OCR Text |
Show fAOS FOUR THE 8 TJX, PRICK. UTAB-XVBlTP-MlI. d td, British flnandere W ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF chants cot cold ed to ebaadoa tho tetprlac. Wales cama rescue sad made hie too 'or speech as quoted to guing. Naturally this Jarred the dignified exposition to Loitooa board Mgh-op- a don't talk that way. But theyunderstood what Wales Amenlean and Canadian lancuaf meant. They made him president of the board and raised the second hundred million. y So now this exposition isjP-ularlknown as the Boy Prince's Exhibition." to caa-trewith the Prince Consort's Exhibition to the middle of the last century. To return to tlie Queen's Doll House: The most Interesting room in the house Is the library. It to 23 tochea high, wainscot led to walnut The ceiling le by William sre books The Waicot bound in red or gray leather. Two hundred noted British autbore have contributed the volumes. Many are to Undertakers and Licensed Embalinef, Ready to serve yon night or FITZGERALD day" BLOCK, PRICE, UTAH the Mr. A. N. Wallace is one of tho in ers first licensed embalm state of Utsh. He i a graduate Emof the Western College of had has Ho balming, Iowa City. and thirty years experience, hia successfoipoa to Price from ful business in Salt Lake City. We are completely and prepared to tu in yon your need. Weeanyg full line of caskets at pries, your aniting. We also ham , complete lino of fmum m. plies. s 8th n US, Phone Office Phone 158 reproduced by photographic process to the proper size. Bud-yarAmong the authors sre BarKipling, Sir James ArSir rie. Joeeph Conrad, thur Conan Doyle, John Drtok-wate- r, John Galsworthy and Ian Hay. There ere slso photographic reproductions of Whos Who, many standard reference hooka, a complet dictionary and the timetables of English railways. Details of the furnishing are complete even to a fountain pen, engraved stationery, a book of life I ON OPEN DAY AND NIGHT d Beat Ventilated House In All Eastern Utah PRICE rka UTAH C Matinee Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 2:30 p. m. Ev. ing shows start 7 and 9 oclock. Sunday shows 2:30, 5:30, 7:31 and 9:30. iVe STAR ORCHESTRA CONCERTS r THURSDAY AND FRIADY You Can Be Sure of rid A a Good Program Every Visit alO hi un An increasing number of warehousemen are being licensed L der the United 8tares warehouse United States department of the issued Every Friday By Bun PublishNumerous eottssl culture reports. ing Co. (Inc.) H. W. Crockett, Manager. and tobacii (growers' Subscription, $109 the Year. Office ociationa now refuse to plaea Phone No. 9. Residence, No, lllmS. or tobacco in any warehouse licensed by the department. Entered aa m, June 4, 1111, at Footoffloo at Price, Real politicians are tbe kind Utah, Under the Act of March 1, 1179. do not air the scandals they knot i ADVERTISING RATES. til campaign year. .Map lay Matter Per Inch per month, H.I0; Single Issue, toe. Special PeModern folks may be a little as tition, St Par Cent Additional but not near so muj i hnrdboiled, InTen Cents Koch the Lise yogsle sertion. Count Six Wards to the Una, stewed. Summons, tll.it; Water Application, $19.00; Final Proof, $10.90. Dentists have a poor opiate ri Keadare Ton Cants the Lise Each In- onions. anition. Count Blx Wards to the Line. Hiackface Type Fifteen Cents the Line Each Insertion. t Ca Booond-Cloa- o T?t jczrcjapr I 1 l'e balls. hojra. Os n't lose your nerve. Let's hoot the wad, and eee the thing through. Thnt'a the way to wla euL Prince of Wslss. By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN n HEN Macaulays and Juetly-famou- s Traveler from New t Zealand" shall, to the mldet of n solitude, tnke his stand upon n broken arch of London Bridge to sketch tbs ruins of 8L Tsui's, hell doubtless be curious to know how Londoner of A. D. the high-clas- s 1924 lived end had his being. That balng the case, be should bunt up what Is left of tho British Museum and keep digging until be finds the Queen's Doll House. For the Queen la Mary, eonsort of George V, king of Great Britain and Irelaud and of the Brit-la- b Dominions beyond ths Bess and Emperor of well-know- India. The Dull House is a reproduction in miniature of the typical city home of a rich Briton of the present day. This house le five feet by eight feet six Inches and five feet high. The scale Is one inch to a foot. The execution Is so perfect that from photographs it is not possible to realize that the rooms and tlieir furnishings are not full aliens the photographs herewith reproduced demonstrate. The