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Show DALE. IITAH FMFRY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTT.E r . ! f"A Strange and Baffling Race of Wanderers i TIT 11 CROCKEYJOY ADVENTURES From Northeastern Asia" By MANUEL GA3IIO, Mexican Anthropologist. before Columbus launched hia caravels a etrange race of wanderers came from northeastern Asia in CENTURIES to discover and develop the virgin soil of the American continent. With equal readiness these hardy adventurers trod the trackless deserts and the snow wreaths of dizzy peaks. Fearlessly they explored remote caverns and hostile 'tropical jungles. Struggling through cataclysm, hunger and epidemic, this race of bronze conquerors proved over and over again its indomitable strength and manly wilL Artistic, sentimental, harmonious, the original Americans from Asia built powerful empires, created strange theogonies and wiBe laws. They developed a marvelous architecture and a graceful, colorful art, profusely expressed by the decorator, the weaver and the worker in metals and precious stones. silent and humiliated, revealing no Today this race is clue to its magnificent heritage. There is no one to understand or to receive the mute protest of its afflicted soul. There is no one to wait with devoted faith that certain hour of its redemption when, cast in the molds of modern civilization, its latent ancestral virtues will reawaken in triumph. The highest homage of mankind has been paid to Columbus as the discoverer of America. Several countries and numerous cities bear his name. In all latitudes bronze and marble immortalize his genius and poets ceaselessly sing5 his odyssey. Only with Spain, the conqueror, does Columbus, the explorer, share his glory. The fame of the Great Admiral ts merited and justified. But his undertaking is not comparable to the achievement of those who preceded him here by a hundred and fifty centuries. Some dauntless son of the indigenous race was the first to plant his roving footsteps on this land. If honor were given to whom honor is due, he would be exalted as the true discoverer of America. grief-stricke- By BETTY BROWNE " uTVs Tt u A Crockeyjoy Mardi Gra climbed Into the big easy RUTH had which stood beside her father's radio set After 6he had nTr,fa 19 --kr (H: rp ( Li lj27 L 35 134 If00"37 J n, "A Blind Man's Ears Are His Eyes as Well, He Is an Expert Listener" By THOMAS D. SCIIALL, U. S. Senator From Minnesota. A blind man's ears are his eyes as well. Because of the hundreds of little things he hears which the uneducated ear cannot hear each denoting a characteristic of the person speaking he actually sees the person. The blind man is an expert listener. This is a job he is especially fitted for. There are all sorts of things to throw a seeing person off the track. A man may have on a fine suit of clothes and may have a carnation in hie buttonhole and may smile confidently and puff out his chest This may all be camouflage and frequently serves to deceive a seeing person, but not the blind man. I Many a voter has said to me "Schall, I'm for. you" when I knew very well by his voice that he wasn't. The blind know their friends by voice, by their step, and by some little peculiarity that to the seeing has gone entirely unnoted. In a poker game a man can bluff his way through by keeping a straight face, but just let me hear his voice and I'll tell you what kind of a hand he holds. We Are Passing Through a Period Not Unlike the Puritanical Regime By JOHN J. BLAINE, Governor of Wisconsin. There is a formidable program on today. It is to enact, laws and ever more laws, stricter and sterner, heaping the penalties higher and higher under the delusion that modern cni3ades can make men good by passing laws and the establishment of moral guardianship over the people. Conventionally, we think of the Puritans as coming to America to establish the principles of religious freedom. They did religious freedom for themselves, but prescriptions and inquisitions for others. They demanded full obedience to their decrees and religious freedom ceased to exist. Their policy was suppression and repression. They became the reapers of wrath, and through Massachusetts there began a race of lawbreakers, fostered by the laws themselves. We are passing through a period now not unlike the Puritanical regime of centuries ago. But the multiplicity of laws that do not comport with God's moral law are bound to be violated and eventually repealed, as they ought to be repealed. nfeJ ST si- f - w'r'p Lif r?pin li, TfT 68 67 jJJJJrrn (Copyright. 14 Horizontal. 16 1 Brilliancy of Barer or effort 20 ft A bnaeball nrctHity (vnrlant) 27 K To be a pa ring or frugal 80 13 A aeat of education 83 1 One who aerka to attain 3 A cry of aurprlae or dellcht ,17 4'i 1H A leg garment 43 20 Rhode lalnnd 21 Having- - more year 22 A deer 45 41! 