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Show t EMERY COUNTY 1 IN IE RANGES It Was an Affair i 1! Wis Moun-lw- Asserts Many Pacific fSlt in Africa, ""paper -- . ! it r -- 'i 1 e pMpr earthquake rifts. of special danger on schoolhouse or skys- They are lines which no dum or should located. should - be also be avoided, as far as They poss- railroad lines, bridges, aque and yet it happens that they often run through fallejs where such work is suggested by the conditions of the ground. As long as we remain Ignorant of their position, we run the risk of Inviting destruction, but it is not difficult by proper studies to locate the lines of danger on a map and to make the information public for the benefit of engineers and others." ible, by ducts and other public works, New Style in Blurb. last 20 years Topeka young women have been overworking the superlatives in conversation. Most everything is "wonderful" or "awful," or they are just "crazy" about it. Now For the It seems the conversational style Is changing. A Topeka girl recently visited Kan sal City friends and a certain ttme up for discussion. The wedding Topeka "Wasn't it an awfully swell girl asked, wedding?" "Ko, no," said the. Kansas City girl, "It was swell, but it wasn't too swell." "Didn't the bride look too sweet foi anything?" asked the Topeka girl. "Yes," said the. K. C. girl, "but not too sweet." "Wasn't that a dress she lovely, orer added the Topeka girl. "It was a pretty dress," said the Kansas City girl, "but not too pretty H you know what I mean." Topeka Capital. Farm Athletics. at "college, son? "What were you aed Mr. Cobbles. ml $pjt He Seemed to Grow Rigid and Quiet. mystery tucked away into his life which she, as his first and only love. should know. So one dav she said frankly: "Ted. why were you so quick to say you didn't want to help in my little sing er's case?" The dark shadows rose into his se rene eyes. "My reason, my dear, be i nave longs to a past over which dronned a veil, and not even you can lift it," he answered quietly. "tiid it have to do with some girl.' she persisted." "I have always thought I was the only one!" He laughed. "You are but you Now, look here. Mischief, weren't. Innermost seyou have pumped my crets from me, but this one you won't !" "Is that so?" fiat nil tvirlv. mizzled by FT then,- evidently "c. me tone satisfied that she really knew nothing about that secret, he answered: "That A Is month so ! later she announced that at he was to escort her to the recital to apwas which their little singer she had her pear He demurred, but way. an m -- 1 hnve a lovely little plot ..... .i T..,i is n heautiiui mini.'. the other day that t.u un(,I noticed at your temIs gathering crav frost settle down: must Herald. ples You really If you could get fine 'it be would and interested in her: sue a...... was snll The acme 0f He grinned a grin that flattery was achieved a iem,.r.n.... .. to me Detroit barber shop this week. bovlsh. "Marry where Is your the baldest man in the city tnl songMrd? Pegff. want a lark in I don't , sense? 4 f"r a 'i haircut. After trlmminc fit in better outs.de. w sparse region back of the ears mv home: they married m- ehad If you barber deftly and solicitously snip Now. led. life you What A. fj'rped his shears over all the glis nmg ban-earea. The bald man she parried. him to the .ml. where ned at the Peggy guided subtle compliment and n.e.r was to be held, jerously tipped the barber. Detroit the recital in h fnvr.hle location o were "ee th staire. and she gossiped memly of the sheltered position er Diplomacy. fG .TsLed with interest U.the ear oauKhter-Mot- her, wish yoa'd per I e father I rw4 mm new clothes number, and -c- on with his quiet regard bored. was on the whole he "Quarterback, father. And If I 'do Ey it myself, one of the best ever." "Well, I tlon't doubt that what you warned about quarterbacking will be "seful to you in after life, but your education won't be complete until you are able to do team work with me an hired man." Birmingham Age woulde n i f""d. see that f id wl Sy0,iK 'at r, craper Pd CASTLE DALE, UTAH IS IMPOSSIBLE TO SEE SUN ome Facte About Wonderful Ball Fire That May Be New to Many Reader. mair fmfM5?555 1 I d be said of n " Ted, you have more money than you know what to do with. of want to Lr Bailey Wins, pressor help you part with a liule OI 1 1, Stanford university, has Jfarei Ames looked with hilp wnere UeVlU ex- j amused and tender eyes at the clear .fat face that was lifted to h rS om the of a the representative newspaper. I Emerson smiled at the dark-eveie institution, Washington. 