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Show I EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE PALE, UTAH WONDERFUL MINIATURE hospital fund In London, England. A million bricks are Indicated in the model, and 7.000 stones, while 13,000 tiles, each about half the size of a little fingernail, have been used to decorate the nursery ward and kitchens. There Is a large solarium and an department. In which the delicate electrical apparatus is s reproduced on the scale of of an inch to a foot In the children's ward on the top floor two cots are covered with lace handkerchiefs by the presented queen, who has shown great Interest in the construction of the model. There are also an electric lift, which really works, and business offices with carpets and paneled walls, one of them decorated with miniature pictures of Florence Nightingale, Lord Lister, Lord Dawson of Penn and Lord Moyniham, painted by Alfred Praga. OLD three-quarter- UP RARIN' TO GO ALL CLEANED ... CLEANED SPARK PLUGS GIVE MOTORS THE SPARK OF LIFE... SAVE GAS... MAKE STARTING EASY on PARK t MAI CLEANING STATION look for lha"g-Ji- r Removing spark plug Oxide Coating gets rid of the chief cause of sluggishness, hard starting, loss of power. All Registered AC Cleaning Stations are ready NOW to clean your spark plugs. It costs so little means so muchl Badly worn plugs should, of course, be replaced with new ACs DR. HARTMANS PRESCRIPTION. Ar you Distressed after eating, Gas In Bowel and Stomach. Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Hy$1 postpaid. Saraplilttv, S ConRtlpatlon? LABORATORIES. Bell.t allf. Pergonal Letters on Child Government.Free to mother of disobedient children, who 705, Eureka. Calif. send particulars. lix CRISMON & NICHOLS ASSAYER3 AND CHEMISTS 1 S. West Office and Laboratory Temple St., Salt Lake City, Utah. P. O. Box 1708. Hailing envelopes and prtcea furnished on request. !29-13- He!p Kidneys poorly functioning Kidneys and make you Buffer from Getting Up Mights. Nervousness, Rheumatic Stiffness, Burning. Smarting, OH Opsins, or Acidity try the guaranteed Doctor s Prescription Cystex(Siss-tez- l Must fix yon op or money y&ZSX back. Only 75 at druggist. sr..m f, Constipation? Rougs. creams and powden only bids complexion blem ishes. They don't set at on coo of its Sequent causes I a Plush the iboweb stipaoon. with Garfield Tea and rid yourself of th waste thai often cloa Bores and result in blotchy, erupted complexion. A week of thil internal beauty uet iFRrTsAMPLEj I IaAKKiCt OTCACO. M V B roent" will astonish Begin tonight. Anglo-Saxon- you. iAiyour drug atora) Salt Lake City's 'Newest Hotel s$PiT?&3t jtW niit ''t HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM J1.50 Jwt oppontt Hormn Tobmsck ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgt. . 3 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Bemores Dandruff 8 topi Hsir FslBng Imparts Color and to Gray and Fadea Kair Beauty eue ana ii.wk mteox t ;hem. WM..fstcno(rae NT. FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for use in connection with Parker's Hair Baliuuri.MaVes the bair soft and fluffy. 60 cnta by mail or at drug, spsta, Uisoox Chemical Works, Fatchoipie, N. Y. Sez Silly TWO SONS hospital, complete in evdetail, ery yet small enough to be exhibited on a billiard table, ia the latest propaganda to be employed for a A model and She summoned the doctor and stood wringing her hands till be arrived and stilled her panic with the grave self-assurance of him. Old Man Hastings bad suffered a 8 stroke. The third In less than a year's time. By R. II. WILKINSON The medical man made no bones C. Bell Syndicate. WNO Service. about explaining the seriousness of the situation. He advised Mrs. Reynolds to summon the boys without delay. MAN HASTINGS sat In bis Irving arrived on the foil wlng morn chair near the window ing; Ronald by the afternoon train. overlooked the lawn and Together they sat by Old Man Hast the shrubbery that lined the ings bed and waited. western boundary of his land, and the Fine looking boy that any fa bill that rose above the shrubbery's ther could be boys, of. proud even edge beyond. Toward nightfall the old man opened It was summer and the hour was his eyes and saw bis sons sitting there and smiled at them. He reached out and they took bis The window was open and the old man could smell the fragrance of growgnarled old hand In theirs and bent ing things, and feel the soft, warm close to hear his words. breeze against his wrinkled face. "You're good boys, both of yon,' he Old Man Hastings sat there and said. "I I couldn't ask for better." thought of the past, as a man Is apt to He was silent a moment, panting a do who has lived his three score and Uttle. Unashamed tears coursed down the ten and knows that the future holds no more than waiting. boys' cheeks. And