outside walla cun tie raised so that establishment run be very room of the seen. The garden folds up and slldea Into ths basement at one end, as does the garage at the . flve-ator- f: T y other. The Queen's Doll House" la the gift to Quern Mary from hundreds of her artistic subjects who bate been engaged on the work for the last two years. Queen Mary will exhibit it to the Ialace of Arts at the British Empire exhibition at Wembly, Bow Just beginning. The proceeds will go to charity and It la tlie idea that eventually the bouse to to go luto the British Museum for the benefit of gtosterlty. It Is a fair guess thut the Queen's Doll House" will not bo the least Interesting exhibit of the exiMwltlun. For the Queen's Doll House" Is a real marvel. The best thut British genius can do has been lavished upon It, regardless of time and pains and expense. Here are a few facts that give a hint as to the way the work has been done: Scores of controversies hare arisen and been fought out to the bitter end over such details as of an Inch to the width of a picthe thirty-secon- d ture frame, the binding of a book not as large at a fingernail and tho tints to a rug a few inches square. Sir David Murray, president of the Itoyal Institute of Painters, was responsible for the decoration. He thought some of the friezes and mural paintings out of harmony with their aurroundlngs and kept at his fellow artists until they did their work all over. There Is a golf bag and complete set of clubs, given by Lady Maud Warren der. It la accompanied by a book on gnlfi written by her after months of research among the records of the British Museum oii tbe royul ancient guroe." And maybe the controversies over the proper clubs and Irons to go in that bug were not hot and long drawn out! What tbe house would have coat bad the serv ices of those who took part been paid for at the market price can only bo guessed. Anyway, a tiny volume written fur tbe library by Uudyard Kipling wna insured for 800 pounds sterling, when taken out for reproduction. Sir Edwin Luytens, who helped plan the new Indian capital at Delhi and designed the cenotaph In Whitehall, planned tho house and baa super-vlsetho work. Queen Mary herself has also had n hand In tho supervision end has mnde contributions. Here ore some of tho features of tho establishment: Mechanically the house la a marveL There to on electric lift (elevator) with externa controL Tho four bath rooms and kitchen have running hot and cold water. There la a complete electric lighting Installation. There are all sorts of rooms from n box (stop-age- ) room to strong room for the crowns and acepters (set with real Jewels). The store room contains pots of Jam and marmalade. The wine cellar has bottles of real wines and liquors, labeled, binned nnd cobwcbbed. The garage contains five automobiles by noted British makers. The liedrooms are completely furnished, even to toothbrushes. The nursery, decorated by Edward Dulcac with fulry stories, has every toy that e child could wish Including toy train, a model theater and lead soldiers. The center of the main front to taken up by the grrnt staircase hall, thirty-on- e tochea broad, in marble with lupis lazuli inlays. The mural decorations are by William Nicholson. The subject la The Expulsion from Eden, with all tho animals looking on. The Queen's Bedroom, of which a photograph la here reproduced, to a miracle of completeness. The celling to by Glyn Phllpot, A. B. A to black, red and yellow. The furniture la black walnut Tbe bed hangings are gray silk. The toilet set to to blue enamel There to even n framed photograph of King George on the wall Another miracle of completeness to the dining room, also pictured herewith. This room to forty-tw- o Inches long, twenty inches wide and one-baand fifteen tochea high. The dining table to two Inches high nnd Is set with linen, and one-haglass and plate, even to saltcellars. The chairs are works of art Note tbe completeness and beauty of the sideboard. The celling 1s by Gerald Moira. It W. 3. On tbe walla are portrait! by famous artists. These Include King Edward III and King James V of Scotland, by Sir William Llewellyn. It A It L Others are Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort Looking across tbe table In the dining room one may see a portrait of the Prince of Wales In hunting costume, by A. J. Munnings, A. It A. This picture to actually about half tlie size of a postage stamp. In view of tho recent experiences of the Prince of Wales, the fact that the