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Show PLEASANT GROVE REVIEW - i 1 hat's thi d, it slow r lUtV: bowels, aatives jive it tt Dsive. ) p.pepsin' night. B togwyj elp..You liomnest tulevm an eons! ion of ntoiicali tht this 1 !1 a Robber Castlo on the Danube. , Clonal Geographic .jilniton. D. l;-) . f m 01 91. ant ra ran se ar ufaj .ntifnl Blue Danube," I not bine, but either f roon accord- jtiw 6' - niifall to ! vaiiey-grease vaiiey-grease In commercial .tie agreement at the L eenference . between nations regarding cer- kud political poll- wn. nttoad lent, ilea, bl, ' tropin lintmestf J4W 1 ; p 1 rears countries bor- fbe have disagreed other regulations. ntt nn the most lm- Me sfream In cen- ltta hills of Bavaria set, the Danube has highway of races races of both the Occident have navigat- ijiiMheld parts of its Jsrels from the Black Jritine Danube is left tunra-Severin, arike sprawling-3elta.' There Moslem minarets-ifor old Turk- old Roman bridges. iTower Danube winds !!, ever-lifting hills, the restern Europe. im may board one ; liter steamers that all ucenil or. descend 'I dozen countries ly-iisafc. ly-iisafc. ; 1 Black forest and ..L' Bardly is Turnu-Sev-Iwii, then the traveler finds iit wild swirl of wa-inose wa-inose terrific force Mm more and mote 'ZSLi f feat of trying 5 1 tending escalator. meiter of an arti-ii arti-ii channel Is reached, 'two-mile stretch the ;M doubtless the Argo-M Argo-M to their ascent gave A forceful name, per-vl per-vl .to the battering jtffc :. - . forgotten Island. J jilKalei," remarkg a to an Islet off Or- all It the Foreotten f the Berlin Congress H Now, would yon M being overlooked LWhyrihere'd be Park on ft r traveler glimpses a colony of Bosnian ago built their told the encompass- of a disinantled ; K la as peace- Bat of wild flowers aheH crater. ,' there are customs Jft local port regu-,3U regu-,3U aallonnan go Y The river Is more a eonflict, with seven I Wd, which is to say. i&ree kingdoms. !l republics and a icy. koat... enters a J of sky-cutting the observer jj T5t of rock-walled ..it: M'tkf LyJul atri- land it Defil WiV i'uiiuve as kTabe wroueht ,w haTe seem to i Aharon-haunted pi?if ?nderworid- P dwct m .we-H .we-H "shadow-en- J?"" Placing ,ts rt malevolent-i malevolent-i ' root 1 1 ' uterf, Permitted ""ith busl- ? SeauT . nan1 an1 h lain ,D tte othCT. S-ttS1 Pottery and "fin m ,.h. alavesT trav!. .. "jay aia. V ' capital eW 'ace of t JP ready ta eom- -t!4 . li- Berlin.- cathedral But with marine glasses he will find that ' the : scratchings , read "Imp. Caesar. . . '. Traianus Aug. Germ. Pont Maxlmus." Trajan, or any other Roman who could lead an army along the fiat face of those river-washed cliffs by means of beam-supported galleries, he will agree, had a perfect right to cut his name there I r - For two days And nights the boat churns ahead between wide plains, and on the third afternoon comes Into sight of Belgrade (Beo-grad)wJerched (Beo-grad)wJerched high over the confluence con-fluence of the Danube ,and the Sara, the Jugoslav capital presents a striking picture. Few European cities are situated on two such waterways, whose navigable lengths within Jugoslavia total 720 miles. Budapest a Stately City. Not to know Budapest Is to have missed one of the loveliest of European Eu-ropean cities. It has Its own distinctive dis-tinctive Btatellness that reflects the cultural flowering of a race whose kingdom as been enthronedTlsirthe Danube for a thousand years. As certain American metropolitan quarters," such as "Little Italy" or "Little Gefmany," reflect their mother countries In miniature, so Budapest's topography reflects 'on a small , scale the lineaments of what, as ti result of the war, is lit erally .'"Little Hungary." Ancient Buda, on the Danube's right bank, rears aloft on rocky crests that represent the foothills of Hun-gary's Hun-gary's mountains, while on the other" bank mpdernT Pest stretches away In levels that "prelude Hungary's Hun-gary's plains. After leaving