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Show i -- . !" -- ' - - ' - . rj&L. Ufll II IIIIP.I III P - - - glnm and can hardly be approved In material aide Britain atanda rf tha Ruhr war ende In the mln of Oermany. On the political aide aha atanda to low whether Germany aftwa "Into ruin or to France and ttncondHionally Belrlum; cither war Franca emergee vtctorioua from a new war and unchallenged In her political aacendancr in lvurrpe for soma time to come. II Tneoretlcalbr Britain wlUUave loaf none of her right aa a participant i.in the world war. but practically her poaitlon will be determined By her neutrality In the Ruhr war. But If the Krltiah cannot without grave 'loea match a Oerman policy of pan:ve realatance with an English ouree of paaalve neutrality, what can haa they do. All Ihe Itrltieh preaa en talked eolemnly of breaking the la entente tente, but breaking the more than formally teatifylng to II inq - i i aa ueran existing fact, bo tar tn man situation I concerned the en hasrt tente is broken tecause there been a complete divergence between Krltih and French policy and In a. grave crisis the British have declined to support the French; The fact that the British are not with them In the Kuhr means for the French the end of the entente as an effective hh to, loae much I ., nr-ir-ir-t- i llhll ..: mn m i mill mi I I 1 f Further Effort Off an pmfUiiti , at Regarded f I Failure Marks Beginning of Battle for Powerzz? Balance Premier' . M i u as Mr m Sj II dbsw- 1 i i - :m iu i Honest i SMWSMWSmaMMtmSBmsutW ... rnr-s-- i m m . I Va. mmmmb - i n i i IIk I m J iftn IT, I I I I lv v v 1 " 1 WHik f if if mr Jl - I '. m m X fc V V.iv -- xx xv ti ii - i aw I r"nM m 1 1 i i w a, I I a .sbwssbsW g 1 . i i ix if - uu uu u u 11 M i v. : J v 1 A V x, ii i I I I x - j u n nil n h h vi iha. t x h - t ft x m i V - 1 aim ir 4 itJ! ri Phenomenally Low Prices "nBHflBBHflnnnnnBBHnnBflflnJ a. -- - n Fur that aulhenlicalh establish the correct vogue for the 1924 $eaon in unique end original modeh. Bought during tjie TRUBYTE TEETH The$e big sarin gi tcill be shared by sions in price for ta$h. our patron in this tale. uer-ma- Gold Crowns 0 0 0 n a trttl-mat- e maip-nitui- lc - Bridge Work . . ' fliii-knes- i a and b wi si I I'lioi i 0 n bBHB ! l k :5 ii Now to. The DcJtoi Store Goirantee Behind Every For Perfsct tatisf action in every trmnaaction it absolutely CTiaraU- iteed, Tou cannot afford to buy a fur ooat withoot first cominjr to the BOSTON STOBX. variety and value to COSPAKE OUR VALUES. amase you. Amazing Offer 22-K- $10 Amtlo-tjerma- n SGO e 53.M By Certain 5I.C0 W Offer With a Maker Just 30 Black Bay lier-man- y Seal Coats J ttcEes models, loog and baaattfuUy sffk lined, wonder Mg, fenexoa collar foi coats at HIS. OPEMTNO SAXE PBICE negsnt tier-man- -- i FYanoo-Felftla- ' (BBBBBH BBBBBHHB 'r Higa-Ond- s T.ie i i.r.a I'l.a-viiwra- f llHl'JV a? IWl iu Franro-Belgla- r"it p ,. EXTRA SPECIAL $3950 1 I l.'T?.:.'?. e $S$ (o $225 COATS-CAPESr-WR- APS the season's newest styles with large choker collars of self furs or contrasting furs. The linings are of exquisite silks and sensationally priced for Immediate sale t?fM .-: ; . . . ;. . . . . ;r.v. I".'.-- :v. . LOVELY MARMINK COATS if! tier-ma- OPTICAL- CO. 105 Sale Begins Tomorrow at 9 a. m. MAIN ST. 276 MAIN SI Ne I tt 0 Buu ForCaV4 4 II until delivery, and by that time you will find you have saved its price. Truly a plan that many will take ' of and. enjoy. ge JJSJ) Vie For C.aiVi mmMill VG1 QtZlA- - FOR SEE WINDOWS. I LESS Sale Begins Tomorrow at 9 a. m. see wnroows. bv-a- t GLASSES 1 " CAPEli WRAPS j SCHUBACH'S PRESCRIPTION Mt $19 10 tKUsi Lorely fflarmink costs, cape sad wraps of th -very highest srsde. It is practically lffipomlhle to tell these garanots from geaulns- mink. They come in the new long lenVths, 45 to 48 inches. SenssUonsl special iii W.ji)u"r. : .T. a You Can Pay a Little Each Week Kich, luxurious long models frwr. ? will hold YOUE COAT untfl you want it delivered in the fall GENUINE NORTHERN SEAL t vy j l Deposited at Time of Selection the new long model lengths of 45 to 48 inches fashioned of the finest north- era pelts. Large collar sad cuffs and lined with richest of durable silks. Pay only - ' i Also lit