Show THE NEW YORK’S N OLD STATE HUNGARY J Parley Bates and ftlagleby : LAWYERS Court House Richfield Has Been an Independent Coun try Since Year 1001 Ut Is a Beautiful less Plains Land of Immense EndGreat Rivers Lovely Deep Forests and Most Magnificent Mountains Lakes 'f O - - BULLOCK DENTIST- - - Office Over Salina Meat & Supply Company’s Store SALINA Utah In Office 5 to 30 of Mo The White House Rarker Shop I i H F Jensen Proprietor m e i&9W9M909WZ9t999Q Coffins Caskets ACCESSORIES AND at Salina Co op Ageat tor the Otto G Olsen Casket work Ephraim Utah W bar In atosk ia lino of Coffins and Casket and Moossorlas Salt Lake or any modern olty styles We dest with manufaotarer and can s aye yon middlemen and ffi have goods to profit plsnss everyone’ purse Gallon g a Wo eaa please yon The ' Who’s Your TAILOR? Who repairs and cleans clothes? London— Although tourists in Hun gary have discovered mineral springe and baths whose waters contain medt clnal properties they have not yet invaded the charming country districts hotels Not far from the fashionable and sanitariums are queer quaint lit tie villages never seen by travelers of the beaten path it ia a beautiful country of immense lovely endless plains great rivers lakes deep forests and magnificent mountains Since 1001 it has been an state and a independent sovereign kingdom over which at present bis majesty the Emperor Franz Joseph His subjects include 9000000 is king Magyars light and handsome who occupy the fertile plains 6000000 Slavs In the outlying districts and Croatia Roumani3000000 ans on the hills and mountains Germans on the edges of the Car pathians and Transylvania 1000000 mixed races a large part of which are gypsies or Jews There is plenty of room everywhere and everything ie far apart A church an inn and a few rows of neat little houses make up the villages Some of the very best residences are surrounded by specious grounds and a fence Many of the cottages are painted in pale yellow ochre and have tiles A blue roofs of band about two feet wide i3 painted around it just below the eves and is stencilled by the women witji red and A narrower orange fruit and flowers plain blue stripe surrounds the bottom of the walls This color denotes that the occupants are of Slavonic descent Gypsies use yellow Instead of blue' The gable epd of the house is usually next to the road and stretches back a long distance Into a yard where there In a small arch is a a over the doorway may be seen a picture of the Madonna It Is not oustom-arto knock before entering any house or room and all doors contain so much glass that there la very little privacy even in bed chambers The small homes are immaculately clean and neat and there is usually a stove Tables chairs and boxes are richly carved In old native emdesigns Strips of handsomely broidered linen done in Indigo blue or paprika red often hang from the rafters or on the walls The towns are patrolled night by watchmen Tyho are at Co-o- OVER 65 YEARS EXPERIENCE jfk Trade Marks Designs OoRYTUGHTS in' imAtof fnli'klr favanttrm Patau u jxsmm AC dMortptlm mat on? opntUm frs whether au Communionprofenblf on Patenta mutants upenojr Menu A taken tliraiwh rMlTi without ialhe A Scicniilic tftmricat) Typical Hungarian Village constantly to blow a long low prove beyond doubt that they asleep! Everybody dresses elaborately in a riot of vivid colors the different villages clinging to different styles Peasant women of Agram wear snowy linen made with many pleats jackets and sleeves are richly embroidered In red and orange purple line drapes the head In Zsdjar bodices are ornamented with broad bands of gold and silver embroidery sleeves being of white linen with crimson at the shoulders Girls go bareheaded with hair oiled down tight and flat Fastened to the back of the head is a sash which separates Into three streamers that pass beneath the waist band and reach to the knees On their feet are block with fancy heels obliged note to are not GIRL is tho only GIVES LIFE FOR KITTEN Child Killed In Front of Street Car When Brushing Pet to Young Safety Sewing Mac Mne New York— In a desperate endeavor to save a small kitten which had wandered on the car tracks in Front street Brooklyn from being run down a Fifth avenue trolley car It lj Tessie