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Show I I I . THE S ALIN A SUN. SAUNA, UTAH UM Ss aleaspoimM? it depends on the 0ki - much leavening strength as K rK&i - mall i, s'Jd , I Baking Powder you use. You must use a neaping spoonfulof many brands because they dont contain as , , V . "i THE WORLD'S GREATEST zfn' I M. r TUT ikmf'f: BMMsm mwmsi 3 RBT Level spoonfuls are all that are necessary when you use CALUMET i'kinO it makes more bakings which means a real V ,i on bake saving day. iJko Sales 2 y, (i w&' h- - w-V- NJ Paris Plans to Have Markets Underground V ' ? trrV F y vpt tw , 4yv . .it A' It;-- ' r iJh -- V' , iVSv ., T- T Ti.iK?rtl v v" i, 't ? 1 k' , ) &r if W " FrrftiioirX. fl$-4- .. V , CormT f l50.Yarc U.S. Marcus Corps XnlufJer met 'lm all over the world, a doin all Kinds of things tike landin' Laelf with a Gatlin gun to talk to them 'eutl en Kings; E sloops In nn mninlcK Instead of a cot, and 'e drills with the deck on a slew; There Isn't a Job on the top of Sho earth the beggar don't Know nor do. You ran leive 'lm at night on a bald man's 'ead to puddle 'Is own tunoe, 'Es a sort of a bloomin cosmopolouBe soldier and sailor, too. Kudjard Kipling. a bl CCtfmAim&ZlT less fir-,- ) From th halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli We fight our country's battles, on the land as on the sea. First to fight for right anj freedom and to keep our honor clean. We are proud to claim the title of United States Marine " Our flaa's unfurled to every breeze from dawn to setting sun; We have fought In every clime and place where we could take a t,un In the snow of far-of- f northern lands and in sunny tropic scenes You will always find us on the Job the United Btutes Marines Iltre'a health to you and to our corps, which we are proud to serve; In many a strife we ve fought for life and never loat our nerve. If the army and the navy ever look on Heaven' scenes They will find the streets are guarded by United , States Marines That first victory of the Marines vvns at New It evidence In the Palmmns, nn episode In the f rst naval effort of the Colonies after the ont-reuk of he Revolution. Capt. Jek Hopkins, ton maniler In chief of the Colonial Navy" (armed merchantmen), went to pen from with eight ships. It was on his Alftid that First Ideut. John 1'aul Jones hoisted a y.llovv s Ik ll.tg hearing the device of pine tree and rattiest .ike, with the motto, Don't tread on irn " Three hundred Marines were cm the various The Drltlsli fort at New Providence ir.Ders vus taken by ttorin under the lead of MaJ. Sun tel Nicholas, Senior Marine Otluer of the Lev otutlf n. The Muiines, nt this time, were In the process of organization, under resolution of the Second Cor "iter trl Congress dated November 10, 1T75, vvbi h provided for the raising of two battalions, n.rticu'ar rare to be taken that no persons be appointed or enlisted Into said battalions but such as are good seamen or so acquainted with niHiltlme affairs as to be able to serve with at sea when required. Bo the United States Marine Corps Is the oldest branch of the mllUary service. Somewhere In the letters of Benjamin Franklin Is one to a friend describing a Marine fife and drum corp9 parading through the streets of Philadelphia In search of. recruits. This recruiting sergeant took his Ilill-nde'phl- rt C010MZ recruits to the Tun Tavern on South Water slreet. It was a popular place In Its day the meeting place of a Masonic lodge of which Franklin was a member and rendezvous for seafaring nu n of all nations. In the possession of the IVnnsjlvnnla Historical society Is The Diary of tlie Tun Tavern," and It Is In this MS. that most of the earliest tecords of the Marines are found. It contains the muster and pay rolls of t the company and the ptoeeedings of a It also tolls iff Hie first delinquent for-elg- n 1 1 prospective n 1 Is MaJ. Gen. Joseph Uncle Joe Now csrtiaSR JUs that some such mart pious pen would be moved to nth q uatol,v phi me that even more remarkable cosmopoloime," the Inlted States Marine soldier and too and also (among other-thingspoare-L5Apoliceman, diplomat, maker, the host rillenmn, the deadliest fighter and the handiest m'litary hundy-ni'ion the liahltahle globe. Well, the U. S. M. C. ought to know Its business by this time; Its been at It long enough, rebiimry 2.'1, 11)2(1, will be the one bundled fiftieth anniversary of the M trines first engagement wleh, of course, was a victory. Since then they have seen service all over the" world and at this very minute are on duty In many lands on both hemispheres. "The Iiymn of the Marines thus' summarizes the service of the Corps : 1 Marines in Nicaragua were the boys to fill the bill, And Uncle Joe, he was the lad, took Coyotepe Hill. court-martia- l. Marine, who leceived ten lashes well laid on for carelessness In carrying out Ids orders. 