2.1 To faaten (nut.) 47 24 Klectrical engineer (aribr.) Bl 25 To dreN atone with a harp- - 83 pointed hammer 54 27 Rrloacina; to It 2 20 Sere 58 Within 81 82 A ed 87 8 41 42 - 45 4 80 62 68 65 67 69 61 :i AO 87 71 73 1 2 8 4 6 7 8 9 11 12 trait , 70 rM I n 1925.) Guinea (abbr.) 19 Evert In such a manner One who speculate To list separately 33 Sour to the taata To long A cereal grain 3S To employ Kick A business associate Dressed or slicked up A female colored person Those who tell tales A black rock of volcanic origin A string of brails Life principle (theosophy) A domestic animal A tale of achlevementa or adve tu res Cooking vessels A filed amount 69 .311 Answer (abbr.) 6)1 kind of fabric 64 Nova Scotia To brinjc or draw forth Ye 40 The Witch City 65 Tantalum (symbol) sloth 68 The three-toe- d A point of the compos ' 70 That I (Latin abbr.) Preparatory achoola Lf fete 47 Anathema The solution will appear In next ! A color A verbal anfGjr meaning "make like" To faaten with a piece of wood Solution of Last Week's Puzzle. A measure of area Throuich or by An article of food ATjArAfcigjEltKlMiY A preposition 68 To (raze The established monetary vnlne ICr ELJlSSgb! ll LJiDDlOTE ; Lease 82 An article or criticise by notes Explain A southern stste (abbr.) Thinnest 69 More delectable a rTmog a n & EJsEjPiAlf A trinity 72 To behold e.'A; Shabby or worn out . Vertical. Resounded I .ST i.S Ft? Ml Prison cell (slang) Ah f r-A stock ticker abbreviation ITS Pertaining to Swiss mountains 8 To meaanre ItippinK To apeak KT AiClaMiA T El r r "1 Worn in public, a clothe TIO wBJT!'B:lEnf iiUC. AIS 10 Irish (abbr.) Prongs sT"i ye. tsEfoEI A nerve tonic A Roman gold coin Conauuied 84 44- hard-xhrll- 'y si A ' -6- -- Ymm -- m my recommend it to any woman fornm! down and nervous condition." Mm H. Fuller, Walpole, New Hampshire: Over 200, 000 women have so far rerJiM to our question, "Have you received lnefit f rom taking Lvdia . Pinkhami Vegetable Compotad?" 98 out of every 100 of the replies sav "Yes" and because the Vegetable Coil has been pound helping other women it should help you. For sale by druggiati everywhere. t Persian Carpet$ Persian carpets evidently are ing popular in this country, worth being shipped a recent month. $20,000 If one "Just naturally some one, It is to be feared can be done for It. 3 beconj. nearlj here In dislikes" not modi , SOLES nIn's . P t HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WOR- PUZZLE When the correct letter nre placed In the white apace thl puzzle will spell woril.i both vertically and horlxontally. The Brat letter In each word I Indicated by a number, which refers to the definition listed below the puzzle. Thus Xo. 1 under the eolumn headed "horizontal" defines a word which will fill the while spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number under "vertical'' define a word which will fill the white squares to the nest blnck one below. No letters go In the black spaces. AH words used are dictionary words, except proper names. Abbreviation, slnng, initial, technical term and obsolete form are Indicated In the definitions. Tum-ta-ta-tu- Why is it tfare? ta-tu- m iw , play-writi- Famous Shoes Did Not Find Place in Museum ng M naMotor Greases OA have their Write or call for an appointment dry decorum have yosr photograph maQe Once & Officials of the British museum a humdrum time of it and dutleR consist chiefly of rather Conditions in Life Which Favor the Success of Motion Pictures to and concrete facts. in a while STUDIO.. however, a little hmr.cr creeps in. a' Salt Lake W So.. Main St. former superintendent of the -122', eadlng room tells how one day a card, bearing a highly respectable name, was brought to him with the message that the owner had an important discovery to communicate. Universal Milking Machines "You know, of Milk Coolers course," said the visitor, "that Dairy will tell yon how. Nebuchadneer. the king of'the Jew., bold his wife for a H. A. Shellenberger. Dairy SW? pair of shoss." - " ii "Yes," replied the official, "but I have never found absolute confirmation of the story." "Then you have It Retain the CJarm now," was the response. "There are the shoes:" And the speaker produced from his tail pocket a A deaf StfeetSlaa pair of worn and shabby shoes. Equal to the occasion, the oiliclal blandly replied-"Mos- t Will Help Yon interesting. But you have come to the wrong IT.. Ca,l.r. f department, my wetr lear sir. This is the reading room; LADIES Even women who tMj what yon want Is w Go corset" want CORSE-TWI- brawn-antiquities. coreet and woW'Z straight down the conidor, and tell replaces n you H5 wly. Ju.t the the policenmu at the end your boa! pay 'ookln.for. Sella Itaelf. "?lY?,nt you. T.,. V. fach .ry. . Company A;"Mwn. Pa WILCOX in Current History. SAVE, Start Now! Is the enthusiasm for motion pictures an artificial thing created by the promoters, or is the success of the promoters due to the fact that there are conditions in modern life which favor the suecess-o- f motion pictures.? A most cursory consideration of the subject must reveal the answer. Motion pictures were no doubt heavily advertised, but their success has been primarily due to the fact that they provided in an easily available way for the recreational needs of modern life. It is in the nature of this highspeed system that millions of the city workers, caught in the grind and the routine of their daily overwrought by the whirl of business deals, of natural the mind, muscle, mood, should seek escape in play inhibiting some medium of swift experience which brings visions of financial success, of free, unrestrained joy, of the thrills and dangers of outdoor adventures. It is also in the nature of our industrial order to stimulate in our rural population a desire for the luxuries, the pleasures, real or imaginary, to be found ip the big city. much better now strong enough toZ my own