byCalabra five years old of 6 H Sew H Front street ran in front of the car Thb Fata 'nK Machine jnsored for five yeaill rainn accident j brushed the animal aside and was herself run over instantly killed breakage vrear fitef tornado lightwere Tessie and other little girls ning and water T his shows our playing in front of her home with sevfaith in rj eral kittens which were born recently One of the to the Calabra family cat little animals jumped out of Tessie's lap ran Into the street and sat directly whaj j&Li 3 in front of a car Without a moment’s tha break lb whole machine Tessie amid the warning hesitation r aujf pAit (needle belt or attachment tie) cries of her companions Il will be replaced to without charge leaped to her feet and ran Into the street to save her Bend for our booklet “In the Day’ Work” Pass SatviNO Machini Co Chicago III pet The car which was going at a high rate of speed was upon her before she could regain her feet after Co-o- p having shoved the kitten to safety Just ThlnK of ? Sewing Machine Salina Store a the or I3CS5‘ vjy of Old England Suvnchmen Vrciohmen Engiid hmcn of Irishmen and never except by accident of anyone speaking a forHere unmistakable Briteign tongue ons of many types gathered to eat luncheon of cold roast beef off the driflk the joint imported English malt liquors talk horse and scan the ticker for newe of the races while yet racing flourished as a tolerated form of commercialized sport In New York The talk Is of sport rather than politics of Great Britain rather than America The place long been a sort of second home to the homeless newcomer though It begins to show The British ?lgns of coming change quarter would be an admirable place for an English speaking man tq live if he wlBhed to disappear from the ken of the great world uptown All over the less active streets of the quarter are sunny respectable looking houses W no "great lodgings pay be had within a stone’s throw of one or another quiet shady liule pank Indeed it Is almost the only quet part of lower Manhattan Bleecker street would be the anchorite's shopping district and he would find here and there endurable restaurants Indeed a man with a taste for and the quiet might do far life study worse than to bury himself in the British' quarter under a vow never to venture outside the limits of its soothing domain rarely has BECOMES AUNT TO HERSELF That In New York— Because American law does not permit a lady become her own aunt little Mrs Annie E4as of West One Hundred and Fourteenth street will lose her husband Eight months ago as Miss Annie Ergas fifteen she traveled to the United States from a little village close to the Dardanelles to Join her family It was a case of love first sight when her uncle her father’s youngest brother saw her descend the gang- at plank The parents smiled and agreed when he asked her in marriage The Ottoman law does not prohibit such au and there is a Biblical arrangement sanction for it Four months ago the couple were married by an alderman Ignorant that they had disobeyed the law here they lived happily together until two weeks ago At that time the Federation of Oriental Jews heard of their case and explained the situation to them Then they were eager to right the At the request of the federawrong tion Monroe M Goldstein an attorney of 140 Nassau street brought for them a suit for annulment of the marriage This is now pending ia the supreme court MAKES RAID IN DRESS SUIT New York Police Inspector Poses a "Man About Town” and Raids Gaming House at New York— Inspector James n Gillen of the Third police inspection district posed as a man about town In order to gain entrance to an leged gambling house on East Thir street near Fifth avenue In Immaculate evening dress he presented himself at the door of the place and was admitted Having satisfied himself of the character of the place he called in three of his detectives who had been waiting outside and carted away a costly roulette layout No arrests were made The hames of five patrons of the place were taken OUT OF HORSE A seaman on horseback 1b like the fish out of water proverbial John Surman Carden who was afterward the commander of the British ship Macedonia when she surrendered to the United States during the War of 1812 was one