painting pictures him on foot In front of his horse evokes u smile. Just the sunte. It whs the Prince of Wales At one who unveil the exposition from failure. singe of the enterprise, when JWO.OW.OUO had been spent and another huudred million was need-d lf lf inn Li Jbituarlas, Canto ot Thanka, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Reading Notice Rates. Count Six Words to the "R for - GZJTrrj& or meg'&dBZi&r specially-printe- d Bale, For Rant, Found, Lost, Eta. Two Cents par Word Each issue. No fra rias Charge Accounts, sdiireeo All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING CO. pipes and postage atampe end Price, lloS. tobacco. Doubtless American ideas on this British Empire I went mourning without The Sun: exhibition will very ae widely aa the viewpoints. I stood up oiid cried in the coonwwo-JoaJo- b. S. It to Intended to show the whole of the Brltleb Empire In miniature In 241 acres on the outskirts of London, Its main purpose le to advertise the During the month of March, 1924, reeourcee of the empire, to etlmulato British trade, records for more than three thousand to restore prewar Brit- new birds bunded were activity and received by ons will tell you that It woa theprosperity. great Industrial the biological uurvey 0r the United fiilr given to Hyde Park In the middle of the last States detriment of agriculture. century that gave England Industrial supremacy. This brings tbe total number for the To restore that supremacy la the first purpose of year to twenty-fiv- e thousand. this fair Richmond Temple, one of tbe directors, aid recently In New York: One thing a girl cant This exhibition to a gigantic effort on the understand w how the of our Industrialist to pay our war debt andpart to cur can be stranger driving the big wicked when he is so the prosperity enjoyed prior to the war. All parties are behind it The whole hush I ness community of England, Scotland and Wales' common mistake of us all has for two years given its first attention to the . Tlie details. England must Ml her Marling and then laying something and must good, ell them to other countrlei besides the United down on tbe job. States, In order to pay the $157,000,000 It gold lot luck may win now and then, which each year has to he sent to this country We, therefore, decided that In order to attract the but success generally come from buying public of the world to our goods we would plain, hard work. have the biggest shop window ever built, where The salt of the earth Sre the goods of the biggest empire In tlie world might the people be displayed. In It the needs of the most exacting hopper In the most remote corner of tbe earth can bo satisfied. That It will be an Interesting exhibition Bl evident aa that it Is Intended to nit Into American trade with the British dominions. For the Hrtii.h line to and the sun never sets on the British flag Five minutes will suffice to take the visitor from Newfoundland to Australia South Africa to Malta. One.f,nrih of he JSS will be shown at Wembly- -ln it nnUv. dre to Its everyday Ufr. The United States will be represented la tbe International rodeo, open to the world. only wMh takes place the last two week, of June hundred cowboys and rough-ride- r win 'so America. To an English-speakin- g . k people illfiPn cans, with many roots in tbe Britton hlbltlon makes a certain sentimental anneo! th. vZ. fj the Briton, though be Is to coloniser. And as a he Is built heroic scale. Britains sons, ever of Raleigh, have been busy carrying The toJ flag over the seven sea. to the uftemt nto2 the earth. They created the White Man-- , i. By den" and shouldered It cheerfully, nmiallr benefit of the burden. They grabbed, hunt cleared, planted nnd built -- nnd orann-a new new a and civilization. empire And this exhibltY,, A. will show the fruits of that . Xh descendants of the pioneera are returniiT the trophies of that plnr.epr'cg. . Oo-X- Baby Chicks Wl I Grow Into that will fitofc J when given the belt profit only ity feed. It can be purchased MRt prices that sre no higher tou which la paid for some of ths toft lm M I grades. Give some of our Ml P poultry feed a trial and eee suite that it will produce. We" feqd for live stock too, hxy, oats, bran or tankage. w ii i Price Commission Cftj Sooth Ninth Street, Price, Vtok . far-flun- g n ft hi. lund-grabhe- r, land-grabb- , IZ Z rmpIrp-hMbhrg- I Great Western Coal Mines company for railroad grade work. Get in touch vid Leorge Storrs at Great Western Coal Mines or inquire at this office. CTmragaas Cf |