presently the old man spoke lie was a dejected looking figure, sitting there alone alone and lone- again. "I've I've tried to be a good father. I have been a good father. some. haven't L boysr No one knew how lonesome. It was difficult to answer him. No one could possibly know, unless, Yet somehow they made him un like Old Man Hastings, he had lived an active life, a Ufe filled with adven derstand, and that contented look came Into the aged eyes again. ture and ambitions. In that moment the boys suddenly A life made happy by the love of a devoted, helpful wife; a life made at wondered If they had been neglectful. once merry and fearful by the cares If tne old man had been unhappy beand worries that are Inevitable with cause they left him alone; if, in the excitement and rush of their own lives, the rearing of two children. Both boys. Ronald and Irving. Old they had forgotten the man who had Man Hasting's eyes lighted a little. given them their chance In life. ' Old Man Hastings, looking at them, Bright youngsters, quick to learn, active, prides of their parents, both de knew their thoughts and shook his serving of the success that bad come head. to them. "You're good boys," he repeated. Good boys. Kind and thoughtful and "No father could ask for better. ' unselfish. There's nothing I'd want to change in Old Man Hastings' face set firmly. either of you nothing you could have Yes, sir. Good boys. Thoughtful of done to make me more happy " their old dad. Always buying him was inevitable that the boys It something ; always sending home some know a feeling of regret, little trinket they thought would please certain misgivings, wish thatexperience the last him. ten years might be again relived In orcourse Of he wished they'd come der that they might display in some home a little more often. He couldn't more impressive manner the depth of lonesome. help that, couldn't help being love both felt for their dad. Everything had been taken from him Yet the opportunity was now gone. so abruptly. had naught to do but to look They First there was the necessity of re Into the future. And thinking thus, Doctor's from business. orders. tiring at himself. bestirred Irving length That had been a blow in itself. "Dau wouldn't want us to act like lie couldn't help that either. this," he mused, half aloud. He'd want A man who's been active in business us to live to carry on to " he all his life, always promoting some new scheme, advancing new Ideas to paused, groping for words that would remind Ronald of the manner in which have It all snatched away from him Old Man Hastings would have handled a to man be like had that, well, just situation "Dad would have told the given time to adjust himself to this us," he went on, "that the only and new mode of living. best we could repay him for all way And then Martha had gone. Almost that he's done for us would be to do as as suddenly. Heart attack. It didn't seem as though he'd ever get much for our own children. Repay him through them. Give them as much of a over that. as he gave us." But the boys had been kind. Irving break And Ronald, listening, suddenly saw had stayed on at home for a time, just the wisdom of this, knew that this to keep the old man company. But after a month or so Irving had Indeed was the solution of the eternal problem confronting all conscientious been called away. children who, because of the ImporIt was Inevitable that he go, or for tance of their own development, appear felt a big business deal. sometimes neglectful toward their You couldn't condemn him for that And he had seen to It that the pater parents. was provided with an efficient house A Mrs. Reynolds. Capable Modern Man Ruthless keeper. enough. An excellent cook. Always in His Quest for Oil looking out for his needs. But, wel- lWhen civilized man hunts for oil, she didn't exactly fit In where Martha says an article translated for Living had left off. Age, the procedure Is the same everyThat had been a year ago. Irving had been home three times where. Spies and secret agents are employed. The natives are demoralized. since; Ronald twice. The case of Mexico Is an example. And once they had come together, Old Man Hastings consoled himself The Mexican Indian still lives In an with the thought that that was a good agrarian, system, he deal, and next year they'd probably does not appreciate the value of money and It Is very difficult to make him come more often. You couldn't blame them. part with his land. English or AmeriAfter all they had their own busl can agents In their struggle for -- oil nesses to attend to, their own lives to land use Mexicans to persuade the The Indian does not understand live just as he had In his younger s ; he Is not Interested the years. And to add to it all he wasn't as In machines or luxury ; he wishes only to be left alone with