well-nig- ? - NORTHERN MUSKRAT COATS n . U i Jna ' fl 2f- single-hande- tmd 'ff. & had f the ruin German arrtile 'created. France ha preferred, perhaps, that Germany should pay and thus escape ruin, but she haa always been reserved that Oermany should pay or Oerman collapse abolishes perish. French hop of reiiaratton. but It automatically eliminates the danger of Oerman attack. An economic' collapse In Germany, followed by political disturbance, may easily leave for half a century. Frame In Therefore, France can better, riK German collapse and tbe re suiting security than Oerman recovery and the resuKIng danger if Franc haa beesf bankrupted paying for the last German war. . LLOYD GEORGE IjU BLAMED. At France obtained - the pledie of" security throiurh the tripartite treaty of Inauranoe. which was promise; by Wilson and Uoyd Tteora-eBh obtained the pledge of tton through th I repara treatyof TeTsiinre. Hut sh lost " the esrir " ance of security when we' declined to ratify th treaty of Insurance and our refusal Invalidated the British pledge aa welt a our own. She lost the aaauranc of reparations when German policy undertook the systematic evasion of th treaty of Versailles. British policy Uffer-- . always from the fatal mistake made by I.loyd George at Parla, when, under pressure from the pres and certain political Influence at home, b declined . . -- . ' to-i- low American leading and support the proposal to tlx reparation total at a reasonable and tmasible sum. Sine British Interest were actually concerned, not In th collection of from Oermany, but tnipoasible sum the restoration of world markets to British trade, Lloyd George actually set his hand to a contract destructive of British Interest. - One he discovered his mistake he se to wvrk to repair it. But It was too late. We went home, and our rolng" deprived the French of the promised security. A a result, the French timed to reparations and insisted upon their Versatile contract or upon th equivalent that la. they war ready to modify their claim upon Germany only as Britain, modification. supplied a ..balancing quid pro uuo. In the matter of security by alliance. In the matter of reparation by a cancellation of debt due from France to Britain, lleantim th Oerman, discovering rheiii vi table di vei getu. of French and British policy, undertook to exploit It precisely a they exploit! th absence of unity of command tnMh campaign of 11. Thus you had the fatal triangle. America, which might conceivably have auppned the t a la nee to reconcile British and French policies ami Interests, ws gym; the British, while demanding that Franc abandon ber pobcteei refused; to French view, while the French, war equally deaf to lirltiah logic. A for the held faat to hta purpose to - ly evade and escape. Hartwr tost the ish intervention.. The chance of suc-c- a war, he sought to win th peace. in such an Intervention were so slkrht that no statesman would have OCCUPATION BEGINS SPLIT. taken rh of defeat which seemed The occupation of the Ruhr last almost the artiured save. s Kef1-th- at January waa the lneyitalebat-notJ-evethr nop warranted or tne total irsw iwiaa, consequence in view 01 what Waa at Incoherence of ail allied policy. It handaooie, if matter In their continued ws, moreover, a decisive circum- present course. stance, for It changed everything. A. The failure which followed perhaps new stAte of war Interverred and to th unwisdom of the vencould only be terminated by the sur- testifies although tt may be that presrender of one of the two contenting ture, when ently, has Oermany collapsed forces. Equally decledve was the re- and the consequence are shown to fusal of the British to march with b tremendous. Baldwin's failure will their former allies, because while be a point for praise, not cenaore. In fact the British ware neaitrai, But In any . event, my Judgment ia their neutrality seemed te France and that the failure t net, that tlermnny Belgium an unfriendly act,, wh.il to cannot now be saved British the Germans It appeared a promise renewal o.f effort and y any we that are of later active support. ed on.tn new crisis Bwnrhe trim tod" in fact, of a nyw phase tn and, then or thereafter was"Itmperctyel" Britthat the history, markrrt by th ish were neither able nor willing to of Franc. go to war with Franc, on behaJf of a: a factor 4n the Inter-ofGermahy uermany nor ready and able to ac?"5T? would as cept they or new of power, be obliged to do if they marched with with Franc a and Great Britain once France ajta Belgium in tbe Ruhr. more th rival they In were the cenTherefor the Ruhr war could have turies which preceded the riee- - f but on end: Germany mhrht resist modern Germany. has resisted far lonarer than anyone eould imagine, just as th world war (Copyright. 