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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY "MORNING, APRIL HERE GOMES THE BRIDE TV m AP): The theory on the goa did is aatjhifjed by Dr. Hugo iToll, prominent Swedish surgeon, tn a new book which has caused discussion among-- Swedish clergy and scientists. Dr. Toll, formerly a surgeon In Minneapolis' and St. - Paul. Minn., rhlef aurgeon at the Deakoneag hospital hare and oresldent of the Stock holm society of physicians, concludes mac til (savior waa not dead when taken down from tha cross, and that. aner resting for aome time in the grave, he retrained consciousness and left the tomb In a normal way. The doctor's conclusions are based mainly on analysis of the reports of witnesses present at the crucifixion, viewed iir tha light of modern medical science. The author asserts that the' crucifixion, which meant fastening the victim on the croaa by the means of nails through his hands and ropes around his feet, could not have caused death,' as the nails prevented bleed-ins- ;. The head, mouth and throat, however, were emptied of blood, which flowed to the lower limbs, ha saya, suggesting that It Is therefore likely that Jesua soon fell into a deep stupor U awnon- mtetftkitlt h h' anlrt(OT-and the spectators for death. The removal of tha stone slab closing, the entrance to the tomb la explained by the author as possibly having been caused by an earthquake, a not Infrequent occurrence In that region. Jesus then probably walked out of the grave, he suggesta, and, remembering his sufferings, obeyed the in net m jinn Un, showing himself only occasionally to V most loyal friends and followera and behaving as a man would do under conditions of grave danger. Dr. Toll maintains that several facta point to the possibility that the Savior found his ultimate refuge at Srinlgar on tha Cashmere slopes, under the name of Ixaa. There is reported still to be an Indian sect claiming to be the descendants of the followers of Jesus, that--Jeu- s j&ot-dl- a - a ' T JUNIORS HOSTS. JUNCTION, March . Piute County high school juniors were hosts at their annual promenade Friday evening. Tha dance was held in the auditorium. in the best seats in the theater, smoke and drink, drive sporting ear, entertain his friends, take trips. He neither knows what he asks when he asks his wife to dolay motherhood, nor what he asks when he begs her to consider it. Amuseare his ment and two interests, he ia not prepared to make any sacrifices fof his wife not prepared to enter into the finer feelings of a woman. Civilization is against her. Bents " - Fata.) failure of matrimony. These mavericks, detached husbands, detached wives, are charging about in society, demoralizing everyone. The bride may .feci so sorry for poor Evelyn,, divorced from that brutal uiaa, that she aUs Evelyn down for even though Jim stronga weett-enly objects. And Evelyn comes, and, having no code whatsoever, she promptly to ulav Jim. Jim, tov'mg tgut no code, is delighted to meet her half way. A youna husband is fair pitylorHMy'gtit f nend; n"6ailays 'J lift Dride nas always saiu mm "after a few years" she means to have a dear little baby or two. But before that time arrives passion is pretty well burned out between Jim and herself, and she sees that to have a baby now would only be to elve Jim another great advantage They are not at ail sure that they love each other by this time. The way he is carrying on with Evelyn Jones certainly doesn. t looic mucn like it. Far wiser not to involve herself The women who have had children are not much better off, she reflects .bitterly, ;. It just makes one more complication when the split (Continued Scientist Says Savior Only Unconscious ; Quake Moved - Rock at Door STOCKHOLM tiresome old darling, and 'her Own mother annoyingly partial to Broth er Joe 'a children, and quite unfair to her own. , . But what of itf It was life. She wat living a serving- and strug, gling, hoping arid fearing, rejoicing Not many of owf and triumphing. modern women experience in tlieur whole lives her calm content when, at 50, she could see married sons and daughters coming home for visits, with their own baby tons and daughters in thoir arms, to display te Grandma."; And if the brides to "aak her wistfully, "Were you and Dad always so happy, Mother!" it wat well for them that they could not interpret, he- - fre frecedjaa- money-makin- g . aj- - jtigU-v- y - avl- i- hat wkWy-aa- d flock to the expensive neighborhoods; they never think of unfashionable 'making' "ri& "f "quiet, neighborhood