OCR Text |
Show V N. SECTION FITE THE DESERET' NEW By JEAX HOBART. Turk ..... of , lu hard-worki- - -- -- ln-p- os he s Jews and Thracian TytTrCT-wBarTinKe" them robbed ' t were fast and furious, recrminatlouS' Wind, themselvea becoming rich and and silly. The criticisms on England might y. They delivered the Turktsh were those mads by foolish travelers he- - tender mercies of t who beat them lutnwhe pr-a-a soldiers.- - These-so- ld Hers starved or died of disease, chiefly from cholera, typhus and dysentery, literally by the thousand, while the wheat their people raised was ship d to Germain' " Improbabilities. T quote td shoWth anengfh of the massacres that tha Greeks say are takinr place In that part The Greeks of Smyrna are said tq be even more vicioue then the and Turke that their recent massacres in the country where their power was au preme is even mor ferocious than that T)f tbs Turks The great papers of Europe and of the United States have correspondents now In Anatolia It la true they are diverse in their criticism but they are nothing Hk x severs in ' their condemnation as thetireeks ar Some Christian writers think the Anatolian Turk is really praisworthy man. is giving trouble to the great Turkey powers and the Turkish question will occepy the daily papers for months to come. The Armenians hope to come under the mandate of the United States but the great powers have not given them their liberties for which they so devoutly pray. The great powers have left the Armenians Id the lap of th - peasant Prussian to-.-- drill-mast- er P-- J GHIRARDELLI S Gil-de- a blood-thirst- - 11 - tpe . ? kind-hearte- ??? - t ! role---tti- m I T ...... -- irnt IV j, that a aar is on bolweerr the to neutralize Constantinople; to give and the Greeks something of! iheGreeke a large elice of - territory - prejudlue exists throughout the Chris-- 1 hading general Mustapba genial tion world against the klohammcdan. Bssha tatablished In the heart of Minor he called Anatolian Now tne Mujutmmedan are as air Ati enunent. with its capital at An--- ! one another aa people ' gora. This gutemment gathered the Chr.atlau sorld. The .Russian around Rail the possibile military ln Christians' JkTh!r Christ iane and the German OOC.AOO Anatolia, Arnttotuns, ara two iemire.y different race. , Curcaalana, and Christian maromtcs.'T ml the Turk. There! though the lst fumed are located are the Arab th mountain of the are two different kid of Tuik. thchiefi' Turk of ConstauUnopie. and the pure, blooded j quarter one would father the im the Turk of Anatolia Tuk of AiatoUk the f&calle4 Oa-- frwsion that assassins and that be remembered also,v'er were y manii. on the wrecking jlhey that among the ilomtprhani of Coti- -j Christian population vengeance chiefly Greeks, are e of there oie(-tthat country. The Chrlfejjcid Armenian, rantlnop l Anatolian Turk are a CQ. tor the most part people and have been ried the Greeks are mo-- e extensive! ,ros,y misjudged Christian ly the holders To --the Tin klli captt all are even worse victim They the Turks themselves. Th lead-- 1 of Turkish oppression than the Greeks eta of tluv joujig- - Turk party ate not j or Armenians the latter may. buy are alhemsefYeu of ffrotn' pure blo.nirfl Osmanll-Uu- -y military Ant-ii' ore of the different Balkan races,! ice but these poor .unfortunate rl ufler ad are Mongrels In their ( tultlin Turk are drafted into war ructak characters. They were the ter- They are a meek class of people and rors? of the late war and by their easily Imposed -- upon by a. corrupt have created an exirenie at Constantinople, government if prejudice among Christian na- - left to themselves they would live iU the Chrtouat and peaceably "Th "conference al Parts dis- - igSOtJumdltf, among them Ibap-ase- , ks as n rule, peasants of that country "EKwrtir e- the Tilts peace treaty They do the work and Ttreaicountries. Ute Wealth which Greek and Armenian p. cUoseal affair suth that ttxs -- eai poweis po kporecl' dcattng w ith . merchants by- trade get away Brum 1 u kcj foy a In the meantime.! them --jear. ., ti4 rive own. at tk . Indiscriminate Condemnation. I -- d powers with regard to Turkey U was" known, for example, that ttt The Indiscriminate condemnation of was the Intention of the great