192S, by the McClure endured beyond all conceived limit but the exhaustion kept pace with Kwspaper Syndicate.) duration and now Garmany ia visibly on th point of collapse, Cruise Special ON EDGE OF NEW CRISIS. and Around the measure of The th dasperateness Worid. VjajkO-Oiok, Amn Kx.. of th Oerman situation I perhaps Raymoftd k Whltcomb and all ethers bast shown by the fact of the Brit J. Ot TomUnsoa, Agent, Wilson xioteL . . - f- -. Eurc-pesm an French-lejulerhl- Winter i ! A ittb i i i S I mmJ twr i Xv f s , - K I v fl.jv ' . ; i-- I I I I w vv t i I I i 0 yt 31 W t 1 s ' Vi r sr i i " I. i I a I I I 1 1 I m I .'.'...,,..: Til n There ha l.een talk In parliament of the withdrawal of the amaJI B to the Jthlne. but uch. S wthdrawat; nke TtiB" ATnrrtrrnrdoea Kvorv nlatf that 1pves Vm of f icp bears onr no' more than clear the way for) com H TRU-UYT- K plete rTencn occupation oi trie iph iniaranlpe that nothing but GENUINE In fonjimctlon with lnk of the Rhine By FRANK H. SIMONDS. TEETH are u?d. Jf there is another It really mesne dethe Belgians. Ii -- Th priving the Rngllah of any baaia for WA.HIN0TOX, Aug. H tlpjitist in America that uses suoh good material whole discussion fajfurv of 1h moHt ambitUrtiit effort partii'lpatUin In the wtuco la bound u em wnen and H acttrally tnms ont first-clas- s plate work for mart ty irat T5tT111i jrovfrmoctft collapaea. If arte does colbtpse. to t.ring alioin a :ttlle iricnt of th TWO COURSES OPEN, H pool war taniiihjiji ...njrf airily tmtn flf course, pfesentiy the Itrltlsh will II ' foMowed fiy a have to choose between complete reKlanlpy Iialil continental diswin venture a tou coiimilrtj)e In tirement from the of the' old assoturbance, a renewal ItM'ir and Bttrscled too murh attrn-lioCrownR I'pon the good judgment I'll ion (ioid ciation with France, and finally. direct In th and skill of the Dentist d to France and support of wurid h rmit a rum- - onnosition .JS'.'H'i. Uccmsnr. jBd -- tbi Jast - cmxrre.mun jtr, the wieeeiw or failure or .r fatttrre immedtat mrvtsage ;,T.i without lh vrry of Bridge W ork. I'nicm wnr Since the latter is ' not in present conditions and of which woulit leave th' ;worll Dentists have had years of the former B becoming steadily more In for a partrulation. a within it is clear that eiperirnce, they have every inevitable, Wihat th"' nwr.rtc-lB prime minticular jialitMil or a facilitv at thrir command, relatively brief time. If thing conuter ha4 done, in temix, was to tell tinue as they are. the British must gold, big fee, but EVERY aid hl allies of the war. f'nnr, lielKium either march with the French and " r retire from the continent I M E for ami Italy, that clreat Hritaln found Belgians tbirkneas, is osed to JT alone retirement and the aiiating KurfMan ajtuatlon In- altogether, as well aa tfnd an artistic insure EVERYBODY feasible. tolerable and iirpoel to do xome-thl- n eem The British note to the contihentarf B rlentifle piece of" work. to end It; but. before tax id; a the charge is always was the nations upon predicated exfl Bridge Work ia atep alone, a ttnaJ invitation waa to" enter direct separate a the same "toothy guaranteed, yet tha coat ia tended to theae ailia to )in in a note purHee forthe tf with 43eraia? B tn Oermany; . tentative ffiwft of no more, no less. only $5 per tooth. declined to Join. But supwhich fcoeomtwnled the Hrltinh note mer allies pose for a moment that Indon now to J'arla, Rom and Krnaela. ? approaches Berlin, what can result But tBepol"t 'hat remained In Ihe The best evidence of the hopelensness dark all the time wa whether Hritaln of this undertaking has been supplied examination and estimates t&ze MJSLUn If came It or eould would ko