4tf fWmouBtatas are "alive," accord--- ! girl in turn. "Another affair of char-i- . t ttc Doctor Willis, la many places. ? It seems to me that I have part are coast Atlantic they ed with quite a bit since the you won me 3 Pacific and In to that ud." but around the settlement work of yours. liUI Af-1 f across reaches which I am game; 1 11 help what is at belt it?" ar growing. I a ibe mountains Peggy Ames knew the secret of her f'noctor Willis explains that in their power over him; that secret was ,.,-o- f irovrth lars'e "iasses comprising many the great and precious twsund cubic miles of rock are of her life. Once had he possessions loved her When the strain of and she had almost KaueA toother. loved him Though and too is they slip great she had married another, pressure of .. , ih8 earthquake occurs. me iragrance of his love something for her shed I' rfryg is the modern theory of earth-- I its fragrance down the years and had .,... i,,Mf(ir Willis said. "It was fcepr ttiesr companionship sweet. I ' Lveioped through studies of the great e "I'll tell you. I want you to furnish lUOd which caused the ft I irtiiquake of , tmj a y((ung singer to ''etliat destroyed San Francisco, and , complete....b her last year at the conservademonstrated many by 5 'i m bee tory I jjinur earthquakes that have occurred I A quick shadow rose and darkened in his eyes, and she was :j "'sjce then, m an e earthquake 'the swift bitterness in his surprised v often speak of tone "Ti.m ;l I jjj, es a fracture, but it is not real- - is the last thing care to do, Peggy. ?ir break. It is the surface between I'lease don't ask me to do it." 'wo great masses which never have She looked at him with questioning f'm united, but which for ages have eyes there was some behind mystery and each other, past lm slipping his sudden and unusual stern answer. surout comes to the ! where this plane "But it's a small thing, Ted; and I face of the earth we have a line which am anxious to help her. Please!" an rift. called earthquake Imometimes I could only learn to refuse "If you." I "The greatest of these rifts in the he said, the shadow still in his eyes, the extends through ICnited States "but I cannot. So what is my contri'coast ranges of California for a bution to be?" It passes just west of 900 miles. He paid the succeeding installments, f jf San Francisco to the east of Los as he did that one. with good grace, I Angeles and disappears In the Uulf of but Peggy was constantly tantalized California. Along the San Andreas by his evident feeling that it was the have is it as called, earthquakes I" rift, last thing he wanted to do. She came occurred at different times in different to the conclusion that there was some The most recent was the lections. J a covered stretch which quake of 100C, J of 150 miles with San Francisco near I renter. South of that stretch for miles there has some three hundred since 1857, when been no movement tjiere was a severe shock, the mark of which may be traced acrosfs the desert plains like an irrigation ditch. Still further soutfi there have been several recent shocks, but none of great violof ence, although there Is evidence considerable activity in the section east ind south of Los Angeles, "to view of the fact that we can fttti locate certain lines along which we are earthquakes have occurred, able to speak of live earthquake rifts We u we sneak of live volcanoes. or know by the form of the volcano within the occurrence of bj eruptions historical time that it Is potentially or actually active, and much the same may qUerieJ Bna!,y' hafre,raLSUdJenly teDSe' came gracefully By ARTHUR W. PEACH Coast, and a Largs Constantly Growu tit of Charity " tains Are Alive. I inc to ranr.nrw after en.re, he seemed to gww ri"id returning to bow her appreciation of I! him? 6lVen "Now, aren't her" Peggy s14 you glad vou spent SUCh'an invest- - rUr mney la memr He was silent for a -moment. I hardly know." "Aren't you interested in her" He turned to her. his voice full of pain. "Oh, Peggy, bt. merciful What do you vnow? What have you been l to? You knsnv !ier real name is not Prls.ilia nope but M:il Lu what else?" "Hush, dear lad, I know a deal. 1 know that you loved her great once, and that because she thought she wes more interested in her music than in .vou and a home she refused you. I did not know all this at first! but t have horned It." "Well, It is true." he said a bit sadly. "I have learned something else that she really does love you. I have managed it oh. so cleverly, dear lad, and all you have to do is to go behind that door and she " "Peggy, are you crazy? Why, we have not spoken "Some precious things W3 keep in our hearts, and they grow and blossom, season after season, and I know ! for" I