pleasant. Food in expensive neighborhoods is much more costly than food elsewhere. Everything else rises in proportion; clubs, frocks, bridge prizes, flowers all cost enounoi(sly. Service is almost prohibitive, and she has not boon trained to dp without it. There, is no tense of newness, of daring and adventure to her marriage.. She must follow the current, do what the others do, spend what they spend. Her mind is miserably tossed between doubts and fears; she know tbryonghtthat expensive car," she knows that Jim it silly to try fo impress those much 'richer men with his clothes comes. and his clubs, she knows that deep And presently, never having been in her own heart there is a constant genuinely married, two out of three longing for a baby. The years of brides frankly admit failure, and her marriage are wretched years, get s divorce. She hates the idea. wavering between ignorant weak-nea ever liked getting divorce, Nobody and ignorant strength. and about most of them there is a "The happiest time of allLLLsojne humiliadeal of suffering and great tion. The divorced woman has, to of the elders say fondly, of the first married year. But the young spend months, and even years, in ex- wife of today doesn 't often agree plaining to her family and friends with them. that under the circumstances there However, if she wants to take was 'absolutely nothing else to do. If there are children there is no my word for it, there is such a thing as troe marriage. There are left in end-ltho.avU If. there are a then our bride is all alone again. the world, still, certain young men Today's bride may well go dis- and women who discover it, hidden tracted, trying to, steer her course deep under the puzzling surface, between all the dangers that beset There are mothers-in-lawho love her. their sons' happiness more than Iler childhood and girlhood have their own jealousy and pride and trained her to be anything else in hurt affection. There are men who the world except a capable, affec- can be faithful to one woman, and tionate wife and mother. reverence her, and home, and chil The education of her young hus- dren, for a whole lifetime. There band has been similarly neglected. it a pleasant neighborhood in which His' mother has spoiled him, his big there is a cottage or a house or an eollege allowance, the money ideas apartment that our young wife can of his friends have all helped. He afford; there is a budget that will wants to do expensive things, ait take care of her financial problem friends ' - jot. . without any uncertainty or anxiety on her part. And if she ?ares for them there can be years of in and security creasing happiness ahead of her. A Like everything else that is worth while in tbia life, these things are The never discovered ready-madol d f 9 sh ion ed,,ucc ess f L.. ,m. rx iages that look to simple to tit were not achieved in a moment, either. There were just at ihany problems for the bride of a hundred years ago, just GIEKJRT China's Oldest Religious " Group Leads: "Workers " in New: Political Move. ago. Manchuria MfKDKN, (AP). Taojat prlests,llcaderi of China's oldest roiiKion, are reported to be the giilldmg peasant, spirits of a n antibanUlt, antlgovemment movement which haa sprung- up In the Tunghua district asi of Mukden, within 150 miles of the home base of Dictator 1 men tnl cruelty, or incompatibility in smaU matters, or . even nonsup-uor- t NAMED. rto 1'h'e Tribune. BRIGHAM CITY, March SI. Following women were selected as dele-Katto tho state convention of Federated Clubs at a recent meeting- - ot the Civic Improvement club; Mes-dam- es C. B. Stratford, C. V. Forafren, J. E. Halvrrson; alternatea. Mesdamea Frank Karl, Nels Jenson, J. Leo Nel-so- u and W. V. Call. Mrs. Theron Lee has been v.Hed a new member of the club. Special and . Chun-shen- hard-bitte- hard-ridlna- r. n gpeelel M the Trlboee. Pin The "All MORILANDS B-- Art v )THU0(S . tu. iiiutn AV. iiUKL.fMU Phone Wat. ' CPUfLE MARRIED. JTJXCTrON-- , ' - war' . March Tha rlage of Mrs Vivian Barnson and Av ery Green of Wyoming la announced. They will make their home la Wy4 nuiia in me summer. l)ays Trial. Free e e : Agony Sco Below such ailments at chett celdi, neural-- i gia, neuritis, lameness, tore, aching; muscles, lumbago and tclatiee, 1'or feet that are inflamed and bam and ache a good rubbing at night with Joint-Easusually meana foot comfort in the morning. Joint-EasAsk for e at aay drug store in America 90 eentt a tube rub It in it penetrates. IT IT 1? nd nam nd address fer -- large generous tube Oa days' treatment) to Pope Laboratories, Desk ea, Hallewell, Maine. (Adv.) e R MORELAND 4 a rIxotr Me)tc model It the fait . Road Runner & a hear-Brake ler'dutv truck com bIned' !t U t9iSatd to 'TrattaUtlMa naui ioaaa oeyona me tonnage limits of the 6 " oramary tpeea trucx i wiltly,turely U laftly. 