nlone. the by (;er man chancellor. Cuno. who to that AHer all. irrth " the British plana prnclalmeonly frankly - Krench atnlpa. TtriTaTT"iir-th' Kirhr and distasteful than French and In . Gold Crowns and Bridges. VWiUVel the ItaJiana at InaM on the fence, less detail wholly impossible. what large contribution to aolution essential There you have the fttodamontnl would a aeparate wnakneeM the the British situation. tn any event the It ia he, alne Rubber Plate, Bsit Trobyte Teeth. necessary not merely to convince would eontnit Franoe French and llelKian that moderation is wiser the aitu&tlon and conlinue to hold the extreme coercion, but also to thjn !0 beat part of Herman aaaeta In their Porcelain FilUngi. must the Hermans that hamla. even If poaeaton did nt per- consent to assume burdens tliey and make mit proftta? erman governsurrendrrs whlcn n ment darea to make Hrttain is' EFFORT- FUTILE. SUver Pillinft to save Tirdpe. to spare Now Pari. Brusaela and Rome did to and herself, spare Incidentally irhadea of with all, varying nplnion, 5Qc .; Painless Extractions . . decline to march with Ihe Itrttlah. tn a the obvksis evil conseotjuenceaso nut she haa been, collapse, The ellorl to en lie Italy of tie Latent JUM as unsiKveasful In ierstiad- far, Delirium from France (ailed, and Ing the Germans as the French: uhe Oa-W- ith Nitrbus-Oxi-d OxTtre- npolicy rests upon the settled French and the Belgian, with equal Oerman y of conviction that the colaipee ALL WORK GUARANTEED determination, declined to Join In any weuld be so dlsaatroua to Britnerotlatlon with Oermany in advanre ain that Hritaln must prevent it, and . of Oerman renunciation of paaalve to muaf consent accent Hoars: and the Italian chanced Oermanarcordlnarly condition In the matter of Open the ubjct by Intimatinir poHltely that salvage. 8:30 a.m. their intereat lay in the matter of Sunday, j POLICY BRING8 DEFEAT. InteraHled debt. .And their, convict to Thus British policy haa suffered a n 10 to 2. the tton, aa unchamteable 6 :30 p.m. double The 4efet. of ihei tn matter rejection of the poaltlon British note by France and Ftelgium khv to be fwind In the frefrom of Muenollni that blocked one avenue of quent at&tement M It waa useleea to talk reiutratlona navt the existing sttuation, the cateKoticnl of refusal to funo British In connection with debt accept terms closed another. Cuno a speech All thing conaldrred. It would apnot on'y discomfited th British; M pear that the eomiiletenem of check confirmed French contentions that the had not been fnreeen In l'Wnlng to iesshess of further effort aiong the of r1. tree. Lottie or nothing real objective exUermany policy waa maJi point of view there lines already followed. Germany l short of absolute evasion. pected of Franc, nothing after M, nothing correcVeir mnst aim at "sfnkrng, the collapse cannot be far .the thir the whole BrTtfsh methods, since both Pol near had apoken at tenlia, but case It and indeefl. lollow sums, real ofr; otivioiis of the may upon swiftly of duty reparations tion large much waa plainly hoped for from pay up to the limit of ca- Herman policy alma at evading such upon the demonstration that Britain Bruaeele and even more from Home. Oermany to o pacity. Baldwin. Ilkr Bonar Law. collections. It Is rfn"h either cannot or will not Intervene The proof of thl la to be diacovered has only argued that the coercive methods now, because It is and save the re;ch, for this is the In the patent truth that no Itrltmh method of single thing that might make pajnlve German and to rouse patriotism occupation Ps1Im" prime mlnleter would have underwas a mistaken method of through the presence of enemy troops. resistance successful ultimately. taken the maneuver Into which Bald- accomplishing was the common rosisi what in less It i,o t easy GERMAN COLLAPSE NEAR. might prove win pi united had he been convinced end of both British and French policy. ii,. itritih method of collection, par There Is not and there never was that the consequence would he to to extract reparation from ticUarly if all the allies were united ahow France and lielalum united and namely, chance that any Germany could win to the limit of reason Kvery aa the) are not now her Ruhr campaign Italy ooneultin- - her