know" "You are mistaken," he said firmly, his face grave with pain. "Suppose we go !" He reached the end of the aisle in the darkening auditorium before be realized that she was not with him; then out of the shadows, summoned evidently by Peggy, came a golden figure that passed before him, and spoke In a INVENTOR WITH NEW AUTO HEADLIGHT f Have you seen the sun? It soundt silly question, doesn't M Yet, In pite of the great heat and glare of light which we receive from the flaming center of our universe, the fact remains that no living creature has ever seen the sun. Wiat we do see is the "photosphere," the outer layer of incandescent clouds which surround the sun's vast orb. Each of these white-ho- t clouds seems to be some 500 tulles In dtanieter and to float in a medium which is darker compared with them. Outside the photosphere comes the "reversing layer," about a thousand miles thick, and above that again, the "chromosphere," which is perhaps 5,000 miles In thickness. This last is a sea of leaping, blazing gas. o hot that we simply cannot Imagiuo a temperature so terrible. The photosphere is visible to our eyes through the chromosphere. It might Ife supposed that when a "spot" occurs upon the sun's d's and of late there have been some very large ones we might then pet a glimpse at the real surface of the sun. But astronomers tell us that we never can see through the series of concentric shells which envelop the central body down to the more solid body which is the real si.i. Everything connected with the sun is staggeringly big. Those little dark sunspots which you peer at cautiously through the medium of a smoked glass are, most of them, many thousands of miles across. One was measured and found to have a diameter of 143,000 miles which means that our whole planet could have been pitched into it like a golf ball Into a large pall of water. On a midsummer day we are apt to complain of the heat, yet the amount of the sun's heat which reaches this planet Is simply Perhaps the best way to put It Is this: Suppose the sun's heat to be worth $25,000,000, the amount of his fortune he bestows on us Is one cent. Louisville Courier-JournaIntlnl-twdma- j7) V Mi h sYJcs 1 J ,M ? . in x I Prof. R. C. Qowdy, professor of physics lu the Uulverslty of Cincinnati, claims his invention is the perfect automobile headlight. Nothing but a piece of window glass Is necessary in connection with this new safe light, which eliminates all glare no matter bow strong a bulb Is used. It lights up the' wad-wa- y brilliantly for more than 150 feet ahead. All this Is nceompllxhed by modifying the parabolic reflector so that the light Is distributed properly at Its first reflection by .fluting the silvered reflector Itself, making special dispersing lenses or devices unnecessary. As the new headlight has been pronounced legal everywhere, many auto makers are ulready making arrangements to use this simple device as standard equipment. l. REACTION TIME HARD COIL OVERCOMES l. QUESTION FOR OWNER 0N1TIQN BREAK first-clas- wind-blow- - '' A breathless, half cry: I wanted to succeed and I have-b- ut I I want you so much more. Don't you want nie?" Resting Weather. Peggy, looking from the stage door, are more often lnt our minds Storms saw what made the tears of happiness than in the air. This winter season gather In her eyes, even as she closed is rather nature's quiet holiday, a va Addition of Vibrating Device j a little door In her own heart over cation that will bear Its fruit in more whose threshold Ted never more Sometimes Overcomes Diffactive seasons to come. Frost to tear would care to go. at the rocks, ice to rub gravel down, iculties in Battery. melting snow and flooding rain to TRANSACTION DID NOT LAST loam over spread the and through the earth's clay any stuCertain Circumstances Induced Man dent can tell of these. The immortal STREAM GF SPARKS STARTED Who Sold Himself for a Hog, life of our world pursues Its way in to Repay Money. the calm of winter, though more withdrawn from sight, just as In the leap- Arrangement Is Particularly Effective Once unon a time Mr. Rarick. an! incr iav nt snrin.r In Improving Running of Faulty ElGlen of north settler j residing early And, as always, beautiful beyond Engine at Low Speed Exder, brought one hog to town, selling knowledge or deserving. It Is our pense Is Small. the animal to the buyer, relates the eyes that are dull In winter, not the After unload- - J Bky or land. Lavender of snow shadUlen Elder Sentinel. ' ing the hog and weighing the empty 0Ws, purple of maple buds, laced do- The addition of a vibrating coll will Mr. Itarick was learned that wagon, It signs of tree tops living gray