'ihe Murines are not only- the oldest brunch of the military service but they are practically an Independent defense unit, under a major general commandant. They are, however, under nominal direction of the secretary of the navy In time of peace and of the secretary of war in time of war. That their posltlou Is peon fair Is shown by the fuct that they tan land for' the protection of American Interests lu a foreign land without that landing being considered tantamount to a declaration of war. "Send the Marines! Is u try that frequently reaches official Washington. AnM often they are sent. Usually they gain their end by diplomacy rather than by fighting. Hut always Washington gets the word, The Marines have landed and have the situation well In hand. Naturally the Murines have Increased in Importance and strength. When we entered the .World war their stiength wits 377 officers and ff,917 men. By 11)19 the Marines hud been Increased to 8,017 officers uud 75,000 men. They filters and probably nuipber now about 1,000 27,000 men. "Leatherneck" Is the name of the Marine. Thats ecause he used to wear a fethf leather-facecollar. That's gone, bgt the name still clings und by no means hurts his feelings Of course there have been main changes In the dtess of the Marines. September 5, 1770, lbs of the Second' Conttneutul "Marine Committee Cougress decided on .this uniform for olllcers: Green coat faced with white, round cuffs. Plashed sleeves and pockets, with buttons around the cuff, a silver epaulet on the right shoulder, skirts turned buck, buttons to suit the facings, white vvulstcout and hi caches edged with green Mack gaiters and gartets. The men were to weur green shirts "If they can be procured. MaJ. Gen. John A. Lejeune, commandant of the Corps, doesnt dress much like that, ns his up photograph shows. And he doesnt dress much like the colonel commundunt of the Fifties, as here shown. And theres all the difference In the world between the ty picul noncommissioned officer of toduy and of that time. Mus'aches and beaids are both In evidence In a photograph of the Marine Guard at the Paris exposition, of 1SS9, resplendent In white spiked helmets and white belts and gloves, with twelve largo brass buttons on shapely blue tunics. General Lejeune looks natty nnd dapper, doesnt he with his gloves and spurs, his ribbons and his "Glebe. Eagle and Anchor?" He also looks veil In civilian evening dress and cun make a very good after-dinne- r speech, lies a husband and father. Nevertheless and notwithstanding, the Leathernecks call him "Johnny the Hard which vould appear to have a meaning all Its own. Anyway, this head of the Marines bus worked his way up. He was born In 1867 In Louisiana and Is a graduate of Louisiana State university. Annapolis (1SSS) and Army War college (1910). He was made a major general In 1913 and has commanded the Marines since 1920. - tUne-honore- d 1 d n. Ten-dleto- n, retired a year or so ago at after foity years of service till over the world. It was in 1912 that General Pendleton led a charge up Coyotepe Hill, fortified, believed impregnable and held by revolutionists dealing death and destruction to all the country around. But the Marines do not .call him Unde Joe because he took Coyotepe Illll. It Is because he was literally "Uncle joe to his men, just as his wife who always went with him was Aunt Mary. One reason why we Antericaus thrill over the Marines is that they are so handy with the rifle our national weapon with which we won our independence and achieved our march across the continent. Every Leatherneck Is expected to be nt leust a niatksman. The sharpshooter Is deadlier still. And the expert rifleman is 6ure death with our accurate and hard hitting Springfield rltle. In the National little Team match, held annually since 1003 with the exception of three years, the Mdilnt's have won eight times. In the match last September at Camp Perry Second Lieut. Tlerson E. Conradt of Portland, Ore. (portrait herewith), Ted the 870 contestants In 87 teams with a score of 293out of a possible 300, while Gunnery Sergt Bill E. Clary of Ifine Bluff, Ark., was second with 291. The Marines won with 2,818 points, beating the Nuvy by 31 points and the Infantry by 44 who By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN T WAS, of rou pm', tlm British' Marine of whom ltudjurd Kipling sang. Would sailor i apace. Th .1 ' An ill weed grows In f$ ' stored there, when cemeteries around the churches were abolished Now certain for sanitary reasons. members of the municipal council advance the Idea of sinking city market into these eataeohibs. With a lighting system and proper ventilation, it is believed, public markets can be Installed here after the bones are taken ont once more, a scheme that would allow the destruction of the present central markets, which occupy ground muck too valuable for such purposes. were Ills record shows that he commanded a battalion Panama (1001 4) when T. It. put across the Panama canal deni; a brigade in the Philippines (1908 9), nnd a brigade and regiment at