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Show THE LEHI SUN. LEHI. UTAH lohfu Gotnam T I. 1 "2 1 1 1 44 k API 1 V4f , 4 iT g I, a" 3 " - i irtmriiitimnitiftfli Da j ueauiy laiKs MARJORIE DUNCAN Famous Beauty Expert j par Halts the Northward March of Architectural Giants. .wts. Nation! Gsoxraphie i pumps, wnn an elaborate system of SJ'wMhimtton. v. WWun fmrvtcs.) P3PHB Its youth and expert- eta comparea wiu. Z the recent flow of gold h it BriUsh capital, New Lata. Its position as the fcs leading banker. lork Is ciijr U j, man's incomparable i, incredible almost as that honiahave buUt the Andes! Uinyliigh hotel roof after SoJintch the city come to I By electric moons, rainbows, Ld comets yoa see Manhattan an dusk into gorgeous theat- laimuuiaon. tfiniling skyline eous ana In tides of tempo and color. As diaci melts into new lights i'siadows, all the architectural siasmagoria of the ages, linked filta earth's ancient scars, I to unfold, In fancy you see pitoo dty, a kaleidoscopic riot fpstnd Acropolis; Ming tombs, jilikl, and Pyramids ; Gibral-lanama Gibral-lanama canal, Tower of Babel, I Grand canyon and Yangtze s(oraed by street caverns far ; Cologne cathedral, Pikes and St Peter's, a Chinese against a Sahara desert of lit sky; towers and turrets, jces, minarets, domes, steeples, tasks and penthouses all ei and crowding and seeming fn as smoke moves In electric I lit day, from the same high see It again realistic, noisy, .'f eets crowded with traffic. New " never rests. Higher and ever 'if rise the skyscrapers. Their fcionic bulk; their grace of ge-frie ge-frie design; their dizzy height fearsome beauty at first they st tint that man's monsters im away with him. Stare up feck a building and It fairly iates one's mind and body, la their npper stories you see fog floating by. Miles to the fetches Long Island ; to the I Is the Statue of Liberty, and a Island; to the west spreads Jersey, and to the north that f the city beyond Cewtral lle merely pigmy structures I aid eight stories. Here and I tp from among them, other rise in this swiftly 11 region of Mid-Manhattan. JNcal Travel It Immense. feMgh buildings, that visitors fslloTer the world stare at astonishment, make New m It is-the supreme won-I won-I to modern world. When the ! toper,- of only 13 stor-itS, stor-itS, n" l0wer Broadway, iTJ1 n8eaajaceni out in alarm. Now, J"tetheygo-50,6O,70 HT?0' uifr? the verUcal C!,Io:k ially exceeds iepassenS3than fcei" bnsses- "d subways pae 'scraper 21 elevatnr. to the run of 1 ifctttt lTlm ta New un ume. I'm no'l anywhere even 20,- to IKnnn . ' a. m i fcoa, m e'ery state la "It!! VT. elevators, It H!toPtysome UITS Bnrl If tu8e ' congested nun floor area l'Rn r;onethemre-Z r;onethemre-Z . " cx ass'f. ... : r;eun.r 1U crew f . T sincn ' ""Out orrernot Un, ,nPght wa- 104 tiSh-pressure alarms and extinguishing apparatus. Beneath one building are turntables turn-tables for busses from railway terminals. ter-minals. Tunnels lead from It In many directions. Through them thousands thou-sands of Its tenants arrive each morning after many miles of underground un-derground travel, and through them one may wander, as In the streets of a subterranean city. In this human hu-man prairie dog town are more than 50 places to eat, and stores selling sell-ing everything from office supplies and lingerie to thermos bottles, sun-ray sun-ray lamps, cigars, books and haberdashery. haber-dashery. From these commercial catacombs one may ride all the way out to Long Island without ever coming into the open air. Speed in New Construction. But New York's greatness is not In structure alope. It lies also in the speed at which life moves and new buildings displace the old. This swift transition stuns even the blase New Yorker. Troy was wrecked and rebuilt nine times. Here history repeats. Compare the skyline now with pictures pic-tures of the same region made only ten years ago. You will see that palatial homes have been demolished demol-ished and whole residence districts swept away to clear sites for higher high-er buildings. You see buildings like the famous Waldorf-Astoria turn to junk, and hard of the heels of its wreck come giants like the amazing Empire State building. To widen streets, houses are sliced off in front as with giant shears. Four hundred buildings wrecked to extend a subway spur; tralnloads of dirt hauled to the river front and dumped in to make a park below Klverside drive. In cyclonic devastation, whole neighborhoods neigh-borhoods are razed for new bridge approaches. Swiftly the old landmarks fade. Only Grant's tomb and similar objects ob-jects of sentiment seem safe. If even the Sphinx stood on Fifth avenue, ave-nue, somebody would probably want to wreck it to build a skyscraper! Here is no Bpace for static things. By many cuts and running It fast, imagine this picture Bhown In, say, two or three days. You would see old buildings crumbling down and new skyscrapers hastening heavenward, heaven-ward, pushing up like giant mushroom?. mush-room?. It would be unendurable. Compared with medieval cities, think how fast New York