of a group of English oaval officers who in 1802 visited Cairo There they paid their respects o the “Grand Bahaw’’ of Egypt "Having gone through the diplomatwe prepared to depart ic conference When we got to the door we found three elegantly caparisoned horses one for Sir Howe Popham one for me and one for Captain Collier After Howe I was Sir mounted got on my Arab steed a dark iron gray which seemed aa docile as could be imaginAs soon as Captain Collier was ed on bis Arab and outside the palace gate a salute of 21 guns began and to my utter dismay (Blnce I was not an expert horseman) my Arab began to jump sideways and right on end and in various ways at the discharge As I was not used to of every gun this kind of motion I considered what was to be don for surely I could not long keep my seat It suddenly struck me that I bad better have recourse to water close to the of a large piece palace for I felt that I should have a better chance on my accustomed element than on the hard stones by which the road was bounded I directly clapped the shovels (the Arab stirrup Iron) Into my Arab and went slap Into the water and thus kept the horse above the girths until the salute was finished when I rode out perThis freak caused very fectly quiet great amusement to a large asesm-blagof natives and others who witnessed it” — Youth’s Companion BODY’S Like a Bit UTAH “GINGER” Sailor Being Indifferent Rider Sought ' Refuge In Element he was- Accustomed To New York— The British like the EYqneh and the Germans love their own quarter of the city Here south ia almost the of Fourteenth street only part of New York where you may hear the Cockney dialect A few millions of New Yorkers do not auapect that any such quarter exists but it must have been familiar to many a prosperous British resident in the homesick newdays when be was comer glad to find "mutual of the mother tongue” among his fdlow Britons In the characteristic resorts of the region more a saloon For a generation of the quarter not many years ago owned and conducted by a man with a characteristic lowland Scotch name and a taste for the ruder sports that Britons love has been the resort of to fcenAeome)? IIInttretM wtoklf Jarirest oIn Term uleiiim of enf nHontUlo Jnurnnl $t a L tiswedeeicm fonr months fclUNN & CoseBdNew York I) C Branch Office F St Wajhlnaioo a Quiet Corner of Manhattan Where the Cockney Dialect Relgna 8upremt Now Young Bride Has Learned Her Marriage Was Unlawful New York V TOOK SECTION sljdertf August Ericksen j p Store J at the JknTon There SALINA SAUNA CALL BRITISH RESJSTANCE TO HEAT First State Bank LAMMERSDORF H B Lake City imifitHIMMHMHIMIMNNMNMflMmNMMHM LUMBER EVERY THING IN LUMBER Nephi Plaster Portland Cement and a fine line of Builders Hardware Doors Windows Phone Moulding Black (j CO' JOHN ARNESON LUMBER WmeMIHMMHtHWfMMWHWMWMWHH— DC Why not say Hello to them? Your friends all wanttotalkto you the ’phone Better have it over - in- put With 6 Salina taUphoaa in your home yon ean rna errand go shopping do bualnasi ato without leaving home Yea will njoy the aon "Why not have itT Get eonnectd this Homing The human body can stand far greatheat if it be dry than If it be wet Strangely enough it can stand far hotter liquids inside than out For exthe average tea drinker sips ample tea at a temperature of about 140 deas high as 145 degrees— sometimes But he cannot hold his hand in grees water that is 120 degrees or his feet in water higher than 112 degrees Few persons can stand a bath in water at 105 degrees In parts of Central America men live in an average temperature of 115 degrees in the shade and 140 degrees in 151 degrees has been the sun while ' In the Persian gulf the registered thermometers on ships vary between A recent ex122 degrees and 140 plorer In the Himalayas reports that he found at 9 a m in December and ht more than 10Q00 feet altitude a ttmperateure of 131 degrees Drs Bleydqn and Chantreym desir-inlto ascertain how high a temperature the human body could stand Bhdt themselves up in an oven of whieh the heat was gardually raised and they wereable’to bear up to 212 degrets the boiling point of water SAUNA TELEPHONE COMPANY 3 YOU CANNOT LIVE MEATS C WITHOUT GROCRIES And the very Best Place to buyithera LONG’S is at TheWhite Front where