6192. A e -a A A a"A A A M. A'AA'A AAA 4aVAaVA .- LTA -" Tormented Joints If you have a swollen, Inflamed or pain tormented joint, don 't keep oa suffering agony day after day. For quick, comforting relief thousands rub on Joint-Easand for Eheumatie pain druggists will tell yon that it is always la demand. Joipt-Eatis a soothing, penetrating emollient that you eaa rub on often to obtain speedy results. Its comforting influence and speedy action indicate its use for 1S1 MOTOR w Z'-.- .. SPANISH FORK, March II. Deraei crata of Spanish Fork will meet Mon day evening. April 1, at the Thufbee school for the purpose of electing seven delegates and seven alternates) to the Demccratlo state convention at Salt Lake April 9. The call la iseoed by C. E. Smith, chairman, and Lorlii , Cllsen, aecietarr. tot Kneumatic 12 . Democrat $ Called ; For Monday Meeting 'comfamMion speed'' capacity new ct&es, She knew he would be irritable when he got home tired, and found that dinner wat late; the knew, that the children would have measles and break in occational arm or leg; the knew that her own father was a iry inis Tso-Il- This Is the Btjr Sword society, similar In purpose and character to the Red Spears and a score of other organisations which have arisen In various parta of China where civil war conditions and the exactlona of taxation have aroused usually meek farm-er- a to resistance, but this la the first appearance of such a force In hitherto ". peaceful Manchuria. first The BIr-- Swords war otralnst banditry, but as the Manchurian of war the oppressions lord'a tax gatherer .became more seof vere they became enemies he gov eminent. General Wu the old governor of Heillngklang and defense commissioner JoraJlMnchurta- - dur . CONFERCNC1AT WI0T80E. 31. Primary 31JXCTIO.V. March conference of the L. D. 8. church will J Widtaoa tuiidax. . - - Chang DELFQATIS n forty-seve- rs and ignorance on the life!" ing hit overlord's stay south of tha Great wall, undertook personal command of an expedition against the society, which broke up aome Its bands and captured some and slaughtered more of Its members. Thajirrsy of captured arme In one battle Indicates the typical armament of such organizations rlflea and ISO spears, These peasanta must employ primitive weapons, since they have no accesa to the forelan who supply the militarists. Despite General Wu's campaign, the Big Swords are stllli active along the Korean bordi-r- . The cult of Taoism la a mixture of ancestor and nature worship - with some degenerate remnants of the teachlnga of the earliest of China's Lao great aagea, Tie, who taught right living and humility 2500 years T reminiscent shadow in her eyes. part of young husband and young ,,., Don't .g.oia,tU.r1.K happiacs,.you wife. brides of todays Oo after marriage, But she hnd'tho Idvantace of trim and you'll find them pecting cloiuly'days and rainy days, both 'marriage, together.. along with the sunshine of the honeymoon year. 8he never thought of (Copyright, 1928, by the Bell Syn- getting a divorce oa the ground of dioat'iy Inc.) or intemperance, because she anew that some of these things enter into every marriage that ever was contracted. We think ourselves much smarter and wiser women than the brides of 1829, and yet their method waa far more intelligent than oars is, after all. They made a real job of marriage, and under their influcnco the intemperance and' extravagance and idleness of the undeveloped young male lessened, and, with the increas ing interests of noma and fhildfe and family circle, minor points of somehow .vanished, incompatibility or at least became no longer of first importance. In those days a woman married a human man, and was tinder no illusions at to his being either a saint or a sheik. She took a chance with the special one of her choice, and If her resultant gain everything estimated, - position, support, children, home, garden, neighbors if the resultant gain was 50 per Cent or over, she called life a success. When tome other woman's husband made fortnnate deal that netted the family a fortune, the merely smiled mysteriously and said, of her own man, "George crown never child . in his spoke harshly to 7 - A.jnitckinjuitka..Ani.iioteafianaW9; ness, 1, .1928. AAAaAA-Aa,A- am e AA ata I J'. 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