grows. Today, To-day, in New York, bricklayers may run walls up two stories in a day. A building of 50 floors is begun and finished in about the same time It used to lake a Sioux to kill a but falo and tan his hide for a wigwam. Between crowds and skyscrapers is reciprocal affinity. Each is the cause of the other. Into that part of Manhattan below Fifty-ninth street there comes to work every morning an army of people equal to the population of Paris or CWcago. No other spot on earth is so crowded crowd-ed with men and houses. On, Under and Over Manhattan. Thus men crowd Manhattan rock, Not only that They bore holes in It, dig tunnels under rivers, and push bridges over It, so that still more men may reach it hastily. The passengers on its transport lines each year outnumber all the people in the world. Those passing througn Times Sauare subway station alone last year equaled in number half the Inhabitants of the western hemi sphere. So jammed is Fifth avenue now that in busy hours a man walking roes faster than a bus. In many streets motors average less than four miles an hour, New York's fight to keep men and things in motion knows no lull. It has built a great elevated express highway, a novel thoroughfare many feet above the street It runs along the Hudson river water front from Canal street north to Seventy-sec ond. Think what this means to crowd ed New York I A broad, free path of two 30-foot roadways, with no grade crossings, able to carry from 5,000 to 9,000 motor cars an hour, at a speed of 35 miles rlgit over all congestion. Then there's the new tunnel, to run under tidewater from Brooklyn out to Staten island. It will take two to four yean to bore this bold SUPREME IN THEIR OWN ENVIRONMENT Australian Natives Masters of Woodcraft. Stretch to Health and Beauty OEALTll and beauty are Just up A above and yours If you will stretch for them. Stretching is one of the old, old reliables as true today to-day as It was back in old Noah's time when the animals practiced this splendid exercise, TIs the most natural way In the world of limbering limber-ing up the muscles, awakening the system, sending the blood coursing through the veins. Animals stretch. Babies stretch long before they know it Is good for them. And Just as soon as the thinking mechanism does function the natural Inclination Inclina-tion to stretch seems to die down. Perhaps It Is the stubbornness In our nature that does It Perhaps It Is the dominance of laziness in us. Or perhaps, again, It is a human revolt against doing anything that Is "good for your health " A woman noticing a sudden bunching and bulging at the hips Is quick to do something about trimming trim-ming the unwanted pounds away. She may exercise. Or If she Is not wise she may rush to adopt every quack scheme for quick reducing. But certain it is that the discovery of a bit of fat sends her into sudden sud-den action. But, tell her to stretch to keep the muscles limber, to preserve pre-serve the svelte, slender, flowing line of her figure, or to ward off any extra ounces and see how very slowly she does your bidding. The slowness is certainly near enough to the "not at all." There's no pudglness known to animals chiefly because they have not been "civilized" above natural inclinations that are "good for the health." They stretch to health and they stretch to beautiful sleek lines, too. For the woman who wisely would stay healthy, for the woman who values her beauty and for the woman wom-an who Is too lazy to do a complete routine of exercise, stretching Is a veritable boon. The best time to do the stretch ing is In the morning upon awakening. awak-ening. And if you haven't already started, the best time to begin is tomorrow morning. Begin the stretching the very second your eyes are open. Or if you wish take one wee second to blink the eyes some twenty times. Then stretch-luxuriously. stretch-luxuriously. Give your lungs plenty of fresh air. Wash out every corner and crevice. New vitality will be yours. Your skin will take on a clearer tone, your eyes a new glow, your step a new spring. It is as important to stretch the lungs and chest cavity as it is to limber up the muscles. Even before you start the stretching take a full minute to breathe in very deeply to the count of ten, then slowly exhale. Imagine a definite object Just a bit beyond your reach. When standing stand-ing stretch up head and neck, reach ing for it When sitting, stretcn from the waistline up, up. In bed, stretch toes down, head up, arms at shoulder level out There's health and beauty Just beyond your finger tips. And it is all worth stretching for. Keeping and Looking Cool TO KEEP feeling comfortable during the hot summer months is an accomplishment To actually look as "cool as a cucumber" Is an art It sounds like magic, yet a great many women have learned to give the lie to the thermometer when it registers 95 in the shade. True that to every million people who look all "hot and bothered" only about one nunarea iook re freshingly cool and ioveiy. mm there are a few simple things to remember to do. The Intimate details of