power the Turks as a Whole la unjustified n I! 17 9 1923 1 by the fee is Writer ere not went-- - how R can mite, hut it might do lug that declare this .009,00 of Oe- The general public hankers above all mttnll Turks, the 'cream of Turkey' for a plot, and served with that It la hard to remove population. plot an amount of hokum. Nothin race prejudice and etlll harder to f the eort la to be observed in The overcome religious antagonisms. That ,forch Bearers which ends as It bathe writer may escape the criticism ; pan In satire that he w biased or greatly impartial, cast was admlrabl That he takes the liberty here of quoting ,n)f crew. Alison Shlpworth, covered trom William Lynn W'eetermann, herself with glory Usually aha has expert on the Turkish- question at thela "bits tn the various pUys that ahe 'Veatcrmann This time she had a long doe Asia Minor of tha directreea of the amateur of the Os- - nd she wee really superfine. Arthara now 4n deadly ur Shaw nnli Turks who was excellent, and so was Of this Greeks. wlt,h th nibt Theri Boland. had Mary d and much abused Po Mary Edward Reese.we,Helen Lowell, Ole this expert write.: "It la the con-ensus of 'op(nlon of American mls-- Douglas Garden, William Castle, Rose King. Booth Howard, J. A. CurSionariea, whp know him through end Mary tis and Daley Atherton. I that It was all rather long suppose who nav vorf trchaeoloi three acta of it. But it waa not too r years beside and with him. of me I could have stood an-- . British merchant who hve traded Ipng for with him. of British soldiers who other ct fought against him, .that the Anatolian Turk. Is as honest as any other i Then w had the Hudson theatre people of the Near Eul that he ie a a production by George' Cohen, en farmer, a brave and titled. "So This le London! attributed generous fighter, endowed fundamen- to Arthur Goodrich, It was one of tally with chivalrous instinct,- That those plays that really do no good at these characteristics and instincts have all. as they are principally concerned been distorted by the brutalising ef- ln jMcktng flaws from one nationality fects of Ottoman rule is or another There seemed to be Just aa Ottemaa rule once brutalised moraf which was never carried out. the Balkan, peoples, and.,- continues to That waa hat' each natina brutalise the Armenian- Of all these shouldmoral Us flag ar each peoples the Anatolian peasants havs other. stop waving suffered the most. They have beau - But - id Mr. Goodrich's comedv. conscripted for fifty year to 'fight America waved Its flag at England, the battles of a government whose retaliated. Both wav-lacorruption has been a stench In the and England wars rather stupid, and somenostrils of the world They have been scraped to the bond for taxes to times coarse. The excuse was that Sultan's war pay for-tThe young an English girl fell In love with an American boy whose parents hated Turk leader who wer, be .it mem bored. - hugely from t European England, and were fust THEM GEOGRAPHY OF EUROPE Now ATFFDaT: SEPmrBER - god Alan Dale Says (Continued from pag However thiths the earn I mentioned four.). perhaps the tttle that principle above jq X hAve tha who had much better stay at home, and the criticism on America wcre eqjual-ly-peef- Alid"linpardonable One got rather tired of although there .were a few hearty laugh and th situations occasionally turned out very well But I never see the value of plays of this ilk They tend to maks bad blood and why is It necessary to do so? - -- Mr.- Cohan had provided a It-al- l. few happy touches but they could not leaven the mas He had 'Also given" an' extremely good cast,- though bis selection of Lawrence D'Orsay for the typical Englishman, proved at least that the whole thing riras intended for burvery fine actor, lesque. D'Orsay Is and one of experience but as a typical he is typically musical Englishman, comedy. - - Edmund Brccsc 'was the typical American, and the others were Donald Gallahcr. who vas t he Amert-ea- n boy, and Marie Carroll, who was the American girl. Lily Cahill. Leah Winslow. Edward Jophson, Marion Grey, Wallace Widdecombe. Robert Vivian, and John M. Troughton were also tn the cast. If. England doesn't knew A meric and if America doesn't know England, their knowledge of each