own Internet and Oermany British declaration, official and unIMPOSSIBLE. SUCCESS co.uld flhe rhotild hold the theae fort temporarily, auvKeatlnx politely tint official, must, to have any ippea! to be at leaat aa Imereetinj to Hrilain France, restate Thus the British operation stands but she could not brea the strangle thla underlying truth. aa Britain! intereate to Italy. i present chance of success and has grip France and Belgium had Mken; But since the British propoaa a complete standstill for the she could not. either by the ecoTAILURE CONFESSED. sent to the'alliee. franklv nrooosed icome to reason the British can nomic loss indicted on her enemies or that aimple some form of All Ii all. Baldwin'! failure waa aa international and a'llrd not produce In the court of the world by the political conseiuenctw which dutaatrnua at home and abroad a haa control of German ftnahoes, of the opinion a to do the were threatened, force them to evacbeen IJoyd Oeorea Genoa confer-fk-- e whole German edifice, a control not necessary Germany ready recognising of the obliga- uate. Her solitary chance of ultimate of Met vear. ( mce more Waeh- - by armies of occupation, but by finan fair opportu- auceess lay tn the possibility that and tion askmg only Ington had declined tiyfaahon4 cial experts navtrsr unquestioned an- - nity. The obHtinacy of Cuno was Just Britain and the I'nltcd States or to contribute the aid which mignt tnnnty, werman oopoaltlon was as- - as of Polnoare and to- Britain alone would Intervene and as fatal that For e declaive. while France, ao far from sured and haa been declared. diahed save her. these two premiers have not wiah to pay up to gether waa diavlneed Germany do appearing iaolated. Baldwin. That is the simple truth of .But that hope has now been dem4 llolding ground which etUI reflated capacity, does not mean to pay. and the matter It Is not France, and onstrated to have bten unfounded to that Interna. consenting ny attack, whether frontal or In percelvea Belgium alone who have refused" sug- Britain has sought to intervene, and aiuc- - tional control would be a atep toward t flank and rear, And. aa I have un the contrary, the Ger- her effort has ended In a complete gestions; r to -- eonelade payment. lied. jrott are- man rejection Is Just aa emphatic aa check: the French and Belgian troops REFUSAL BLOCKS PLAN. that the defeat waa unespeited. at are still In the Ruhr, the French and ihe French. leaat In extent, for Baldwin and Cur-toThe French refusal to the That la why I do not believe sep- Belgian governments have reaffirmed were bound to toil the two hmieea RrltisA views, together withaccept their purpose to stay until Uermany Belthe Berarate British with negotiations - of parliament quite bluntly that they gian, blocked Ihe Baldwin lin can accomplish much even If they abandons passive resistance that is. t did not know what they would do In an far as it waa an attemptoperation to per- are. undertaken, defeat In the Ruhr war, and aocepts to mav lead and they ; next. , suade the allies to unite In a common new British rebuffs. It is not a the the peoples of France and Belgium We are then bound to consider polk-baaed upon Brltihs views But champion of Oermany that Baldwin hove demonstrated a determination ; wlytf they may do. always accepting the German rejection of the British can persuade France, and British to support their governments In the of occupation. i the fact that they may tlU decide ideas constituted a wail nigh imiiaeea- - public opinion by no means ready policy o do ttothlng. aa Bnnir law did beTble olietacJe to any conceivable auc to We are, then, it seems to me, on k policy of championship . . . . cesa for s. support -Uulrfu.l rate British the pa I edge of the German collapse. negotiations. of without regard to the S J the more Influent la supporters of the in a wora, to use a ctjmmqn phrase, pastrGermany whole Brit f tt case- - must d' not believe Germany will surThe the 1 Have" British cabinet have been advised Wat the It is h present Inconceivable render; whlpnawerl. or as fall a is it stand championship i; ... ministry should do. But to do nnth- - their recent allies and their former of But what to me that any German government justice