personal daintiness such as bath accessories, deodorants, antl-perspiratlon remedies, reme-dies, and the removal of superfluous superflu-ous hair are most Important summer sum-mer notes. Now let us see what else we can do to keep personal loveliness at its best during the summer. There Is iiPllehtful young lady I know who Is immensely popular because she always looks as refreshing as a cool breeze. Here are some of the se- nrpta of her success. She rests for a short period every day. The word rest may not sound as refreshing as a cold plunge, but trv a ten-minute nap in the after- noon, of a not Bummer uaj. . atlon is a boon to beauty. I hve known a great many men and women to take a cooling and refreshing re-freshing plnnge and feel "new born." Five minutes later they are running run-ning about again raising the tem perature of tne Doay. Rest after a cold shower or plunge so that the refreshing effect ef-fect will be prolonged. vrcxh rfothes both outer and un der garments changed very fre-nuently fre-nuently are another secret of sum- mtiness. Undergarments are ,.u lnnndered. there la small excuse for not changing dally. Dresses should be light In weight .Mn?h to be cdmfortable and ETm in color. Avoid tight cloth- nn Verv often It Is the simple. easily laundered ensemble that has the greatest success as a cool, crisp- Among the wonders of empire are living men of the Stone age whose forefathers saw the rise and decay f all bygone civilizations. Ignorant as they seem to us, the aborigines of Australia in their own environment are as much in advance f our most brilliant scientists as our scientists are in advance of the verage man. Our cleverest men would starve to death if dropped down without food, clothing, or weapons in the heart of Australia, but the Stone age men thrive and flourish in such conditions. They live solely by hunting, their knowledge of the habits of wild things being uncanny. If they were not the world's most marvelous trackers they would have died out ages ago. They can read every scratch and mark on the-ground as easily as you read this paper, and can tell whether the creature they are chasing is young or old, whut it Is doing, and where it is going. They eat anything, even snakes and lizards, and once they get on Its track a creature is doomed, for they never give up until they get it. Nor do they make the mistake, common to the whites, of trying to dig out of its burrow an animal that Is not at home. Their crude form of writing by burning or carving dots and lines on sticks stick messnces enables them to send any information by runner to distant members of their tribes. But even more wonderful are their smoke messages. They seem to converse in smoke as easily as the airplane writes in smoke in our own skies. Starting the fire by rubbing one piece of wood against another, they elect their materials in the most careful manner. Familiar with the type of smoke given off by different woods, they make smoke of various densities and colors, thick clouds, light spirals, or flurries in brown, yellow, black, blue, or pink; and every ev-ery change of color and form has Its meaning in their age-old code. Ancient "Cooking Pits" Unearthed in Ireland It Is reported that nine "falachtda" (cooking pits) have recently been discovered In the following places around Kinsale, Ireland Ballinto-ber, Ballinto-ber, Coolcorrin, Melllnfontstown, RIngrone, Ballinvredig, TIgsaxon, KIppagh, Scllly Glen and Clashmore. Townshend, in his "Statistical Sur vey of the County Cork" mentions that in that part of Ireland heaps of burnt stones are found in great numbers, which are said to have been used by the inhabitants in-habitants in. ancient times for cooking their victuals. Keating in his "History of Ireland" refers to the ttoda of cooking. He says the an cient inhabitants were in the habit of diggtng two large pits, on of which was for washing, the other for cooking. Stones heated red-hot were thrown in, and upon these were laid the meat bound In green bulrushes; upon this again was placed another heap of hot stones, and so on, until the required quantity was disposed of. Montreal Family Herald. Sees Napoleon as One of Nature's Supermen Napoleon believed ia no religion; he advocated companionate marriage; he suffered terribly from defeat but never from remorse; he regarded friends, family and women without any affection (barring hie early Infatuation In-fatuation for Josephine) In short he was a superman. He had enough energy en-ergy for 100 men. How difficult It Is even now to escape es-cape from the glamor of his name I Although I know he was one of the most cold-blooded scoundrels that ever lived, and all Europe had to choose between peace and him, that no country, no people and no community com-munity were safe while he was at large although I am aware of all this, if he should appear on earth now and say "It is the emperor I" I might leave all and follow him. William Lyon Thelps in Scribner's. Lightning' Freak Dick Blankenship was sitting on the front porch of his home in Rich-lands, Rich-lands, Va., when lightning struck