Budapest, the boat heads for the cliff-fringed section of the Danube where It makes the big turn westward. Ahead rise the Little Lit-tle Carpathians, forming the background back-ground of a busy port scene of quays, cranes, canal boats, clustered In slips Pressburg, the "German guidebook calls it It commands a splendid panorama pano-rama of the Danube's two arms encircling en-circling the Great Schutt, which local lo-cal pride, proclaims "the largest Jn-terlor Jn-terlor island in Europe." ' ' To Vienna and Beyond. " Beyond the Bratislava the river skirts Hainburg, a hillside picture f town walls, curious gates, crumbling crum-bling towers. It Is one of half a dozen Danube towns mentioned In the "Nibelungenlled'' as being associated asso-ciated with the downstream journey of Burgundy's doomed knights. Beyond Hainburg the Danube's banks lower, into the wide plain where lies" Vienna. Owing to postwar post-war exigencies, Vienna has achieved for Its .working classes a housing scheme which, planned to embrace 30,000 families, is "futuristic" only because of its novelty. A visit to one Viennese palace of many the Schonbrunn of Versailles-like Versailles-like aspect reveals the luxury of the Hapsburg regime and its postwar post-war sic transit under Austria's democratic republic; for the park where Maria Theresa once strolled and where the Napoleon of 1805 planned campaigns had become a Sunday pleasance of Vienna's workers. work-ers. - . Beyond Vienna Greif ensteln's fine old castle rises s, into view, as you near the Danube's region of medieval medie-val strongholds. Steaming past the Wachan Defile's crag-set ruins, one reflects npon the formidable amount of trade that fell to them as a result of the Crusaders. In 1096 some 2,000 craft, packed with 40,000 Palestine-bound troops, descended the Danube. Three ensuing ensu-ing Crusades took the same route. There sprang tip a river trade consisting con-sisting of westbound silks, bronzes, spices, oils, and of east bound furs, arms, and saddlery. And the Danube Dan-ube castles took their tolls and the flotsam rake-off of stranded cargoes, not to mention piratical seizures and the enslaving of ships crews. Castle Aggstein, the most dreaded of Danubian robber strongholds, must have had a great turnover In riparian loot and captive maidens. And Castle Durnsteln eclipsed all local lo-cal records in the capture-and-ran-sonx trade when its gates closed upon the royal prize" Richard Coenrj de Lion. Ways of Makincr Fence Posts Last Coal-Tar Creosote One of Best Preservatives Available. By PROP. O. H. OUISB. Department ol Forestry, State CoHeir of Agriculture. Cornell. N. T. WNU Service. Most common timbers rot in contact con-tact with: the soil and yet these woods have1 many uses on the farm If they are given a preservative treatment against decay. 4 r Preservative treatments are urged only for those species which decay Quickly, such as red oak and hard maple. With others, the value of treatment is questionable. Coal-tar creosote is the most satisfactory sat-isfactory preservative from every standpoint This material, although Inflammable and poisonous to fungi which causes decay, can be handled han-dled without danger. To merely paint a fence post with the preservative, as some do, will prove of almost no value. The preservative pre-servative must be forced Into the wood. The fence post should first be cut and framed to the final dimensions dimen-sions before -IMs treated, and all bark removed. Moisture should be got rid of by thorough air-seasoning. Either round or split posts may be used. The posts are then immersed for from five to eight hours in hot creosote, at a temperature, temper-ature, ranging from 200 to 220 degrees de-grees Fahrenheit A 100-gallon oil drum makes a satisfactory tank. When the heat Is shut off live posts are kept In the cooling creosote for six to twelve hours, A single post will absorb about one-third gallon of creosote, worth about 10 to 12 cents. Seek Wheat Resistant' to Yellow