against sometimes remedy serious difficulties was ndstaken In his belief that he the clouds, oak trunks coal black In an ordinary battery Ignition system. had brought a hog to market. The above melting ice. pointed firs like Such a system supplies a single spark empty wagon weighed more thnfi it did Jade carvings over sunlit snow, the and when tbe Ignition, carburizatlon, when the presumed-to-b- e hog was in holy pearl and silver of late misted ' s and valves are In cylinders, told Mr. Itarick it. Nothing daunted, sunrise and the flaring red of sunsets is sufficient. When, that condition, the buyer he would return and bring along the western hills, the ignition coll breaks down, him another hog, as he had no notion the winter days move over our world however, mechanism and the car the ignition j in of cheating an honest man. beauty as the stars across the sky. buretor become worn or are out of adTonear man a be to used There Collier's Weekly. justment, and the cylinders, valves or ronto who raised hogs to sell. He j valve stems leak, a succession of sparks j one On occasion, was In "All One Backet." also Their Eggs peculiar. is apt to improve the ruuniug to a as E. E. Kelley tells it, he sold a load Of all the multitudes of salmon that marked degree. of hogs to a local buyer named Tom run up the rivers of Alaska and the held and a was Texan Northwest coast, not one ever goes Hargis. Hargls Steady Stream of Sparks. his word in high regard. Hargls re- back to the sea. Their business is to An ordinary vibrating coil Is substiceived the load of hogs, weighed them reproduce their species and die. They for the regular coil. Therefore, tuted the Those and left another man to weigh do not spawn in the rivers. n The seller took his which escape capture on their way when the breaker points close emntv wagon. beof stream passes steady sparks the received weights to Hargis and up agceni to the headwaters, where tween the spark plug points. The money for the hogs. Later, Hargis tnere is usually a lake perhaps sev- "on" had man weighed found the hog eral lakes. They do not spawn in For that purpose they with the load and "off" with the emp- the lakes. a horse and seek streams that flow Into the lakes, N t I' UlTKitvTO ty wagon. He mounted overtook the seller just at a place on and there deposit their eggs, scooping iwitch. jjlyl the creek where we were fishing. Har- out nests In the gravelly bottom with It. "Mister, their fins. gis made short work of I don't Andrew Carnegie said that he beyon sold me a hawg today Ltr.i? BMMfv You lieved In the. policy of putting all of want. I ain't got no use for It. for sold and yo'self one then and in one's basket, welshed eggs yo'self " nt a epnts a oound. I hate "everlastingly watching that basket." a mi to go back on a deal, but It is j effect wnat the gairaon do, had ighty II I I it. Yo' wouiun i mahe guarding the eggs and the young wo'th ctmiKTi on con." liar yd' ain't o' sort I So expect hatched from them until the latter wtTM VIBRATO good soap grease. vou'd better buy yo'self right back, are big enough to take care of themcount on drivhV on selves. There are many predatory Hew right now If yo the Vibrating Coil Is Connected. sold him- enemies to be feared. home." And the man who himbreaker mechanism is designed to genself for a hog promptly bought In the Hereafter. erate a spark at the plug points when self back again. i , A small boy, when told by his Run-da- y the breaker points oien, but this de- school teacher that he would J vice starts a stream of sparks when A Snap of the Fingers." is the leave his body behind when he died, the breaker points close, previous to In southern countries the fig commonest of fruits, o to say that said in alarm, "I don't understand I opening, and this stream continues as means "I care that." Some-- ! j long as the points are closed. "1 don't care a fig" "Yon see," explained the teacher, times retiming may be found neces- -' vw the action of pushing the "you will take all that is good with sary. you f0 the better land and leave all thumb between the two nrsi ungem Improves Faulty Engine. like a fig, that is naughty here on earth." produces a shape roughly thus means j ..Qh I" be exclaimed understand-tha- t This expedient is particularly efand to hold up the hand That this Ingiyi and fhen, after a moment's fective in Improving the running of you don't care a fig. into thought, added soberly, "I guess I'm a faulty engine at low speed because , eesture has become corrupted the of fingers snap goIn. to be pretty thin up there, the series of sparks occur when the the contemptuous I teacher." engine is operating on practically a Is one