a tree in the yard and killed a cow and six pigs standing beneath it. Blankenship Blank-enship was unharmed, but the pipe he held In his hand was burned to a crisp, and the soles of both his shoes were neatly ripped away. let , -a j v ' -- V) Thkek la somrthlng vibrant and magnet la about the truly healthy man or woman; who is satisfied and contented with life. That "iomething" attracU people. Win confidence. Arouses and holdi affection. Thie vitality and enthusiasm of youth are priceless. Guard thera with Fellow Syrup, the fine old tonic which doctors recommend. It restores and strengthens. Improves appetite. You sleep better and feel better. Your vigor and endurance return. re-turn. For Just one week, try f Fellows' Syrup, which you can get at your druggist's. The results will amaze and delight you. FELLOWS' SYHUP M m your uiair at nome and Shop! The things you want to buy . . . at the time you want to buy them ... at the price you want to pay. You can find these right in the paper. Your newspaper advertisements make it possible to do your "looking around" right at home and then go downtown to do your buying . . saving you lime and energy. A Perpetuating Language Languages, like our bodies, are in a perpetual flux, and atand in need of recruits to supply those words that are continually falling, through disuse. dis-use. Felton, Taking Him Literally Mrs. Catte Do you know, doctor, I believe that my husband's trouble arises from his nose. Doctor I guess you've hit It Mrs. Vattle Oh, yes, many time KADI BY TDK HAHRSO IVOET SOAP mumnmk BUT sea how much easier it is ictth the New Oxffdol 9 If yon want sparklirjg, clean dishes use the New Oxydol that makes 50 more suds rich, long lasting sods that cat grease like a flash and rinse off clean, leaving no senm, so dishes are clean In a jiffy. And so easy on the hands! Procter & Gamble ttlrf.O.S.FAf'.Om L Unhonored and Unsung In August, 1013, an English soldier raided single-handed a German headquarters head-quarters and captured some documents docu-ments which he could not read. The other day he accidentally learned that they were the Hindenburg de fense plans which enabled the allies quickly to win tha war. He's now wondering who took the credit he should have gotten. Collier's Maga-elne. Nothing ages Ilka laziness. Early Use of Carpets Carpets, in the earliest days oi their importation from Turkey lots England, were considered far too precious pre-cious for use on the floor, and, beini small in size, were used for tabU covers. ""rs. try t Av1 ; ' - v' n VP'''?'- ' i r j y "y :JK-1C'':y Hctored here b Bobbls Hotcombs, 18l HowtQ MU1 RtL, Adsota, Ga riding "hone." lie has always been so Eagle Brand btbr, hit oerer been tkk, sod tt ktco moDtbs wtishj 2 1 pounds. rbts 5-month-old daughter of Mrs. W.Geveko&i Prospect St, New Rochell N. Y. was "smsil spd thin when born, and no formula would sree On Eagle Brand," tier mother writes, "she has gained steadily and is now the picture of health. This husky Ufe-mrer well-built. sn4 rtrocsU Bdsoo R. Tambiya, Jr, 1)0 Union St- Ridge-wood, Ridge-wood, N.J. He is so Eagle Brand baby just two rears old sod tops the scales st 32 pounds. Judge a baby food by the babies it builds Look at them three of the hundreds of thousands of babies that are raised, each year, on Eagle Brand; Their mothers sent their pictures to The Borden Company as countless moth ers do each year because they are Prints uuntistt look for ht judging bahj it Well-shaped head; sound teeth ia well-formed jaw. Strong back. Firm flesh. Straight legs. proud of the look of these babies-eager babies-eager to have us show other mothers what Eagle Brand doe3 in building a fine physique, a happy disposition, a good foundation for health through the years; Look at the way their bones are shaping strong and sturdy. See how their healthy, normal growth is making mak-ing them fine-looking,"well-favoredl And then consider this: In the 79 years since Gail Borden put Eagle Brand on the market, three generations genera-tions millions have been raised on this wonderfully digestible food. No other food, except mother's milk, has such long-continued, practical evidence ev-idence of iis success in baby building. Recently, in a famous baby clinic, this practical evidence was scientifically scientifi-cally Terified in a feeding test with 50 average Infants. Judged by X-ray pictures of bone structure, blood counts, weight and height records, every modern check on growth, these Eagle Brand babies proved themselves ideally nourished; TREE-bclpJul baby book-SenJI If yoa cannot nurse your baby, try Eagle Brand. See feeding directions oa labeL Send for -Baby's Welfare," con-taining con-taining feeding instructions, general information oa baby care; We will gladly send your physician a report of the above scientific feeding test; FREE! BABY BOOKLET Tin Bokdem Com-ANT Dept'N-).Botden Buildice S50 Madiioa Avenue. NJrw York. T Bm J Pleaie send sac new edition -t? "Baby's Welfue." VSas nmn ; (Picase prim name and addicts plainly) looking summer vogue. (ft 191X, Bell Syndicate)-WXU rrfc. submarine highway. J |