OCR Text |
Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH FARMER WOMAN IN OKLAHOMA BONNER. AAKV GRAHAM. vtvuftff -- (OfTMHl Ntvytfu M - THE PUPPIES a I wont to tell you a story about dog who had five most beautiful lit Praises Lydia E. PinUxtm's Vegetable Cenpotmi Became It Gave Her ' Health and Strength la a sunny pasture In Oklahoma, a ierJ of sleek cows was grazing. They made a pretty picture. But the thin woman In the blue checked apron as she tie puppies. They were very tiny, black and white puppies, and their mother was so proud of them. Now, . . Their Mother Wae So Proud. her mas- ter was moving away to another place, and a new man had bought his home. This person seemed, to tho dogs master, like a very nice, kind man. Immediately be 8eeme1 t0 take a reat fanc'y t0 the puppies and their Mother. , So their master suggested that he Should keep the dogs, for he was moving to a village ten miles away and had to go over very rough roads. He decided that the trip would be JBAhCBOA. For to admire and for to aa. For to he 'old this world so wide It never done no good to me But I can't drop It It I tried. 2XSCVV&RJ PACIF'JC' 0CAlT ' me ndcevrror YALM AMfAtCA", uffivenuTYfets Therea no tree In going further lt'a the edge of cultivation." they aaid, and I believed it broke my land and sowed my crop Built my hams and strung my fences In the little border station Tucked away below ths foothills - where the trails run out and stop. Bo ed "Something hidden. Oo and find It. Go and look behind the Ranges "Something loat behind the Ranges. Boat and watting for you. Oo!" By ELMO SCOTT WATSON O SANG Mr. Kipling once upon a time. lion-nepln- e ztoosFvgz? . West had been explored the Explorer breed had to turn to other lands to satisfy the urge to.. Go! For to admire and for to see. There was still the mystery of Africa, the Dark continent, so a new race of explorers was bom and It added to the long' roll the names of DuChalllu, Chinese Gordon and David Livingston, the greatest of them nil. The story of this Englishman who gave his life to the work Is one of the most romantic In all history. No less romantic Is the story of the young Amerionn newspaper corresitondent, Henry M. Stanley, who set out to find Livingston, lost somewhere In the wilds of Africa ami persisted until he was successful. The world has particular reason to remember Stanley at tills time because there was recently erected in St. Brides church In London a memorial tablet to the memory of this man who not only rescued a fellow explorer, but who made other expeditions, ns a result of which' the term Darkest Africa" disappeared to be substituted by the knowledge of one of the most Interesting continents on the face of the globe. With the mystery of Africa solved the minds of this hardy breed of adventurers next turned to those places where the extreme of cold made exploration even more perilous than did the extreme of heat In the regions of the equator the North and South poles. So the Arctic and Antarctic regions added to the honor roll the names of Andree, Wellman. Nansen, Franklin, Greely, Wilkes, Reynolds, Shnekteton, Scott, Anmndsen, Stefnnason nnd MacMillan. And It was an American. Robert W, Peary, who planted the Stars and Stripes us the first flag of any nation on the point that Is farthest north In the whole world. Even when the North nnd South poles had joined the class of the Dark continent ns mysteries that were mysteries no longer, the race of explorers was not yet satisfied. Down In South America there was a mysterious river named appropriately the River of Doubt, so a former President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, set out to solve this enigma and did It. Ilia sons also have enrried on the family tradition and a year or so ago returned from the recesses of Tibet, bringing with them specimens of an animat described hy one of the earliest explorers, Marco Iolo, the mountain goat which bears Ills name, the Ovls Poll. Five hundred years of exploration have not yet yielded all the secrets of unknown land upon this earth. There still are places which have not yet known the tread of civilized mans foot But let if not he thought that the old breed of Explorers that gave to the world a Christopher Columbus, a Lewis and Clarke, a Henry M. Stanley and a ltaold Amundsen, Is yet extinct. For the "face of the globe Is nerawl with expeditions seeking scientific data and high adventure. Secrets hidden In the far corners of the earth are attracting eager hordes of Inquisitive students of both sexes and the graveyards of history are being ransacked hy Indefatigable searchers for light on the remote past." Only a year or so ago the whole world was thrilled hy the news of the discoveries made la the valley of the Nile and King Tut became a name as familiar to newspaper readers as Calvin Coolidge or Babe Ruth. During the year 1920 tho Smithsonian Institution sent out no less than 35 field expeditions to four continents. If you would know of the romance of modern exploration get a copy of the little pamphlet Issued hy the Smithsonian which some one bus suggested might properly be called The Adventures of Science." In It Is told briefly the -- one-hal- American waters.