explanation. closed throttle. A far more prohar.ie suppsiuu is the deFossils Found In Spain. The coil is mounted so that the botthat our snap of contempt with which On a farm at Detortello, Spain, hive tom contact Is grounded on the frame scendant of the old snap summon to been found large deposits of animal of the car or the engine and a wire the ancient Romans used fossils rpports the Scientific American, is carried from the lower contact to h.!r slaves, mucn as onewe when snap our 0ue compictet measures 76 feet ; an- - the top of the distributor. The coil to a dog, and that tn,iv. we are merely showing other is a detached bead measuring wire of the circuit breaker connects that we would feel for about 38 feet. Scientists have In- with the upper contact, and the other contempt the slaves of spected the find and regard It as most wiring from circuit breaker to switch the meanest and to battery remains unchanged. Important. Elimination of Radio Noises. Since a vibrating coll costs little, It British Wireless In Africa. Howls and noises coming through Is possible to try out this device withbe reduced with The British annual colonial report out much expense. Installations that receiving set may with she!-- e Gambia notes the completion of have been used have given such satisfor tinfoil. Paint the Interior Is not an Insula-or- i wireless telegraph and telephone sta(not glue-g- lue factory results that it may be conclud to the wet t tions In that colony at Bnthurst and ed and stick the tlnfol! a used car fitted with a viIn Is place at McCarthy Island, distant 17rt miles. After the tinfoil Hoc Is given a new life not coll brating In addition, if These stations are infei ded for interna, even by entirely renewing Its U s ould be grounded. possible besheets no communication, ns the co'ony has nece-a- ry, place aluminum single spark type of ignition system. and ground A. L. B. in Popular Science Monthly, j organized telegraphic wire system. tween the vacuum tubes these. "Ted, 'M - V f n 1 ! th-.i- . Driver Should Know Value cf His Personal Eqjation Interval Elapsing Between Instant Sign or Signal Is Given and Necessary Action Starttd Is Cause of Many Accidents. , "What is your reaction time or do you know the value of your personal equutlou?" This has been suggested as a possible questlou to be put to applicants for uiotor vehicle driver's license, according to the bureau of public road of the Department of Agriculture. time is the Interval of time tliut elujjses ' between the instant a sign or lgnul Is seen and the tvtrs-sar- y Ue-actl- alou started. A dilvet start t' pass another vehicle wheu suddenly a third vehicle uppears which may block his path. The drAer must decide whether to pass the vehicle or drop back. If his reaction time is slow he may not realize the danger until too late to avert au accident. who observes Every astronomer wuen a star crosses u hair line lu his telescope and presses a key so that the time uiuy be electrically recorded knows that be does not observe the fact and press the key at the same time. A correction has to be mads which has been' carefully determined and is called his personal equation. It varies with different poople. Timers of a foot race with split peeoiid watches will frequently get different results for the time of the race. ; i i.e.: reaction time of some people Is very slow and undoubtedly is the cause of many accidents. Does the nubile safety require that such people be denied drivers' licenses? The P.ureau of Public Roads la not yet ready to advocate such a policy, but considers that it should be investigated as a possible safety measure. AUTOMOBILE The United States Is now producs of the ing more than automobiles of the world. three-fourth- If you hnve occasion to remove the magnets of a magueio be careful not to drop them, as they break easily. Be sure that all hose connections are changed once a year. Hot water rots the rubber, loosens up the fabric which gets in the way of the wafer, cutting down the efficiency of the cool-lu- g system. Do not change Inflation pressure with change in atmospheric temperature. More damage results from trying to compensate for an Increase In the tire temperature than Is caused by the Increase in temperature Itself. ' The hours of use of the automobile than the hours of use of the piano, phonograph telephone nnd w'dl total more sewing machine. In point of value, the automobile will far exceed the total value of these other things. With two possible exceptions all auare avoidable. tomobile accidents These two causes are the infrequent unavoidable skids and accidents resulting from the unheralded breaking of Mine vital part of the car, |