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Show UINTAH CODE CHAPTER ;ILVEJ rT of (he RECORD Nations Shrine XXV WAS Young Jim himself who sighted the three smokes. He I and McNally hastened toward the f island and within minutes of their aA th arrival the older man was on his as kc0 way down the lake with plenty of e stBBoj by orders for the detachment of men asei he would surely find there. tOLD TITUS 'y Doctor!" Steve snorted when Tltu Harold w ved t2 pbt Kate gave her first instruction. I thoa should say not! Why, m be good as new tomorrow, ril take It easy XIII Continued and go out with the boys. 17 He would do no such thing, Kate X please," urged Kate, about his insisted firmly. He would stay In blanUets this very spot until a doctor gave him permission to move. for then him lose beside And so a larger tent was brought He want-- t ai, it seemed. in before night and more blankets not. could but further and an abundance of food. .. u(j ebb of his strength I8te the next day the doctor apled to sensations, definite i by He looked Steve over carechragej reach a low point and peared. the wound and fully, entul, to build again, ctor in I ie lauded?" he wbis-H-e questioned and prodded. In a day or two, he said. "Yon 13 sol keep quiet here for a day or two wen out j , . . Shes drawing and then you can go out safely." moment more Another , Good Lord I You mean Ive got i that l "Shes looking back, to be babied and waited on when I ncontrol Good luck, Mary 1" He feel fit as a fiddle? ie was waring her hand, Safer that way," the doctor asthe timber, now. j Into serted. msIN L i ORTH y g Si h fine. went t0 the fir6 made of smoked 4r Take she said. Will pij then more coffee. Mary f to do. She , the thing , . 'elt so helpless. from the he sipped ,is teuf held his ntm, d for him, his head do nht: side, and after that he It was a deep i time. , was conscious of the all the time and roused she was dually ler the fly looking down smiled weakly. nd a her 11 b J ' and i broth L T: eat?" i your hand, om he am definitely better by rents and people LaFane stepped close to the bed, then. He had brought the doctor and carried news of Mary as well. She had made the trip through the timber successfully and with half an hour to spare had reached MacDonald's. The old Scot, having no other course, had signed the receipt and accepted the money. But he didnt want to do It, e added. "Hes pretty mad. He says youre a good fisherman and a good liar. If Mary hadnt gotten there on time hed never have gone through with the deal" Ill have to make my peace with him when Im permitted to do as I - M Lj TP"-- , ai . wtograph Mary reheat g. vn g l . I . ibout you. slone and v Ive won- - - S' Tfi irn1 Ini By Walli v - - 1,13 I In 2 nt, at I' fuit! i t,l socii Los ASS? come N a'llJ stimulant. he finally ended, Imposter, hut it ennlyway If youd """R the kid before out, yoUd have 'r the men realized I hey never would J"b Now, If Mary " on time, weie " t It. Oh, yes; be work, all right, said Kate as If her mind Besides were on other matters. . . . you see . . . She, in her turn, was stammering and Young Jim, uncoiling his long legs, grinned as he rose. Where you going? Steve asked. Mostly out of the way until you two can say some of the things that seem to be on your minds, he i hut kled. THE END therell Early Pharmacopoeia The greatest landmark In the history of pharmacopoeias, is a work published in London in 1617. Ten committees to compile it had been appointed twenty eight years earlier. This work listed 1,023 simple nr'er can be said drugs and 932 preparations and V't 'vnsnt made I compounds. Among the substances to you, .stove it recommended were cream of tnr-la"re so All empty. llovvirs of sulphur, calomel '3"if!,s to Pi III) the and sugar of lead. And It told how You are my to ptepare goats, blood, joung swallows, earthworms, millipedes, coral Dil, "are the sweet and precious stones, how to purify ',,f heard." wool fat and how to dry the lungs ri,t 1,1 ' r, 5 her hand when hills bordering the Potomac river and facing the great monumental triad, the Lincoln memorial, the Wash- Ington monument and the fel Capitol of the United U States, Is Arlington National cemetery. Upon its 409 acres are more