- - It Is In the Old World, however, that some ol the most Interesting expeditions which are turning hack the pages of history are under way. The the man 9, Box 387, Oklahoma . Okla.. City, writes: Everybody now says: 'Mrs. Short, what are you doing to yourself? I weigh 135 and my weight before I took lt was 115. I have taken seven bottles of the Vegetable Compound. Other women who have to work hard and keep things going may find the road to better health as Mrs. Short did, through the faithful use of Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. Ask your neighbor. (cforarfo ! For Indigestion, Dyspepsia, tc. Relieves Distress after Hurried Meals or Overeating. Btlng a gentle laxative, It keeps ths di- gestive tract working normally. 30c & 90c. At all Druggists. tf. 0. GREEN, Inc. WOODBURY, N. J. DONT R INFLAMED LIDS It Increases the Irritation. V MITCHELL ETH deHALVE, simple, ante remedy. pendably I5e at til dnifffista. efl tMkeLfewTwfcatr Bunions Quick relief from pain. Prevent ehoe pressure. At all thug and Aot starts DlScholls Xino-pac- Put on on the pain it (one bt A Little Learning . Five hundred farmers will sail In tour of the Old July for a 0,500-mll- e world. They are going not to visit cathedrals, art galleries, castles, mountain resorts and watering places, but to study the agricultural methods which hnve enabled European farm- -' ers to surpass our own. For Instance, the superior European farmer sticks close at. home patiently applying certain principles taught by experience and government experts, and practically never tours America, lie cant afford to tour America. And as he looks over his visitors he surely will conclude that American failure Is a wonderful thing. well-know- n . Old Billiard Association The National Association of Amateur Billiard Players of the United States Is the oldest amateur billiard governing body In the world. ex- plained that she must - have gone back to her master. When the master heard this he was more touched tliau ever, and told the man that, after all, he would keep his dogs. y Fannthrope-Yernnexpedition of the American museum has been exploring In northern India and went through the dangerous passes of the Himalayas to Chinese Turkestan, visiting a number of regions never before penetrated hy scientists. In central Asia a Russian expedition has announced discoveries so extraordinary that they sound more RIDDLES like fairy tales than sober facts of the present time. In the Dead City" of Khara Khota In the What Is the difference between live Gobi desert they report the discovery of n library fish and fish alive? A difference. of 25,000 volumes in an extinct language, and I the tombs of the Seven Kings of Tartnry treas Why Is a buckwheat cake like a catures ns perfect ns the day they were placed there, erpillar? Because It makes the butter at least 0.000 years ago. Similar treasures are fly. being found hy expeditions sent out by .the Metropolitan Museum of Art, by the oriental institut Who are the acrobats In every of the University of Chicago, hy the University household. The pitcher and the tumMichigan, by Harvard university,, and the Bostot bler. Museum of Fine Arts, all of which are working In various parts of Egypt. What Is the worst thing you could . In Mesopotamia there Is a Field museum-Oxfordo to a junior farmer? Tread on his university Joint expedition, one financed by the corn. British museum nnd another by the University of Pennsylvania, all of which have announced Why Is a girl In a cotton dress like Important discoveries which throw new light on anything published? Because she apthe undent civilization of that region. Pennsylpears In print e vania also has an expedition In Palestine which has nlrendy discovered the Temple of Ashtorath What magazine would be likely to and predicts further remarkable discoveries before give the best report of a fire? A Its work Is finished. powder magazine. Nor Is the Old world the only place where the secrets of forgotten peoples are being sought In Why do pianos bear the noblest the Jungles of Central America, Mexico, Ecuador. characters? Because they are grand, Peru and Brazil, scientists working under the upright and square. direction of a number of Institutions are bringing to light more information about the Mayas and Why