imdto- reason. tnf la, tn reality, to do something; enemies have both declined to e undertake: - to- force eould now surrender and "survive, earthly It la. as Baldwin and Curton have MILim lf WJtar mill to accept Brit- given the popular France and passions which r WMpiwiir, oner inuicaiea, 10 srana i"iiniin ro imfion so tom- - ish lews of Belgium ...,..niwii-wf- f the German situation If have been excited. Moreover, even aside and see a decisive struggle Iniplrx and difficult now. if now should n adranre that these it Germany To an InevT- It is a fair and VusL asjEimutKin .viais a4uirJ'cte.l bv Germany? seems almost Inevitable surrender, ar -- .:; tieTmany-mTntr inalTIf ITTsh" public sentiment teJi'e, conclusion. T lapse, has not It follows, then. It seem to me. would follow because the dislocation she may surrender, but if she vet reached, and perhaps never w P that what we have tn expect is ac- of the financial. If not the economic, ctillapaea, British Interests arethe point where It favors an tual British pasgivlty, however It may system of Oermany has reached a thou! vex be covered by apparent activity. The point where any remedial, measures wniiu, it sne surrenaers, uiattemru to save liermanv juiu. rill be necessarily fo Terms which 'used to the riirhn of th. must Involve very great sufferin?. more is Kaldwin a failure than check; will be. dictated by France and Bel- - many attacked But from the Ger- - It has dlscloeed the' GRAVER CRISIS IMPENDS. hope- Deflation now Is Inevitable, accomIncreases In panied by very taxation. Deflation mesn everv sort of suffering and the masses, of the e . German people are totallv unlikely to .x .' y . consent to this suffering and take the punishments their rulers hava brought down upon them with calm acquiescence Nor are the Industrialists likely on their side to consent to the vast sacrifices nvwhich will be de nottev which manded of them aims at the restoration of Oerman af fairs. w.hether it be applied bv Ger mans or bv representatives of the creditor alliea. Winter la approaching, and winter In Oermany means sometihng very dellnHe. If you conceive that passive resistance can last for 'tw months more, and the Oerman government has just reaffirmed Us purpose to continue It; then ..the tonsetiienes while too terrible to eneourage forereprrintetmotKxi-ieedcT itcfcclive vTston. casts, ere none the lees plain to all eyes. The opening trouble may come It is PKKSON AL service, INDIVIDUAL. SERVI( r from .the right or from the left, from based on skill, knowledge, experience and judgment the monarchtal reactions rtea or the after thorough examination of KACH eye by expert radical fommun lata, but that It rouat of admitted standing in the profession. oome la almost a settled fart. I'nless all signs fall, then, there Is hy take chance of injuring your eyes tie rnianentlv, n approaching the moment when "First consttlt ma expert and find when it costa no more, and usually le'ss, for Hchubach resistance will reach Its logical ont whether or not you NEED Guaranteed Service! Consultation cost onlv vour tims. eonebnrion. and that conclusion will ' be the collapse of - the edifice glasses, then, it 70a do need them, t'ome in TODAY. by Bismarck. The French get the teat." mirpose has never varied. France from the begtnnfng ' has demand and security. Without reparation reparation there could b no securand. German therefore. resistance ity, of reparation payment haa reaulted In maslng the two demand Inaepara Die. FRENCH RESOLVE FIXED. , France has alwar been resolved that Oermany should not escwne from the consequence of her attack In auch fashion aa to leave France open to new attack and Germany capable 1 of making such an attack. For France th matter of victory or de In the world war waa only to teat STORES be decided when It was ..settled whether France or German v would have to par th coat of restoration - I ......... .JTJ a i 1 - . 9 B wasl I g ii - iiiIi IT"! I 212 MAIN STREET A " 19, 1923. vi M II wy "I -.. ' i ; ruiue. w, ... -ZJ Sil w r rx rv - i-CN- i . I m W wmi mi iii 1 1 1 1 1 U J ,1 n . ,. "X w. I v' SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST - THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, r????: On L 1 nnisinns - ' " |