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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH w Five Sets of Brothers in Same Infantry Company FRIENDSHIP The five sets of brothers, all members of Company B, honor company of the Seventy-firs- t Infantry regiment of the New York National Guard. This Is said to be a record for sets of brothers la the same regiment. The boys took part In .the huge military tourney held In Madison Square garden. Kentuckians Seek to Save Cumberland Falls 1918 . By 1 10 ELMO SCOTT WATSON T IS .peculiarly' appropriate that the annual membership roll eall of the Amer- ican National lied Cross should begin on Armistice ' For day, November 11. there is no other organization in- the world . which better exemplifies the essential spirit of Armistice day than that which knows no race, nor creed nor color nothing but the need of suffering humanity. So when the lied Cross invites Americans' to. join while it is holding its eleventh annual roll call from Armistice day through Thanks- giving, November 11 to 24, we can all do so with the knowledge that there .can he no more fitting observance of this solemn' anniversary ' than, by aiding in the work of the lied Cross th.e greatest mother of the world. ANNIVERSARY To save the scenic beauty of Cumberland falls, In States, United States Senator T. Coleman duront, tract of thousands of acres in McCreary and Whitley state park. Efforts to destroy the beauty of the falls with practically every state in the Union. Cumberland river 1928 Smart as an Kentucky, one of the natural wondjrs of the United Wilmington, Del., has offered to purchase the Brunson counties and give it to his native state, Kentucky, for a a dam for a power project have met with protests from falls 75 feet Boy Eight-Year-O- ld I ARMISTICE That faith they hold, Ours, ours they are Those dear, dead knights who won' The peace for which tiny battled was pure gold, the Golden Star: On far French hills, here !n our And In their splendid zeal they died X unshaken. Knowing such sacred btauty fills X their sleep, Shall we yet mourn, or wish they X migrht awaken To find the golden peace ao far de- X based? Should we not rather pray that X 5 they may keep undeTheir vision spotless,shining besideThe eternal splendor of these men, Untilfaced, the world, repentant' and rewho thought deemed. But of the sacred ca.se for which Grow to .the measure of the one they fought. they dreamed? So let them rest. And now, the battles done, gave for us their dearest and They who gave all, tls they alone Theytheir best, who won.. In their great faith there was no They keep the holiest. Yet for their giving dark misgiving; . don" Our fittest tribute Is not grief and They saw no base tears, the mask But the same ardent vision l.i our livon to the Of batten In the sense that Armistice day high ideals, . living ' ' ' . ing. As that which shone, compell.ng, In X means the end of fighting, there Is no ' was a world secure vision Their their eyes Armistice day' for the Red Cross. For and Just Uncowed by Death and all his in 'peace as in war it carries on Its Won by their victory their only 5 dreadful fears. . task fight against disease and hunger ahd Then, when at last these .glorious ' In To crush oiie hideous foe; and dreamers rise, If peace hatli its vlcto-Tie- s devastation: Fellow, a German shepherd dog, understands between 300 and 400 spoken that trust The world we keep for them might no less renowned than war then ' . with and words seem and has the Intelligence of an almost boy, says his master, eager feet, sped They some of the' peace-tim- e victories of The paid the price. Jacob Herbert of Detroit, who Is in New York with his phenomenon. The living substances of ih'elr lofty ' .the American Red Cross, 'won when . dream. Unstinting, of the last great sacr.1- -. canny canine will receive a special psychology test at Columbia university . Charles Buxton Going. flee. tornado or hurricane or flood or fire to prove that Mr. Herbert knows what he is talking about Prof. C. J. some swept over' community, Warden of Columbia is shown talking to Fellow. a're more-the remembered than are ' in rolled Red the for Cross Junior tin Good and' a Will some of its victories won on the batof is literally League Reiter Understanding. tlefield.. Today it service of humanity, may yet come the realization of the vision, held by school more 5.