than 40,000 carefully tended graves of American soldiers. Among these is the tomb of the Unknow n Soldier of the World war and the graves of more than 4,000 unknown dead of other wars. During the first nine months of the past year, Myrta Ethel Cawood writes In the Washington Star, 7G1 d caskets were lowered Into soldiers graves In Arlington. On one day alone the solemn strains of "Taps" were sounded over eleven open graves. Yet tills vast burial ground Is only 65 per cent filled. It Is estimated that, Judging from the present rate of burials, there will be room for new grave plots Id Arlington for approximately twenty years to come. Although Arlington has been an official military cemetery for seventy years, Its largest and most imposing structures were built since the World war. Among these Is the great marble open air amphitheater, where patriotic and religious services of various kinds are frequently held. Before this classic structure Is the tomb of the Unn known Soldier, over which is a altar of glistening Colorado marble cut from a solid block of stone. This Imposing monument tells Its story simply: Here rests In Honored Glory an American Soldier On each of known but to God." the longitudinal sides of the tomb are three wreaths symbolizing the on the Virginia at-n- d day when o smed him and his fifing In a bllzard as it had Imp-11time on. Kate did When he narrated o handled Young Jim 0 her eyes. the story, of !lle made him stop A h t of fllXlig d In peace. Of noise and din you knew your share And more, In the great conflict over there; So now, rest on, rest on Those days are gone No lovelier apot could shelter you, at dawn With rising sun you are the first to wear Her badge of gold. As twilight falls, with care She slips it from your breast, each morn, to don. 2 The birds sing sweetest oer your quiet place As with bared head and gentle tread, the wreath Of love end honor close we lay. With fees Toward blood bought flag we hear the taps Beneath Your spotless white, sleep on, our boy We trace Through you the 'word of war within its sheath. tt aihingtm Put flag-drape- 72-to- Wu J -- 4 J ' J 1 t v. ! ,V. v.yX v-T- i l) : I 1 six major battles of the American expeditionary forces In France. Three heroic figures, representing Valor, Victory and Peace, are carved In on the base of the f tomb. HE military cemetery of Suresnes, Just outside of Paris, is one of the high -surrounding that points j, city, writes k a correspon dent in the Kansas City Star. Before entering the cemetery ones attention Is arrested by the magnificent view of Paris. As the eye travels over the city, it finally rests upon the white domes of the Church of the Sacred Heart, and on the Montmartre Just opposite, seemingly not far distant in the clear air. Turning to enter the gates of wrought iron and gold which lead into the cemetery, one stops to analyze the medallion set in the center of each crossed arrows, signifying the army since time Immemorial; in the heart of the medallion, In FERRY'S SEEDS 3C Sixty-sevent- h one-arme- the great granite sarcophagus over the grave which contains the bones of 2,111 unknown soldiers gathered In September. I860, from the battleTheir bodies field of Bull Run. could not be identified, but their names and deaths are recorded In the archives of their country. The oldest known grave In Arlington Is that of Mary Randolph, wife of David Meade Randolph, an officer of the Revolution and afterward the first United States marMrs. Randolph shal of Virginia. wrote the Virginia Housewife," a famous southern cookbook which She w'as was published in 1824. a frequent and welcome visitor to the Custis estate, then known as the Arlington plantation, for she was the aunt of Mrs. George Wash ington Parke Custis and the god mother of the latters daughter. Mary Ann Randolph Custis, who married Robert E. Lee at Arlington. Mary Randolph died in Washington January 23, 12S. and was burled in compliance with her own request on the front lawn of the Custis estate. For more than a century and a half the hills of what Is now our National cemetery have borne the The name was name of Arlington. w lien John larke estate to the given Custis. son of Martha Washington by her first huMinnd, ncqulred