Vera Cruz (1911). lie arrived in France June 8, 1913, had a. hand In things from St. Militel to Coblenz and returned in August of 1919 In command of the Second Division. The Marines are picked men. The discipline in the Corps are also Iron." But the ldgher-up- s men. For Instance: Certo their Big Brothers tain Marines add these lines to their Hymn r iWm X'' . iff' ,f .V, bv v The city fathers' of Paris have hit npon a grandiose scheme to relieve the congestion in the streets, Tierre Van Paassen relates in the Atlanta Constitution. They figure that there Is still Of plenty of room underground. course the Idea Is not quite new, for Tarls has a perfect subway service. Under an eighth of the area under the city, however, Is a great hollowed space. This was once a quarry, but In 1781 and later under Napoleon, Jm: mense piles, of bones and skeletons 4? AM ii i as v times thoc c any otber brand sixty-fou- -- points. And then r BAYER SAY ASPIRI- &nulne Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physi? cians and proved safe by millions over 25 years for Colds Pain . Headache Neuritis Neuralgia Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism' DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART y.0U n ter of N- theres the Marine Bnnd you are have heard It and seen it march. Marines had nothing but a fife and the Originally drum corps. In 1S00 the Marines on a United States frigate kidnaped an Italian band at Naples. An international rumpus over It? Oh, yes; but the Italians stayed with the Marines. Finally Sousu look the' leadership and made It the finest marching hand In the world as It Is today the President's Own." The doings, of the Marines In these 150 years would fill volumes. It would almost he easier to tell where they havent been and what they huven't doue. Many of their most Important victories have been those of peaceful Intervention. of They might almost he called the "Handy-Methe Monroe Doctrine." They never fight unless they have to fight. But when It does come to a fight the lighting quality of the Marines la a mat- lucky.lt i world-vvldknowledge. Devil Dogs" Is what the Germans have called the Marines ever since Belleau Wood first heard the famous growl, hark und howl." And r.o wonder. For It was In Belleau Wood that the world of Just what was given a convincing object really Is this fighting quality of the Marines It wus the first engagement of American troop on their own and In those 27 days of bitterest hand fighting of the war the German military 'superman- was licked to a fruzzte by the American Muiine. Here Is the "before nnd ufter" of Belleau Wood from an Amcrlcun truck driver uud from Marshal Foch: o Accept only Bayer package which contains proven directions. Handy Bayer boxes of 12 tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Asplria Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture Was All Right if the Words Fitted of Mouoncetlcicidester of Sallcyllcacld perfect profiles, who has. been laboring on a novel. now many words are there in a he Inquired from a novel, anyway? scenario writer, who might be presumed to be a literary authority, About a hundred and twenty thou-- ' sand, said the scenarist. Fine, exclaimed The Perfect Pro Our weekly advice from Haysiland Informs us that Hollywood Is again In the throes of one of the 'Itches for authorship which occasionally sweep that intellectual center. There Is a recurring asplralion among the more gifted and splendid males there to file. vThat nieuns Ive finished mine." New Yorker. achieve the pinnacle In fiction and share honors with such lions as Zane Grey and James Oliver C.urwood. We must love men, ere to us they The latest victim of this Intellectual will seem worthy of our love. stirring lias been one of the screens he-ma- n let-so- o - toll you no American outfit ever reFrance. Don't ou believe It. A bunch of he truck drivers from Solseone U up on the Cheitiln dcs Ptunus, dun pir.a a battalion of Frogs In front of the avalanclia that bright May mom-ltiwhen the Huns bust across and begin hotfooting It for Paris at about 40 k'los an hour. Le guerre Roll out? We do that same pronto. flni," moane the Frogs. 'Parte a perdu." Me, I'm too busy stepping on the ga to argue. Two-thre- e close daye later I rolls Into by ilelleau Wood, and oo la la, tbere'a Yanks all over the ps.ace. 'Look w ho'a here," I yells, AmerLeathericans, ? anils, Leathernecks boo-ku- o necks! 'Le guerre flnt!' Hell! It's' Just etartlngl" They'll treated In K I.ucy-le-Boca- The Rattle of nelleau Wood was the turning place point of the World war, the jumping-of- f of the Allied offensive and the march across the Rhine. Bo the "Wood of Beautiful Water" of the French and the Hell Wood of the Leathernecks ia now Bola de la Brigade dea Marines." And also it is the only apot in France which la literally and exactly "forever America." MOTHER:- - Fletchers Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recoi;mend it. |