other's idio-e- y creates will scarcely be helped by such play as So This la London s As you use it this way; a chocolate sauce for ice you make it this way; Mix 1 cup su?ar with 1 cup cream and iced drinks ; as a hot or cold sauce for custard and .Ghirardcllis Ground Choco- late. Add vekthre puddings yesand For pudding. You can make a icious impromptu pudding out of several slices of stale cake ' sauce is acceptable. . Siac if jt D. several weeks. Say Gtar-ar- -' deity to your grocer and send for our recipe booklet, ' GHIRAkDtLU CO. Ss Fnscbcs T5? & -- C ' ' : !i '' CHOCOLATE GHIRARDELLI S Denver News Items , his covered with this chocolate sauce. In fad:, you can use it for anything where a pudding s cup boiling water. , teaspoon salt, and cook 10 minutes or until thick. When cold, add 1 teaspoon vanilla. Store in tightly covered jar-Twill make about 1 pint of chocolate sauce and wifi keep blanc mange and cottage The dramatic critic feels a bit baffled. s trifle confused, end certainly moat perplexed by the excessive number of new plays foisted upon him at the at art-o- f the season And the pry-- 1 StlUl Ihey com - (Special Correspondence ) DENVER. Colo.. Sept. 8. The of. The Torch Bearers" at the Forty-eight- fleers of the Denver branch organisaStreet Theatre waa perfectly tions sre outlining their work for the delightful from start to finish. The coming season, and from all indicaonly thing that hurt it was the title U."The Bearers" seemed to mean noth-- F tions wlll be one of the most prof- Ing. The delicious satire and humor deserved, a more significant It A fyllef society conference wahId was described aa a satirical comedy 11, In the Denver chapel by Georg Kelly, and satirical It as- Sunday, Aug. suredly wa It was a satire on the President Florence R. Knight presidLittle Theatre movement, and set ed and gave a welcoming address and forth a lot of ambitious amateurs outlined the purpose of the Relief sotrying to give a performance In a ; Mr Mnr V'an certain- - Horticultural Hall. Of course ciety organisation the doings of theatrical amateurs have spoke on testimony and theology lesMr Florence Blyden reported frequently been staged. For instance, sonwe had years and years ago. that the secretary and treasury departPantomine Rehearsul'' amusing on ment and Mr Lydia Albers spoke on which the late Rosins Vokea then we had "Greenroom social service in tha home. Mias fiar-ri- e Olsen sang a soprano solo nd Fun by Bronson Howard that eras a Show Shop special music was rendered by the joy. Also James Forbe that was as amusing as it could pos- choir. Mr Lucian Ray presented sibly be. But The Torch Bearers really ha the literary subject it all Over all of them. It Is a loud Miss Nsrma Cummings who has lalaugh all the way through. The fun bored in ths Eastern States miarion never once lets up. It is continuous for two years and who Is returning and its quality is always first das her home spent a few days in Den-Ths shots 'at are lovely, ver last week, the guest of Mias Minnie' and th amateur performance as we Knight. see It at rehearsal and at the opening President John M. Knight returned night la simply irresistible to Denver Wednesday after a two Now, all this sort of thing appeals weeks tour, of visiting with the elder strenuously to ms of course but I in Wyoming, South Dakota and am not certain that ft wilt he so Walter Tneller and Seymore Kun appealing te the general pubHe. That remains to be seen. I can hardly see who are attending college In Colorado are spending a few weeks vacation in Logan. Utah, and Part Idaho. A farewell party waa given Wednesday evening at the Mission 'Homo in honor of Cornell Knight who left Thursday-eveni- ng for Van Hook, North Dakota, where be has been asIndian teach the school. to signed ths Cenver Tuesday afternoon Branch Relief society held a delightful outing at Washington park. A d was present and a delightful picnic was enjoyed. Outdoor games " were participated In. The Misses Emily McDonald and Amy Cooper who havo been attending the Columbia University tn New Tork during the summer in company with Miss lone Hulbert who has spent th summer in East Orange, N. J., apent two days in Denver on their return trip to Baft Lake City, and Were the 'Muslcalcoraedy." , h