housework, anf have two dei babiea to care for besides. I Wed other medicines hefor taUr, it Try The education of the dramatist should be that of life rather than of books. I cannot conceive of a real dramatist who has not known what it was to be broke and turned down by his girl at the same time. Such an experience is of far greater value than the most exhaustive 6tudy of the work of Euripides, though thoughtful consideration of the Greek dramas may be taken by one familiar with the teachings of life as a postgraduate . course. It is often said by those who favor dramas of the highest type hat should not be classed with other prothere is no reason why and as fessions are law and medicine. taught as effectively But the practice of law rests on the solid foundation of the Constitution and that of medicine or surgery on the immutable laws which govern the human body, whereas the writing of dramas has no foundation savi the quicksand of public taste. WEINBERG, as A''1 yfM On Shou By JAMES L. FORD, in Theatre Magazine. By LOUIS aaa months I t regular until Kuth could not even see over the top of the eavetrough. , When they came to the gutter pipe which, when It rained, drained the water from off the roof and into the cistern, they paused to make sure that the parachutes were tied on tight. Then Into the drain pipe they skated. They shot along as though they were on a big roller coaster. Around bends, Tho Wonder Sola lor IVoa1-Va- ars across open spots, faster and faster twice as long as best laathtrl of rolled. they Finally, with a rattle skates against the edge of the Iron and for a Better Keel Heels drain pipe, they hurtled out from the "U.S." SPRING-STEmouth of it Into the cistern. Their United States Rubber Company parachutes opened. Down they floated. At first Ruth thought that they were sinking onto nn island of colored leaves. As she got nearer to the surface of the water she saw that it was full of tiny boats. In all of these Spoken bojits were Crockeyjoys, young and "Darling, say the words that will old, and all dressed in the fanciest make me happy for the rest of my and oddest of costumes. life." "It is Mardi Gras week in Crockey: "All right stay single." joy Land,", said the kindly old man to her. "Be careful as you come down Contentment is a pearl of price. and one of the boatmen will push his gondola right under you so that you won't even get your feet wet." Ruth sank gently down, right Into a boat, as the old Crockeyjoy had said The boatman at once pushed his craft along in and out among the other vessels. Ruth enjoyed her voyage very much. There was a great deal to see. Twinkling lights wre dancing. Mandolins were strumming. The air was full of the odor of roses and of strange ' perfumes. , the mandolin music grew louder and louder. Ruth straightened up in her seat. bThe oil gatfge is on your car She opened her eyes and found herself manufacturers automobile ecause back in her father's big chair. The of the most immusic kept on, though, because the that lubrication is one motor service orchestra at the big hotel sending sta- portant factors in See how oil gauge. Watch your utw tion had started to broadcast the evethe oil you are usmg tbns out ning's program. miles. JheaW 3 or 4 hundred When Ruth's father came home he MsnaMatcB Oil and we the sow found her still curled up In the This oil gauge test alone wB big supremacy chair. Though it was long marked past her you the bedtime, she demurred just a little as MonaKotor. Oil. her father' picked her up n his arms Los AngeleCU and laughingly carried her off to bed. SanFraIsTo.CaL r Ha the earpieces to suit her fancy, back in the soft cushion leaned she and listened. For some time she could hear nothing. Then all at once she thought some one was faintly calling her name. Over and over, louder and louder It grew. It was a sweet, clear voice and to Ruth it had a little Joyous tinkle which was hauntingly familiar. "Do you want to go to a Crockeyjoy party?" said the voice at last. Very was clearly. Then Ruth knew that It she and old Crockeyjoy, the kindly wondered why she had not been able to tell his voice sooner. She wanted very much to go to the party, so she listened, and then did Just what the Crockeyjoy told her. First she walked out of the window and over the edge of the flat roof which ran all the way across the back Once there," she part of her home. sat down and waited. Sure enough, the Crockeyjoy came to meet her. Under his arm he carried two pairs of roller skates and what looked like two umbrellas without handles. "Put on the skates," he said to Ruth, "and fasten the cord of one of these parachutes around your waist; then we'll hurry on down to the party." Ruth put on the skates and took hold of the Crockeyjoy's hand and away they skated. As they went they grew smaller and It was only a few seconds Lydia E. Pinkham. Vege. ble Compound Helped Other Medicines FafledW If You're Hard To Be Broke and to Be Turned Down by Hisj Girl at the Same Time ever-shifti- MADESJROIiG , (Copyright.) i3 MRS. FULLER mi ARY. MARY, quite contrary. How trimly your garden grows; ta-sc- But have a care. -'- "'t-'y-u" Cuticura Or the maidens there. Will someday elope with their beaus. Find the sweetheart, of the girls in the flower.. Alono lower tpron. Upside down on the clouds, upper Hoht-han- d corner; edae of ban: bottom - dress. In front -- . bJr m rib ''.t |