Is an eye like an n These schoolmaster? the other Indian or ratx?s. Because It always has Include the American Museum of Natural history, a pupil under the lash. the Peabody Museum of Harvard, the Carnegie Institute, the British museum, the National GeoWhy Is an absconding hank cashier graphic society, the Field museum, and the British like un nlr gun? Because he goes off Royal Geographical society. , loaded and makes no report. Those ure some of the expeditions that are already In the field. Add to them the expeditions What Is it that has rods never used that are constantly going forth and It is easy to for fishing, poles on which you cannot believe that within a short time not a spot upon hang Bags, and perches upon which the face of the globe will remain unvlsitod by nmn birds never rested? An acre. d ing for a houseful of boarders, besides caring for her own family. The burdens of life eeemed too heavy for her falling health. She had lost confidence In herself. One day she began taking Lydia EJ. Plnkhams Vegetable Compound and her general health began to Improve. She took it faithfully. Now she can da her work without any trouble,' sleeps well and is no longer blue and timid. This woman, Mrs. Cora Short, R. R. y During the same year the American Museum of Natural History sent out thirty-fouexpeditions and the Field museum of Chicago had twelve out at one time. In fact, there Is scarcely a place on the face of the earth where you can go now without finding some of these modern explorers at work or stumbling upon evidence that they have been there before you. Last summer there was something of a traffic congestion of explorers In the Arctic. Byrd and Amundsen flew over the North pole In an airplane. The Greenland expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, under the direction of George Palmer Putnam, made an trip In the schooner Effle Morrlsey, went within 700 miles of the pole, picked up the University of Michigan expedition, manded by Prof. William Herbert Hobbs, at Nova Scotia, took It to South Greenland, brought It baCk In October and finally arrived In New York harbor with a cargo of specimens for the museums hall of ocean life. The Field museum expedition, headed by Commander Donald B. MacMillan, spent two and f months In the frozen North trailing the footsteps of the ancient Norsemen. But Americans have no monopoly on polar exploration. The French have two such excursions planned or under way, to search for the magnetic pole and explore that region. Up In Alaska the United States navy, the geological survey, the bureau of ethnology and about a dozen other government bureaus have been or are now carrying on their explorations in that territory. One of the most adventurous of these Is the exploit of Lieut Ben Wyatt, aviator, who has set out to map an area of 40,000 square relies, a job that will take him at least four years. In the Interior of Alaska Dr. Ales The people Hrdlieka of the bureau of ethnology Is mapping along the road the probable route by which primitive man first had seen this found his way to this continent and In the Bering from their winsen John Treadwell Nichols of the American dows and didn't Museum of Natural History is making a simllat know what it study of the Asiatic fish which have Invaded could mean until 8,500-mil- e l, g story of these thirty-flvexpeditions to Sumatra, to China, to Algeria, to Belooehlstan, to southwest Africa and to Alaska for the purpose of capturing live wild game, unearthing burled villages which flourished In prehistoric times, collecting fossil footprints, and fossil elephants and shells and gathering ferns in West Indian mountains and minerals r an: In both poems lie wus talking about the same type of ninn, the man who through all the ages since history began has felt the urge to find out what was lost behind the Ranges, " the urge to Go I For to admire and for to see" the Explorer. The world owes much to Its explorers of every nation and every age. Drop their names out of American history, especially, and how comparatively lifeless and unromantle that history would be! Call the roll of the men who have ventured Into the unknown, who have been the advance guards of civilization, and see what manner of njen are these who answer Norseman, Italian, Dutchman, Frenchman, Portuguese, Spaniard, Englishman and American. IIow many years of history and splendid achievement are written In these names; BJurnl Ilerjulfson, Eric the Red, Leif Erlcson. Marco Polo, Henry the Navigator, Christopher Columbus, John and Sebastian Cabot, Amerleus Vespudus. Ferdinand Magellan, Ponce de Leon, Rulhoa, llneda, Hernando De Soto, Francisco tie Coronado, Caheca de Vaen, Governor Onnte, Jacques Cartier, Verrnzano, Sir Francis Drake, Frobisher