his land, his catgood company as he used to be. The years had brought on deafness, tle and his friends. When persuasive methods fail the and it was difficult for the boys to talk with him. They tried of course. Sort agents bribe the government authorities to force' the Indians to sell. And of acted as if it was their duty. Old Man Hastings wished they not only do they bribe authorities wouldn't feel that way about It. they promote them, place them In powIt wasn't so much that he wanted to er, give them money, Influence, and If talk with them ; he just liked the Idea necessary, arms. of having them around, knowing they The Indian, on the other hand, becomes a desperate pariah when he la were near. He wasn't lonesome when Ronald uprooted from the soil. He loses all and Irving were In the house, or when sense of responsibility, he earns money be knew they were coming soon. at the oil wells, gets intoxicated, turns It was a feeling hard to explain ; he'd bandit in other words, becomes excelnever tried to explain It to them. lent material for an ambitious general Old Man Hastings fell to wondering who is supported by the oil promoters. about himself when he was Donald's They steal the Indian's land, thus and Irving's age. obliging hira to support the man in Fired with ambition, he'd been ; filled power, and the lender, In turn, obliges to overflowing with eagerness to get more Indians to sell their land. An out In the world and fight against It. other vicious circle. "Since the Indians He smiled at the thought. No doubt came to Mexico," says a writer, "there where the boys had got their active has been nothing but revolutions." dispositions. He tried to think of himself as a City a Haven for Insane youth; tried to recall how he'd felt; Gheel, Belgium, with a population of lonewondered if his father had been Is the only city in the world 20,000 some toward the end, wishful of havwhose sole business is boarding the ing his children about him In his deinsane in private homes. Nearly evclining years. Yes, the situation had ery Is paid by the government been pretty much the same. Things to family one or two and not only treat keep didn't change much. them like members of the family but Old Man Hastings nodded In sad acalso allow them to go shopping or visknowledgment of the facts as they iting alone. This system is said to be stared back at him. the most humane method In existence seemed and the nodded future He for dealing with the Insane. Collier's even more empty. He looked out at the lawn and the Weekly. shrubbery that he had set out with his Flint Used by Indians own hands, a lawn that had grown The Geological Survey says that the velvety under his skillful care. And he looked beyond at the hill ris- type of flint most generally used by the ing above the hedge, and a certain con- Indians for making arrowheads, etc., was what Is known as chert, which octentment came to rest in his eyes. Almost abruptly Old Man Hastings' curs In the limestones and Is abundant head dropped forward, fell upon his throughout many of the western states and other sections of the United States. chest and was still. Mrs. Reynolds came In 15 minutes Another stone also used was obsidian, later and found him thus. She spoke a black, shiny volcanic glass which to hlra softly; presently knew a feel occurs In Yellowstone paik and the northwestern states.. ing of alarm and then panic. vtvbbwtm. '' sift lnjZi ' kh Tih " J " te vrJi 1 In Jerusalem's ' lttrrl ' ' H'rss nJk J 1 1 fTm.i yM'liiifi Streets Are Carvings From Days of the Crusaders. named. For we had to watch many of our people, wading across step by exploits of the Crusaders step, swept down by the current We stirred alike the could not save them. If the knights of young and old ever since had not brought up their great battle they made their armed pilgrimchargers to aid those on foot, many ages to the Holy Land almost a thou- more would have perished." No wonder that these first Crusand years ago. someNearly all of us have heard saders, coming out of the Balkan valthing of the story of the Crusaders. leys, beheld with amazement the mighty We know that centuries ago our an walls and towers of Constantinople, cestors marched out of Europe Into with Its domed basilicas and marble the East and founded there a kingdom palaces ! which endured for nearly 200 years At this halfway point the almost exfrom 1099 to 1291 of our era. And the hausted hosts of marchers were furCrusaders left traces which can still nished with adequate supplies by the be seen. Byzantine emperor. What was more Because the tombs, chapels, and Important they found out where they watchtowers, the castles that defended were, and obtained guides who knew this first eastern front, and the forti- the route ahead of them. fied harbors on the Islands were IsolatBut across the blue