prices and treatment are the very best in town THB Magazine that xnakea Fact more fascinating than Fiction “WRITTEN SO UNDERSTAND §Your CAN I- A CREgWantiniid Story of tha World’s a may begin reading at Progress which and widen will hold your interest any time lorever ia running in Popular Mechanics Magazine your reading it? Art yon Two million of neighbors are and it is the favorite magazine homes ir thousands of the best American it appeals to all classes— old and young— man and women — those who know and those who want to know 10 RAOCS EACH MONTH SOD PICTURES 00 ARTICLES OP OENCRAL INTEREST ”Sho: Notes" Department pages) givss easy ways to do things— how to make useful articles for home and shop repairs etc "Amateur Mechanics " ( ) pages) tells how to make Mission furniture wireless outfits boats engines magic and all the things a boy loves YEAR CENTS SINQLI CORIES mo Aik your WRITS FOR FRCI SAMPLE COPY TODAY r m POPULAR MECHANICS CO 320 W Wsshlngtoa How Words Reveal History P word ‘investment’’ doesn’t oc- '4 Dr Johnson's dictionary of the of the eighteenth century latter part “Prehistoric” was first used in English it in 1851 'll Such Instances as these show how a study of language may lay bare the a of people Industry and history V finance did not develop sufficiently to n as ’insurance” make such words and “discount" neces“commercial” the of the latter until part eightsary eenth century while the idea of world history preceding the day of the historical records had hardly occurred j until the middle of the last century If it is worthy doing at all it’s worth ing well do- - First classwork at all times is our motto St CHICAGO Let us figure with you on First t Silk Hat Caused a Riot On Jan 15 1797 when John from his London emerged haberdashery shop In the Strand wearing a silk hat he wast surrounded of mob a that such proportions by he was arrested and charged before the lord mayor with Inciting to riot The constable who arrested him testified that “Hetherington appeared upon the public highway wearing a tall structure which he called a s'fik hat having a shiny luster and calculated to frighten timid people Several wo‘ dogs men fainted children screamed yelped and a young son of Cordwi- - jiner the Thomas was thrown down by The crowd and broke his right arm" defendant pleaded that as anEngli’l he was free to wear any hat i he chose but nevertheless was bour v over In $2500 to keep the peace your next job Counting Your Money The cur in j Vice Pres Pres JAMES FARRELL CRANDALL Cashier DIRECTORS CHARLES LAMMERSDORF Capitalist Salt Lake City Director National Copper Bank Salt JAMES FARRELL P (i KCORUP Farmer and Stockman CHRIS JORGENSEN Farmer H S GATES Farmer and Sheepifian W II BROWN v Manager Salina H B CRANDALL Director Payson Exchange Bank er a for Postal Savings Funds CIIAS EnExtreme Temperature Can Be dured If the Application la Dry— What Experiments Proved lockyard of Solid Rock The Ntew South Wales government dockyard! on Cockatoo island in Sydney harbor is hewn out of solid rock Historically Cockatoo island is of much interest as it was the site of a large prison in the days when British convicts werVi deported to Australia The present ojfllces on the island are in the old prison buildings the stone walls barred windows and cells being still in evidence The formation of the tisland was originally quite unsuitable for a dockyard i as the solid rock rose sheer from the water to a height of 60 to 70 feet By using convictllabor however the rock was gradually cut back first to permit the building of graving docks and later to makeroom for building slips and shops neai" the water level The work has beetJ continued until of the total area at present of 33 acres has beern brought to a practically uniform le vel of about 15 feet above high tide ' of Salina United States Depositary V OW about that printing job you’re in need of? in and se as about your Brat opportunity Don t wait until tha very last moment but give us a little time and we’ll show what high grade work y’oa'ran turn out ko Come It at And nea r will occupy your entire time when you become a regular advertiser in THIS PAPER Unless you have an antipathy for labor of this kind call ua up and we’ll be glad to come and talk over our proposition 5i |