the plantation In the year 1773. for 11, 0(X) pounds of Virginia currency. He named It Arlington for the old homestead of his ancestors on the eastern shore o' Virginia. to market room. IDA. Fremont ST. ANTHONY, county chamber of commerce (lliee-tor- s have voted to sponsor a Utah Pioneer day celebration in St. Anthony, July 21, as In past years. BOISE, IDA. According to federal survey over one half of the buildings in Boise, are in need of repairs. EUREKA, FT. Two new jects have been passed on for proFuie-K- a by tlie county FERA committee, OGDEN, UT. John Hook, manager of the Carnation hoie farms of Pomona, Calif, will judge tlie Ogden Horse Show, Jane 7, 8, nnd 9, It is announced by Ezra J. Fjel-gte- manager. LAKE CITY, UT.-C- onl minis have adopted a 35 hour weik as Iheir w 01 king base. HAILEY, IDA. The Sawtooth national forest will have two radio broadcast stations tills year for tlie flist time as added facilities for transmitting woul rigarding fins or other emeigency events in outlying distiicts. the Arlington plantation after It was de dared a national cemetery was Private William Christian of the Pennsylvania Infantry. He was burled Friday, May 13, 1804. Each Imposing monument ll)s Its story the Temple of Fame, the Ca nadian Cross, the ConfiVerate monument, the Spanish war memorial, the anchor of the battleship Maine, the Bough Riders monument, the bronze equestrian statue of the general, Philip Kearney, and nounced A marauding LINCOLN, IDA band of slieep killing dogs entered tlie corints of A. E. Blnnger of Lincoln nnd killed 90 choice limbs which were to have been shipped SALT alto-relie- The first soldier Interred d Oil sleep on b it was." to that Norru-Ower- v Brave aoidier boy, unknown, sleep on, please again! nes a nice old codger and I'd hate to leave the country with him fueling this way. LaFane and the doctor moved feet irw found, eveled ira down to the beach, leaving Young owed np. Ill bet they am raw ler J wa8 so . . so Jim and Kate In Steves tent n and cj 1 the girl Leave the country? never left ar,y YoucJ that ke What do you mean by asked. landing." r, bet n j that? of her futile Her brother looked sharply at her, up smokes. a repressed quality In the catching That explains it! tone. 'Ome of em went right Why, w hatd I stay here for? uy and never guessed Steve countered. The actual, real, (w. Its clear as a bell certified Young Jims all set to go. Vs no wind. Hadnt I dont aim to stick around here rJ the smoke signal and ask the Flynns to make room for me. IU get the fires go3B6JC Ask them? she cried. Why . . . when . . . Dont you see . . . ,ll!0 LA' ,CE help. Youre no Her voice choked up and her eyes o'lng fire wood for a e Union me." misted. ,nglih Steve looked at Young Jim and nd a'Uii' ler help another perthe girl, and then turned his head at is, and If you live to ilicatiOB the hills, away. iarn.i done youve she said Gosh, the boy said, well be sepasoberly and to hide the emotion in needing you. now that its going to luinba4' be such a whale of an operation. of clifl 8res were That is, If we could get you to vnted H she going side. Inistay. For an I 'S no Well, thats fine of you. . . word and then, ,s or J ,e(l 1 havent anything in particular to she Inquiringly, sh U'81 do. There are things , . reasons 100. He cleared his throat you? . that is LAM I h Drake, I knew your as he felt color mounting into his fJ3 a hid. . become cheeks. Wlmt Im trying to say is . . Kind lnolai a Pulling wool over this: if you've a Job of work that a7 I did f But . . . I can do I surell welcome a chance ,w Boys Sleep in Suresnes SOLDIER $L. an odd embarrass-cpointedly personal s not strong enough for need American UNKNOWN mm "Those," He Said, Are the Sweetest Words Ive Ever Heard. IDA With Idaho bean growers planting IS per cent more beans this year than last. It Finds Relief will be necessary to Improve tlie find to in a order Safe, ready .fi quality market, says Dr. W. II. Pierce, asWay sociate plant pathologist with the 8ho had rIvaii up hope of anything bub University of Idaho ogrlculttnal ntkrti.bl rvhv f umil she foamt d of f vnvms experiment station. NR lahlot SALT LAKE CITY, FT. A total fVaturo's Romody). But now after years of of 1550 rams from Oregon, Nevada, chrome coriNtipation and biliousness whab new color and vitality a channel isew Utah, Idaho, New Hampshire, Canfreedom from bowel sluggishness and inv auctionbe will and California This testinal get able laxativw ada, poisons. gently stimulatoA the entire bowel, given ed nt tlie Western ram sale in Sac- complete, thorough ramento, Calif., May 23 and 24, ac- elimination. a 26c bo. MM (tot to received James advices cording by AU clruggisla. AkllK.',;-- ' I.ci,', A. Hooper, manager of the Utah relict tor acirt indiRTS-- I Wool Marketing association. "TlUYlO IKC" OuiUc tion, heartburn Only 10c. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. The federal department of agriculture will provide 20 tons of dry halt to aid Utah farmers In combating grasshopper infestation which promSoothe burning itching torment ises to he a serious menace to crops David F. quickly and help nature clear this year, announces the Irritated akin Smith, state commissioner of agriculture. BOISE, IDA. Ninety carloads of grass seed has been received, most of it hound for north Idaho, where It will be planted In burned over areas to restore water-sheprotection. Tart of the seed, however, VEGETABLE will be sown along highways for beautification purposes, W. VV. GodNowonIy d packages frey of the relief service said. Some JJ In atfresh-date-your local store will lie available also for airports, school grounds, public parks anil other uses to which communities wish to put It. Idaho's 44 counBOISE, IDA PARKERS ties will share $155 300 in work reBALSAM HAIR considera itotnovutt bandnjff Stop Uairfc Ailing lief money during May, :mT Color end 51 Beauty Impart able reduction, compared with Apiil, to Carey and haded Hair too end at IniRRit the relief administration has anTfHaeox T hern VMt Fat it Ivy Poisoning ARLINGTON f m - anger," she said gently, but chiefly because I so much to you." erS; -- V stranger along!" LAV'S J&h'h V j JU Why, a girl thinking you i, V AM ' Mmm nA tu "A . . Its kind out of focus. get here, for . ( ft; -- then, were alone! he mur Iding my life Inside my our hands." He looked s. "They're so small," g Ti idlesonib tr 31 &U-- all i gei I -- rn a vj its J . sit cross legged beside d all that had trans 5 his period of uncon- - 1 s Inspector. MOSCOW, iXi ? z its I" x i h Jimmied up," he course, I remember t at. Was that right eh? . . . And I trying to get away me and then drowning, Td ji2y J , ip-- jSjj'. rtvv-- Of lat , A M? , tre all i . (, x! mind. Us i. i rinding of King Solomon's mine, search for which has caused tlie death of thousands, has been reported 1330 R VMS AT SVIE by a prospector In Broken Hill, northern Rhodesia. He declares that ALVRM INSECT TESTS he discovered It while following a GRVSS SFFD ARRIVES wounded buck, but refuses to give RELIEF MONEY VV VNES the exact location except that it is tn BETTER BEANS NEEDED tlie center of a mine concession. For more than 300 years men have been BURLEY, I D A. Grasshoppers searching for the legendary mine. In are appearing in suih numbers Solomon's day it was said to be so In Ctu-slcounty that an eradfabulously rich In gold that silver ication campaign has been started became of little value in his court. under direction of W. VY. Palmer, The search has gradually narrowed county agent, and committees in down to an area of about 250,000 are taking charge anil square miles. Arabs tortured many districts watching closely for appearance of natives In an effort to extract Inforthe pests. mation about it anil ninny PortuTUOVO, UT. Poison Is being guese tramped hundreds of miles In search of It prepared la the county agricultural office to combat a grasshopper and cutworm menace which threatens Utah county farmers, announces II. V. Swenson, district agricultural Briefly told for Busy Readers J A SOLOMONS MINE AGAIN Intermountain News BT. ANTHONY, rA 1 . IDA. i I I . ' ' Decoration Day Scene at Military Cemetery of Suresne. flanked on each side by the wings of the American coat of arms Is an hour glass, partly run unfinished young lives. From the gates is an avenue bordered by linden trees, leading to a chapel. The altar of marble opposite the bronze doors Is Inscribed : I Gave Unto Them Eternal Life and They Shall Never