Mosaic Evil Kansas farmers have another wheat disease to fight United States Department of Agriculture Ag-riculture crop disease specialists this year discovered yellow mosaic, a mysterious new disease which completely destroys the wheat it attacks, near Salina, Kan., where a 40-acre field was a total loss. A small amount of the disease was found also near Chapman and near Manhattan, Kan. These are the only places where the disease was found this year. Thedepartment will begin experiments experi-ments at once to-find wheats rey sistant to this mosaic, as this has been the best method of combating the green, mosaic "of wheat occurring occur-ring east of the Mississippi river. The wheat specialists Cannot tell as yet where the ' disease came from, how It spreads, nor how rap-Idly rap-Idly it may Increase. Foreign Clovers In recent years most of the red-clover red-clover seed imported to this country coun-try has come from France and Poland. Other countries that have sent seed here are Italy, Canada, Chile, England and Germany. The United States imports more red clover clo-ver seed than It exports. American winters proved difficult for many of the Imported clovers, the tests showed. Wherever winter conditions are likely to be severe, most of the imported red clovers will suffer more than the better domestic do-mestic lots, says the department The foreign clovers, when they pass the winters successfully, may give a fair to good first cutting, but the second crop Is nearly always inferior in-ferior and Is often so poor as not to warrant cutting.. The foreign clovers often die immediately after the first cutting. Time to Grow Alfalfa The best times to sow alfalfa as a rule are early in spring and early in faU. The special point is to give the'young plants a chance to starl without the handicap of the sunshine of midsummer. How alfalfa al-falfa will come through such a-period a-period .depends very largely on what the weather is. If the summer sum-mer chances to be . fairly cloudy, that is with no, long periods of blazing sunshine all day and drying dry-ing winds, then the spring sown certainly have a. better chance, but If the alfalfa Is sown in late summer sum-mer and the fall Is fairly favorable It will come on. Many favor spring, fitting the land as well as possible and sowing as early as it can be worked so that the plants may get 'good start before midsummer. Rural 'ew Yorker. . "Straight Furrows" Many modern farm plowing Implements Imple-ments really contribute to soil erosion ero-sion when they are used for straight rows over sloping fields, rather than making the rows follow fol-low the contours of the land. This was strikingly demonstrated on a Kansas field. With straight rows 70 per cent of a S-lnch rain ran off, while with the rows following the contours of the slopes only 16 per cent of the rain ran off. To correct erosion conditions a new cultivating machine has been developed which leaves the field In a' "prtted, condition. The shovels of the machine alternately go op and down and 'each "pit" dug by the shovels holds about three gallons gal-lons of water. This allows the water wa-ter to soak into the ground, rafter than run off. I J This Little Girl Got Well Quick f' I "just alter ner I third birthday, my f I little daughter, Oon- attack of intestinal flu," says Mrs. H.W. Turnage, 217 Cad-walder Cad-walder St, San Antonio, An-tonio, Texas. "It left her yery weak and pale. Her bowels bow-els wouldn't act right she had no appetite and nothing agreed with her. Our physician told us to giv her some California Fig Syrup. It made her pick up right away, and now she is as robust and happy as any child in our neighborhood. I give Califor nia Fig Syrup full credit for her wonderful condition. -It Is a great thing for children." Children like the rich, fruity taste of California Fig Syrup, and you can give It to them as often as they need it because it is purely vegetable. For over-60 years leading physicians have recommended it and Its overwhelming over-whelming sales record of over four million bottles a year shows it gives satisfaction. Nothing compares with it as a gentle but certain laxative, and it goes further than this. t regulates the stomach and bowels and gives tone and strength to these organs so they continue to act normally, nor-mally, of their own accord. There are many imitations of California Cali-fornia Fig Syrup, so look for the name "California" on the carton to be sure you get the genuine. 