line of the ed In lands under Turkish rule until the hostile Moslems lay In wait the World war, few visitors have been for them, and the rabble who had able to examine them closely, except marched under Peter the Hermit were in Jerusalem Itself and at the acces- almost annihilated within two days' sible points on the coast travel of the shore. The better-arme- d Now one may make the trip in the host of Godfrey and the other barons, steps of the Crusaders, with all the however, fought their way to the anticipation of an explorer of fabled plateau of Asia Minor. It was midlands. The start Is from central Eu- summer, and the Crusaders from the rope where the first Crusaders turned northern regions the Rhinelanders, their backs on their homelands, to fol- Teutons and Franks had their first low their Via Del, "Road of God," the experience of the scorching heat of the arid eastern highlands. trails that led to Jerusalem. Such a modern explorer plays the Across Asia Minor. part of a hunter. Time and weather exact route they followed across The during some 700 years have almost Asia Minor is uncertain. It is clear warobliterated the remains left by the they must have passed to the east riors of the Cross; often their build- that of the Olvmnus heights (Ulu Daz). and Moslems ings had been utilized by the of the dark Sultan Dagl. for mosques. It Is necessary to look to the east who were fleeing before The Turks follow to traces for clues by the way, them increased their sufferine bv driv Into some not easily accessible places, off most of the cattle and burn and to discount most of the legendry ing the scattered villages. ing that the people of the countryside al "We were pursuing them," a chron on for traveler. the have tap ways Icier relates, "across the desert in i In Trieste, Italy, for example, a waterless and uninhabitable, from out as the land broken arch is pointed which we barely came out alive. Hun "Arch of Richard," with the explanatroubled us constantly and we had tion that the English king dwelt In the ger almost nothing to eat except the thorns stone house beside it when he was or barley) that we pulled off made captive on his return from the (wheat and rubbed between our hands. The Holy Land. The arch, however, is Roof our horses died, so that man work, and although Richard may greater part became foot soldiers. riders many have occupied the house, If he was Some rode oxen, and In this extreme ever In Trieste, he certainly did not need goats, sheep and dogs served to plan the fortification of the old city our baggage." of Ragusa (now Dubrovnik), down the carry At Konla (Konya), however, they as relates. Dalmatian coast, legend found fertile land and ample food. Gateways to the East They learned also how to make skins On the other hand, In the neighbor serve to carry water. Aided by the welcome appearance of ing city of Venice, at the southwest corner of the main structure of the a river, they crossed the remainder of basilica of San Marco, nearest the two the plateau land to Heraclea (now columns, there Is a group of four Eregli) In safety. It had taken many porphyry figures in armor. Few vis- of them a year and a half to journey itors notice it, but it is a relic of the from their homes to this gateway of Crusaders brought from their seaport the Holy Land. Perhaps a quarter of of Acre by the Venetians. a million, perhaps more, had taken the Venice Itself was one of the gate- oath to make their way from the hamways by which the hosts of Crusaders lets of Christendom to Jerusalem. sought the East. Others took ship They were camped this autumn, unfrom Brindlsi, to cross to the Dalmader the mountain barrier of the Taurus tian coast, and a chronicler of their (Toros) range. Here they encounday describes a mishap that showed tered allies, the Christian Armenians the danger of embarking upon the of the mountain strongholds, who must crude galleys, or dromonds, that felt have looked upon this host of y their way from coast to coast without warriors as a miraculous apaid of compass and chart : parition. And here the host of the "The fleet was ready at Eastertide, first Crusaders broke up, some galand they embarked at the port of Brin- loping down through the ravine known dlsi. Among all those ships, we be- as the Cilician Gates to the of held one suddenly break In the middle Tarsus, while others wanderedplain off to without any cause. Nearly 400 men set up an Independent In and women were cast Into the water. Edessa (now Urfa) amongkingdom the Armen. . . Only a few survived, and those ians. . lost their horses and mules In the On to Jerusalem. waves, with much money." The greater part made a circuit to This happened during the First Cruthe northeast to cross the Taurus sade, when multitudes were hastening range. Apparently they felt their way toward Constantinople (now Istanbul), through a gorge. "We entered" a the halfway point In their great venchronicler explains, "a defile of' the ture. It was the first movement in devil, which was so lofty and men a mass in of steep Europe directly that we hardly dared to pass ahead toward the East. me Patn. Horses fell bodily and When they left Venice or Brlndisi, aiung one pack anmal dragged another with or the broad Valley of the Danube, The knights beat themselves it Into with ventured was to what them they their hands for grief in this place-som- e an unkuown world. Only leaders had sold their shields, helmets, an approximate Idea where Jerusalem and body armor for whatever could they lay. get Others threw away their heavy Route Through the Balkans. armor and marched on. And so we "A barren land," one of the Provenpassed through the accursed mountain cals relates of the Dalmatian coast and came to a city called Marash (now route, "both pathless and mountainless. Maras). The inhabitants came out y was It winter by then and we saw to meet us. There we all had neither birds nor beasts for thrice plenty." seven days. We wandered through At this first of the green plain clouds so dense that we of Syria the sight Normans were able to feel them and often to ranged far afield making push them away from us as we moved. sword In hand, with all the conquests, eagerness Today you speed over the rolling of miners staking claims. It was the hills of the Balkans In a railway car- threshold of the Promised Land. riage with a dining car attached. a Crossing frontier means no more than Antioche). The Crusaders laid siege showing your passport. But the main to 1 and took It after a struggle of body of Crusaders, led by Godfrey of dght months. With this citadel behind Bouillon, plodding through the "imthem, the road down the Valley of th mense and indescribable forests," had Orontes toward Jerusalem lay to fight or barter for their grain and open. They had crossed the Asia oil and cattle; they had to build rafts Minor Plateau, but other armies of Crusaders at rivers and sometimes io manage hastening after them failed to do so without rafts. Some were cut to "Then we came," one relates, "to the Juk thel,i Turks, other, tort thefr swift river Demon, which is way rightly were betrayed by the Yoa don't have to set "all wattles' ts to keep a dean record for boom pstna, Society. Prepared by National Geofraphlo Washington, D. C W.N'U Senrlce. at. LET'S PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTit THE standard of The accepted measurement is the period earth's rotation on its axis. "GRAINS OF time of the GOLD" THE WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL "Makes Cream Taste Better" Western Made For Western Trade Ask Tear Grocer THIS WEEK'S PRIZE Bos-phor- STORY True service Implies nnderstandinc. Tin is why, (or Iniermonntaln people, Inter, mountain Goods are always the their producers, understsndiiif ut problems of ear communities, fit tkeir products to these needs as no sstsier could. "Buying Intermountain" sUcdi ht it new economy, rreater value use ... buying- - something- made especially for yn! ARTHUR T. JOLL1FFE. Bountiful, TJtik At 400 Utah Oil Refining Service Stations in Utah and The Chocoi Indians of among the cleanest known to man. Idaho Darien are raca The United States gets more cod liver oil from Norway than fron any other country. UTAH HIGH SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE Why not get yonr training at the tartest and best equipped school in ths West Where you can learn a profusion that will make yon independent for the rest of your life? Write fer details. UTAH HIGH SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE , 121 So. Main Salt Lake Citiy, UUb The Venetians came into of Crete in 1204 and held for more than four centuries. posses-sio- it Lovely Box Perfume, Face Powder, Necklace, Xroas Cards; Sent on AppreviL Write Today $200.00 Prizes YOUNG'S BARGAINS, Broderick, Cat Forty per cent of the earth's within the tropics. su- rface lies road-wear- lew Grand Salt Lake City. Utah New Post Office and Opposite Federal Building Salt Lake's Most Popular Medium Priced Hotel One Elcck from Theatre Shopping District New Modern Coffee in Connection Shop (Open Day and Night) Manage! M. H. THOMPSON, 1 AFTER 280 YEARS We have a new windo- w- m . m 3 window first real satisfactory f' ever INVENTED. It's ' SUPERIOR different every way. about Ask your lumber dealer the SILENTITE . Tre-F- it Window joy-full- Morrison-Merri- ll Distributors ; g land-hungr- y ByZaDtines. Bananas Until the Nineteenth nta nanas were not known beyono tropics except by repuUtiom. $3.00 csSSS r Intermountain made Goods to above. Send your story in J" fj. verse to Intermountsin ''r"",ut. mn, P. O. Box 1555 Ball yeur story appears this column yoa will eeive check tot - |