Perish." Back of the altar is a magulfleeut mosaic: "A Soul In Flight. On both sides of the chapel are stained glass windows, each carrying an inscription; to the right Tliy Light Shines Upon Thera for "Thou, Evermore," and to the O Lord, Hast Granted Them Eternal Life. On the walls hang bronze tablets, upon which are listed the names of the 1,623 Identified dead Of the 130, 2C5 men who died durSTS are burled ing the World war, 30, In the military cemeteiles of EuTho bodies returned to the left' OID AGE rNSION INFORMATION stamp - Humboldt, Kan. I.HIMAN JtDGE LOST 57 POUNDS OF DIDNT COT FAT DOWN GO FOOD I lost 67 llis. by taking Kruschen Falls anil it had no ill elicit on me. I didn't cut down on a single food I recommend it to any-- i onewhoiHOverweight i Jr? bo. jp. Mrs. A. ltopnik, Milwaukee, 3V ise. y To a slender. win s,iyouthful figure take a biilf tcaBponnful of krusihen balls m a glass of hot water first thing every morning. While fit is leaving you gain in strength, health and physical charm look younger. Many phyri-c- i ms prescribe it and thousands of fat folks all over the world have achieved slenderness. A jar lasts 4 weeks and costs but a trifle at any drugstore. But protect your health mal e sure you get Jvruschen its the F VI E way to reduce and money back if not joyfully satisfied. n rf; - Dive tons of grash!iopi r poLon lias been allotted to Fremont county by the federal government following an inRitua-t'o- n spection of tlie fcdeial E. W. Shull, Dr. by agent in charge. WALLACE, IDA Directing of tlie Ilecla Mining company, mooting at Milwaukee, Wis, declared a quarterly dividend of 10 cents a share. IDA For the BLACK FOOT, first time in a number of years Itlaekfoot is making plans for an elaborate Fourth of July celebra.gras-hopp- k.m,N SHAMPOO Ideal f r un m connection with Parker Hair Balsam Makes tho 60 cents by mad or at drughair soft and gists. iiiscox Chemical Works, Patchoguet N.k PILES er tion. IDA. The devastating BOISE. Mormon crickets, which raine Into prominence In 1H)S, when they threatened flrt colonists In Utah wiih starvation, have appeared in a half dozen njmts of southern Id tills spilrig to carry on tlie de- struction they started last year. They eat everything in sight, including their own young or injured, and when handed together they have mastered almost every divlie setup against them except tin fences nnd poison dust, SOUTH JORDAN, IT Beth Stockings has a perfect attendance record for nine years, never missing a day nt school ami always early. S VI.T TAKE CITY, IT-- Uih rope. been granted sit handled thouConhas 40,307. United States numbered to sand dollars for iliutuh relief iy $30,fKK)(KX) appropriated gress of Preslcb at Identify and return these bodies. At order KANAB, FT -S- he p shearing at the request of their relatives, 42 lie nits operated In this In grav es near w here they fell. These the tlnce pi, is completed. section pnilictilly nut Do disturb. graves are m.uked 4 7 090 end w 111 li At Suresnes sleep 1,511. lnsirip-tinn- s Approxim ilelv ill the vicinity of Kane been clipped show the on the headstones the sheirlng sea-oFiddlers name, rank, orgnril ithm. county during the he entered where state namo of SALT LAKE CITY, IT -E- ighty servUc, and date of dentin Roo-cvcl- t. n. Tile sufferers from Protruding, Bleeding, Itching or Blind Piles, can now get relief from very first treatment by using Q.n.Piio Ointment Q. R. (Quick Relief) Tile Ointment is a new remedy for tha treatment of pile suffereis no mntter how long aflikteil, guaranteed to give satisfactory relief or money refunded. Before placing tills pile ointment on the market for sale, it was put to tlie acid test In both mild and severe euses, never failing to produce wonderful results. If you nre troubled with piles, Get Q. U. do not experiment. If your drugPile Ointment. gist does not carry it In stock, Jill out tlie blank below and mnil it to Q. R. OINTMENT MFQ. CO. 373 South 6th East 6att Lake City, Utah Q. R. Co., Gent'emen : Inclosed find $1 00 P. O. Money Order for (hie tube of Q. K. Pile Ointment to be mailed piepaid to Namo T. O. Address On conditions that if I am not SatIWled with results obtained, I am to receive money buck upon returning tube to jour |