4 Parsonage and White Horn According to the Christian Herald, during one-fourth of our nationhood there have been parsonage children presiding over the White House. Abigail Abi-gail Adams was the daughter of a Congregational minister. The wives of both Millard Fillmore and Franklin Frank-lin Pierce were parsonage born. James A. Garfield was an ordained minister. Grover Cleveland was the descendant of a long line of ministerial min-isterial forbears. Mrs. Benjamin Harrison was the daughter of Eev. John W. Scott Both Woodrow Wilson Wil-son and his first wife were parson age children. James Madison" studied for the ministry In his youth. Chester Ches-ter A. Arthur was the son of a Baptist Bap-tist minister. Hula Minthorn Hoover was a Quaker preacher, while Lou Henry .Hoover Is the granddaughter pfa Methodist minister. Living Chicken Home At Knoxville, Tenn two deputy sheriffs saw a negro walking along the street with nine chickens under his arms. Closer Inspection revealed suspicious lumps about his person. Occasionally a lump would move and make a noise slightly like, a chicken being smothered. They removed Ave more chickens from beneath his clothing. . , There seem to be organizations for cultivating every virtue but mak ing oneself agreeable. v " Golden Dinner Service Not Alone for Wealthy Would you like a gold dinner serv ice or, rather, one that looks like gold If so, It will not be long before be-fore you can buy it Just as cheaply as the familiar nickel plate. Curiously enough, the new "gold" Is made in Sheffield, England, the city of steel. The first Just-like-gold dinner service was made as the result re-sult of a Joke. Messrs. W. Turner and company had been experimenting for some time with a new alloy of aluminum and bronze which has all the appearances of good red gold. "Why not make poor men feel like millionaires?" someone suggested, and for a Jest the first near-gold dinner service was made. To the surprise of the firm it aroused an Immediate demand. People liked the Idea of eating off gold, and the new metal is easy to look after, since it Is almost stainless. The biggest demand, though, is likely to come from South America and other Latin countries, where there is a deep love of gold Itself or of metal that looks like It Forewarned Is Forearmed "I must go out because I have an appointment "With whom?" "With my tailor. He Is bringing the bill liere at eight o'clock." Der Wahre Jakob (Berlin)." - crcolizcdlVax Keeps Skin Young Oe aa na ami am w dlraatad. Ftae pertUo ol w4 ekia peal eft: oatil ail MmM euQh aa piaipUe, unr apole, Ua and Iraaklaa dUapeaor. Stria la thi aat and ralvwty. Tour I aa looka ra rooaaw. afanollaad Wu brine ao tha akttaa baeatjrtof irour akin. T ' reaaeee wiiwkl am aaa oanaa Povderad SaaaUte laenlnd ta eae-haU piat witak kaaaL Al drag alar. Call for Projrres Little' Joan What do the angels do in heaven, mummy? ' Mother They sing and play harps. Little Joan Haven't they any radios? ra-dios? Boston Transcript Mi AtMca "Complexion Curse She thoat the wit hist onluckrarhen he Called on her ooce evoided her thereafter. But no one admire pimply, blemiahed skin. More and mora women are realising that pimples and blotches are often danger signals of elotgtd bowels-poisonous bowels-poisonous wastes ravaging the system. Let NR (Nature's Remedy) afford complete, thorough elimination and promptly ease away beauty ruining poisonous matter. Fine for sick headache, head-ache, bilKxisocmditkaclixzineai. Try tJhis sale, dependable.au- mKmmmm