(500,000 than There Is still another service of the numbers men whose memory is honored on the in United' States. the children Italy Red Cross, which is perhaps but little enArmistice who children are day, as voiced by the poet million has a known in Comparison to its . other, ' ; he said when members the and thusiastic junior services-anit may yet prove to be of in hold taken has movement strongly a future importance which cannot now vision was a world eccure and other 'European countries. Japan lias Their Just be estimated.That is the. organizain children enrolled more 200,000 than, Won by their, .victory tiielj only task tion of the Junior Red Cross, which1 the league. To crush one hideous foe; nd in that . Servhas for Its three watchwords trust ice. Friendship-anHealth, and Although the Junior Red .Cross They sped, with eager feet' and paid which will begin celebrating its tenth movement would be important for its the price, anniversary next year.. On its scroll instruction of the children In the riidl. Unstinting,, of the last great sacrifice. is written . these- words, Let Youth ments of. home hygiene, first aid and ' So history may yet write down the Help Shape the World While the the fundamentals of American citizen-- ' that- - it was these, children who fact Vision Splendid Is Still Before Its ship If for.no other reason, It Is this ' . Ryes. . international aspect .of its work that kept the to added' relation ' emphasis . If. indeed gives Their shining lslon apotiess, unde-facc- d youth begins to .shape the world while the vision splendid is between the spirit of the Red Cross Until the i world, repentant and re-- " still before its eyes, then there may and the spirit of Armistice day. Out. deemed. chilcome the time when there. will be no of the faith of the millions of Grow to the measure ot the one they more wars, for, the Junior Red Cross dren In every nation of the world, "eri- dreamed. - PARK COP OBJECTED churchyards lying. wars wildest wreckage still unfound In these torn, piteous fields which ihy In dying. Have for us all forever sanctified. We cannot hallow more that holy ' ground; All glory we- - would give them pales Or in self-seeke- rs - I eight-year-ol- d Senator France and Russian Bride Mrs. Ida M. Keller, In the knee- revealing skirt that made a censor of a park policeman In Franklin park, Washington. Mrs. Keller was seated on a bench In the park when a cop asked her to lower her skirt Upon her refusal to do so because the skirt was lowered as much as possible, the policeman Insisted she leave the park. Then Mrs. Keller laid charges against the cop, who, she asserted, had acted In an Insulting manner. MAY BE CANDIDATE - . Siamese Temple Cats To 'the most beautiful of tame cats, says Hie Rerlin Illustrirte Zeitung, belongs the Siamese house cat with its short, smooth hair, which on the body while on' the tail, is creoni-eri'oreloss, ears and face it is. dark brown The cat in Siam, as in all Far Eastern countries, is a temple animal, and accordingly highly prized and treated That fits well w.itli religious care. with its aristocratic bearing and tastes. d For it has been proved that the domestic cats in all Asia as well as in Europe were not developed by taming the wild animals of the same regions, but that they are. descendants of the yellowish cats first domesticated In Egypt and that they have spread from thence over the world. Exchange. Electrical Switches ing two of them, a light can be controlled from two planes, such as upstairs and downstairs in the case of hall lights. A related switch, called a four-wa- y switch. Is electrically a double-polAny reversing- switch. number of four-waswitches mny be two three-wasw'Vhes to used control a light from any number of points. The bureau of standards say that a also called a switch, three-wnswitch, is eiedrically. a double-throsingle-pole- , switch. Us Selective breeding applied to forest trees would produce vigorous varieties, experimeLts how. lazy-ma- n . e y g Former Senator Joseph I. France of Maryland has Just returned to his home at Port Deposit with his bride, the former Tatiana Dechegeneva, a Russian noblewoman. In this photograph Mrs. France Is shown pouring tea for her husband in her new hone. Recent portrait of Daniel CL Roper of Texas, who, according to former Secretary of Agriculture L. T, Meredith, would be an acceptable Presl-de- n lal candidate to the dry progressive wing of the Democratic party. ' , |