier." Since that time I, Itknown persistent hivcsllirutloti lt:is rut down Hi- number until now the War department reports something owr I.- still llsli'J IIS unidentified of The rsMisuti for the sma''iii-In this war t 1st of unknown lies 111 the Simple little u'timilmTIl l b n'lticHtioii lacs which earh man In ti e A. V., r. wore. Two of p,es,. ttc. t of a slher br'f the each d'.l'pr. were worn around tie neck oln Hlisieidej frolll Ih Hth'r. M1 Hi the cH'h of these was stamj-ed- . bis tinme, ri'iA and case f an regiment, corps or department, and III the case of the JtdNted men, M tuimlrt-r- . li the tiame ami rer was killed one tag w;t bnrlnl with him and the nth r wa attuchul 11 the fT's at the (end of Ms grave. Whcner pracllcable a m s Om-viderln- s til s lb-a- lf olfr. cemeteries in this country where are Union soldiers. Of thia buried number the graves of 15.1.41 4 are marked "Unknown:" These totals Include those who died In hospital where Identities would have been easily estibilsled. In the haste with which the country pimped Into the Ch II war no system for IdentNleatlon of the killed was adopted. After a battle searching parties gathered up the wounded and burled the dead In hastily dug pit. Since this work wnt nsiully dime at night, these (lunch-m- i nts overlooked many of the disunities. Then tie army marrhed nwny leaving these bod'es M keep their "bivouac of the dca 1." After the civil war wni over, the undertook the federal giOrtnmctd task of Miik'tie a systematic search for the Ut b n ibnd on many of the Civil war battlefields. Hundreds of ske'etcts were found but tber was It was no natk of Identification. such '"unknown dead" as these who slci t beneath the memorial In And they are onlv a few of the unknown there. In 1S72 the War graves In department marked ! marble that cemetery wTh IUtI headstones and f this nun ber 4.ono bear the simple word "Unknown!" The Civil war was not the onlv on which added P the long roll of missing men. soldiers who cave their Ihes for ihetr country and of whom no tmce t.oi rrmnltn. Their Iff rating d fsr p',n es, ummiiked. are -- In States over the Urltej and w!,Ve t atol H,p West, where Indian bnlb-Ihe'r toll, as well as nn tn.-the biilt'ef.rhls of 'hp SioHll Mi tnortsl their '"' for I'sy ! too. at the I u b of the bnVfmn Soldier 111 Arl fi2'ot. t.ef.ite Whli'h In all AmiTlcsus In w s lrit, st In reverence oti Meeiorlal t(.;i I htiiiis to nil Ateienn m a hiolfttiM-n- t . prescrta-iii..! diet Wit M;.li! for of this "C!ierTitic!i! of the peobv H'C ple, for the Jxsple slid tr'-- e n thi'i(.h all tl:M evi (le. from i.f p d 'etiib rs hs "1" the arlb." Opinion. FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. Symbol of the Day TV 0 Memorial day will ever remain the most sacred of all our holidays, We visit the last resting plan's of our near and dear loved ones, who In the peaceful avocation of life have quietly slipped nwiiy from our sight, and In memory we place our offering of flowers tin their lowly resting places. We d not forget them In our busy working days, but on Memorial day we seern to cope tienrer to them, Into which they and the great have entered scents to encompass our hearts as we brldce the gap that has rem' between us with our offering of flower. tbfy sro not aon. Thrr sr nM Tis only ttiy hs slirtl swsjr, t 11 J e Borglum Memorial Will Supply Hornet g-- ne llZV 11 W'iW? An Rtiourcefut Preacher sr'et f..er outhrpak of 1'urham, BdlMe Conn., msde It rburxb as n Ices discontinue fij.p- at t tempt nit tnudi -, t!ety lltv-W- I Choree lawyer. with should say so lm a 7 r "nl n: i.fcjn m j j 7-f- x V j -; I I t WW Stirrlcd Effect. nowsccureda, pS5M$ 3lfe,?k m s nt:TDtntrToii SALT LAKH GLASS 1 l ! jrv Wall Finish V i. M TiCtSiswhiitC)iiCtv,ni .11 The liaison Memorial to :be wars or America, at Newark, N.J. lew, I'Udograph shows the front tiMkliig tiorth. I t, Wg &mPM WAIm 3rrr1 J 1 iW$&M tl An Important Member 'jtr,' - lOl !' tt - ir. ? !f , C all "f bU was Tarns. wMcti wss the rril" Tie fart thnt V I base 11 rl.sh w letter tit keep fdt as. as he pit Mrltiplsce of Ft. Paul. f tti" lingre ItsvmotoJ liev. pHtd'-nnblIn his with (!'ec. said, pr'de M birthplace, a cltlwn of n woan city tadonal burh. frum rteiherlnit H'H k. t The bis sermon siili'lHT the before About tuUslonsry jesrs eftrnii thst he bad preprl fr b Journeys of St. Paul, tloero. H IhroMU tb" brott.hast famous Notnnn orator and politician, Merj ws was ap;Kiinted governor of (Tilda, tiisi;. to ttieiubers of tils pall'lt and of llw adjacent Island of ("jprus m one-thir- ben-Mtii- sl ? decree of the Italian gni eminent Then and Nou of the profits of the postal by g The traveler of a day Hdmlnist rat Ion will be nsed in rntildnt he so fast rode he and building houses for Its said "n h employees a ml agents during the next the telegraph pedes tear he that fast so ten years. These bouses will remain rides Herald rrognthe property of the administration. Agriculturist :. a P.y nn. araim Memorial day. keep HAARLEM OIL caused them pntaful labors. In ft when Joseph AVllson. the EnsMsl poet nnd essayist, was underserretsrr 0' of state be was given as a matter omcial business the task of wr!t!: :i Hanover that Queen Anne was He found It so difficult to MP himself satisfactorily that the lords the regency were obliged to etupl"? tN Southwell, at that time one of b! For hours Addl-'clerks. a struggled In attempts to draft able tueHsnge. but the last one os Inadequate ns the first, and In t spalr he east It after Its predivesaen i!.a uinifA ItnuL'f'f "l l Southwell Mated the simple Itf M he was ordered. In the ordinary guage or Dtismess. aim n then boasted of his superiority m tf dlsoo In having readily d..n? D d to which Addison attempting failed.-Kan- sas City Time. - lt, And put c!-t!To te'p fTTv correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sixes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. lo-l- ng it (IMcla Gave Lesser Man His Passenger Is the train running Brief Hour of Triumph late? Great writers have had "artlsllr Porter Yea, mum. I don't know of any new arrangements. London science" to a degree that snmetlm" e SC PAINT CO. SALT LAKH CITY, UTAH 11 i |