and Davis and Hawkins, Capt. John Smith, Ilemlrik Hudson, Samuel de Champlain, Jena Nicollet, St. Lusson, Marquette and Joliet and La Salle, Steur tie la Vorcndrye, DLhnt, Radlsson find Groselllers, Samuel Ilearne, Alexander Mackenzie nnd Robert Cook! Those ore the names which should he written large In the annals of what bus been called the (oldon Age of Exploration" when the Old world was sending out Its bravest nnd best to find out all that Could he learned nbout this New world which opened up to mankind on the day when the caravels of Columbus dropped anchor In the West Indies. Then followed the era of colonization, a period of fierce wars during which the nations of the Old world strove to determine which was to dominate the new and out of It nil cume the birth of a new nation In the New world, the United States of America. And It was Jhe Explorer, too, the man who wanted to see what fertile valleys were hidden behind the Ranges of the Appalachians where he could satisfy the land hunger of a westward-pushinrace, who helped bring on that conflict 150 years ago which made possible a new nation. Long before the Revolution the new breed of American frontiersman was crossing over the Blue Ridge and the Great Smoky mountains, and Abram Wood, Thomas Batts, Robert Enllam and James Needham, whatever the motive, whether for trade or homeseeking, which led them there, won for themselves the right to be called Bard on their heels came the Long Explorers. Hunters of Kentucky, such men as James Finley, Daniel Boone, Richard Henderson, James Robertson and John Sevier. Under the flag of the new republic the westward nush continued. In 1S03 the two young Virginians, Lewis and Clark, set out upon their magnificent M. Pike adventure" and two years later began the explorations which were to make him famous and give him the mighty monument In the Colorado mountain peak which bears Ills name. Army officers, hunters, fur traders, trappers, scientists, engineers they all sought to dls-- . pel the mystery of what lay behind the Ranges" and when their work was d6rie there was written on the roll of Explorers such names as Stephen Long, James Pursley, John C. Fremont, Kit Carson, Jededlah Smith, John Colter, Jim Brldger, Hugh Glenn, R. B. Marcy, John Wesley Powell, John W. Gunnison, Edwiu James Becknell, Beard, Chambers, Wyeth, Meek, Jenney, Reynolds, Ashley, Lisa, Bonneville, Jackin, Fitzpatrick and Sublette. When the furthermost reaches of the last great sivrAirjsour In Mexico. - Till a voice, as bad as Conscience, rang Interminable changes On one everlasting Whisper day and night viirWAXrXTzri very bad for the mother dog and the puppies. Dogs are very loyal to the first person they love and who cares for them. Lt Is very seldom that a dog Is happy with another muster when the first one has been good to him. The master pretended to the dog that he was just going for a walk and said good-bas usual, or rather, be tried to say It In this way. But the dog knew that her master was sad, and she had noticed the other man abont the place. She knew something was the matter, and as soon as her master Btarted off she set up the most pathetic wail. The next day toward evening, as the master was sitting In his new house, a tittle whimper which sounded most familiar greeted his ears. Wliere could lt come from? he thought. He opened the door and there stood his dog looking so tired and worn. ' She snuggled down hy him, for she was so tired she couldnt lump up, as was her custom.. But after' a moment or two of petting she gave all the signs which meant he was to follow her, and outside under a vine on the stoop of the house, were the five little puppies, for she had not been able to leave them behind. , You poor, loyal, tired doggie 1" said i You and your precious her master. puppies will never he left again. The dog understood perfectly that she was welcomed with her family, and that never would she be given to another master. i But In the meantime the telephone rang, and the other man telephoned to say that after tier master had left the night before the dog had commenced her lourney after him, each trip taking a puppy with her. looked She was tired of cows, tired of her tedious work In the dairy. She was tired of cooksighed at them. Truck Driver No matter how heavy the load or how hard the going I can count on my track pulling through because I use dependableChampions Theyre the better spark plug. Cfomtxon U lit better tparkpiutbecauteofUt dotMetiibtd tiiUman to core to contmainMidltido two-jre- dal owlto c rirtHin ChamptoiX for rood 60 Ckamto CS other then Fords 75 pre-India- Champion SparlCPlugs - TOLEDO, OHIO Qfl UUUllO Any book you ward -bymalLCO. D Deseret Book Co, 44 East So. Temple, Salt Lake City, Utak |