gists' only 26c HV, j. TUiVlS ySoa. heartburn. Only 10c Yes9Ma&amt BUT see how kind the quick yew Oxffdol Ut O Now yon needn't dread patting 70m hands into dishwater three times a day. There's a new soap that does the work in double-quick time and still is kind to hands! It's kind to hands and dainty things, yet k75 it does more work because it makes 50 ?7i more Budsricher longer-lasting euds that cut grease like lightning, that took clothes clean. Leaves no scam, softens water, never balls op. . Procter & Gamble HADE BT TBI MAKERS Of IVOKY 804P mo. a. e. Mt. e. There Is a way to keep a lawn; but you have got to learn it : . Your automobile doesn't annoy your neighbor; but your radio can. Salt take City's fievat Hotel HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in RATES FROM 11.30 ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. ENJOY A TRIP TO SALT LAKE AND A HEWHOUSE V t shi til if MRS. J. H. WATEB8, Pres. W. B. SUTTON. Mgr. 400 Rooms 400 Baths $2.00 to $4.00 & Family Room $250 or 5 Persons TWO PERSONS Choice Ootslde Room with Bath $5 $250 THE HOTEL NEWHOUSE SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH PARKER'S ' HAIR BALSAM i. BsBWreeDaadniff-StopeBalrVaUlBi lmparta Color and ;S4 "1 Beaaty to Gray and Faded Kafa Uf IOeaodl.(atDniglte. ..fy Hliena Chum. Wki.,Ptchugiie.H.T FLOKESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for use im tcmnee'Jon withParker'eHeir 6alaam.Makea the. hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or etdrujp Kists. Hisoox Chemical Works, PatchogacN.X. TOCNO MEN qualify for positions In radio, elea-trtclty elea-trtclty and telexrapiy taught br aetual pmctloa, ODDortnnltr to earn tui tion. Praetleal Training; for SO Years. Westera Deebicsl Colieta, 133 Relent SU Salt Lake WANTED W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No. 44-1 93i w hat a famous clinic discovered Baby Food! ORIGINATED 75 YEARS AGO A 4"sNEVER SURPASSED IN DIGESTIBILITY s t s EAGLE BRAND NOW PROVED IDEAL FOOD IN PHYSICIANS' TEST WITH 50 BABIES. WHEN Gail Borden originated Eagle Brand back in 1857, he did so because be-cause there was a crying need for a - pure, safe milk for babies. No one knew then what we know now of, food Talues. No thorough scientific research had as yet been made in. infant feeding. Yet, amazing though it seems, this baby food created -by Gail Borden proved so remarkable in its nutritive . value and in its digestibility that it has survived 75 years of revolutionary revolution-ary discoveries in nutrition las raised three generations of splendid babies and today, in as thorough a test as was ever given to a baby food, has proved itself unsurpassed in baby building! Today.'Eagle Brand is hailed as a most modern baby food second to none in its scientific proof of performance. per-formance. How the test was made Recently, two famous baby special- about Wis imping : Mi y It ) X ri ' - ' " - " I ists conducted a feeding test with fifty average babies. For months, Eagle Brand was the dnlyfood these babies received, except for the supplemen-ytary supplemen-ytary foods now given with mother milk or any milk- X-rays were taken of their bones. Blood counts were made. Tooth development was watched. Heights, weights, strength were recorded. And all these records were compared with records of other groups fed on other baby foods. At last came the rerdict. In every way, the comparison was favorable to Eagle Brand. For those Eagle Brand , babies showed themselves superbly nourished. This simple diet Eagle Brand with the usual supplementary foods was wanting in nothing that a baby needs for health, growth. Your grocer has Eagle Brand. See directions direc-tions on labeL The usual supplementary foods, of course, are orange or tomato juice, and cod lireroil -orother source of the and-rachidCTitaminlX FREE! BOOKLET ON BABY CARE! The Bordca Company TVfK. WN.IO. Bacdea BsiUine 350 Madio ATinoe. Nrw York.N.Y. :l Please seed eas-F&EI--Bebr's qkjy? Or- (Fleass print name and address phiair) |