till. Opens Tonight tr F4 1 THE MOST BEAUTIFUL BALLROOM IN AMERICA DANCING INFOR3IAL M .' e The Utah Farmer j Ths September Fth issue of The Utah Farmer attractive bath in appearance and content. This issue contains a new feature s page of cuts of handy farm appllcance by C. J. L nde. with dlrectlonfor thq., construction of the same. - There are also special agricultural stories by authors , who know local problems and understand how to deal with then. The livestock, dairying and poultry departments are well provided with a fund of timely and practical information. All the latest news of the state and the nation about what farm bureaus are doing. given In the Farm Bureau section. - Dr. Harris writes interact Ingly to boy on "Education for Farming, end Unclb Ben. like the brook, still . . t fjpws on. j The women and girls will like the Home and Community page, and the suggestions to the housewife should be helpful. , The editorials are short and to ths a touch number of importpoint, and ant subject for Unexcelled Service - veritbale fairy- land." designed and decorated In exquisite harmony by Miss Florence Ware and bdr U. of U. art class. Ball room, parlors and dressing rooms conveniently arranged, rend distinctly Take Your Vacation Now Only a few days left in which to purchase tickets Coast at the Low Summer Excursion Fares, to the . . LosAngeles And Return An ideal ternity, class othef exclusive ties. SAN FRANCISCO gtepevers Allowed at all Pelats ea eaffcer rsetOe thus Tickets On Sale Dally letU September Seth Iectaelva, Ticket Office 147 South Main Street TrtkMe " Phone Wasatch do09 or Vasatch 3078. P. BANCROFT, District PassCnget Agfent ' fra. or par- CALL OR PHONE Was. 8120 S1ST Let us take care of you for tickets and make your reservations, 'j t suite for .dub, sorority, VIA FINAL LIMIT OCTOBER ! " e J Christensen's SCHOOL Of DANCING at nwTjppcnL . T Cooper took out her masters degree The Misses Nellie Porter, Minnie Knight, Carrie Olsen. Alice Klrkham. Della Mae Hlbbert, Ruby Nellson and Wllmlrih Johnson snjoyed a delightful day tn the mountains Friday. The party left early in company with Mr. Nix and motored over ML Lookout, through Bergen Park to Echo lake. A dinner was snjoyed at Bergen Park Elder Hcnry- - W. Stokes and XTrban S. Madsen, who hare been doing country work this summer ground FL Morgan, were transferred to Denver last week. Elder Stoke who has completed his mission, wa honorably released. aElders G. Byron Done and Wllford Capson, In company with Mr G. A. Don who are returning from the Central States mission, stopped In Denver and visited mist on headquarter. I The Beehive girls of the Denver branch held a picnic outing tn Washington park Thursday afternoon. The (girle had aa special guests tbs offl- cere of the Young Ladies organisation, ths Misees Etta Mae Comic, Ma bel Hickman, and Beene Htii. nh Mta Florence Hickman- .- Th Beehive work for the eeming yuae will be supervised by Miss Minnie Knight, 4- Y x -- . Are you in a hurry? ,. Havent time to run down town? Need something or somebody quickly? Cant wait a minute and you want RESULTS t What Men Admire Moat in Women U Perfect Health the Sign of Strength Calif "Dr. Bakersfield, lerctt Prearrlptum" has- - been a great help to m as a tonlo and narvlns and I am glad to gtvs It mf recommendation. health My bad become very poor; I was- - suffering with Inward weakness, was nervous, could not sleep, and lost I was wsak and sufmy appetlt fered with baekeehee and pains In my side and my limbs 'ached . I was a physical wreck when I began taking ths 'Favorite Prescription but It completely cured me of al- l- my weakness and built me up Into h good he .thy, strong condition." Mrs. J. BUngley, Slit - Go now to your nearest drug store and obtain this wonderful Prescription of Dr Pierre's- In tablets or liquid or send 10c for- - trial pkg. to Dr. Pierces Invalids Hotel, In Buffalo. N !., and write for fret medical advice. N i They will take your ad see that it is properly written and classified you of all the. work and both, er, and you pay for the ad when The . News presents the bill. Simple, isnt it? After thi PHONE YOUR WANT ADS 7 C ThE DESERET NEWS . . Wasatch 550 the number that stands for- SERVICE and SATISFACTION -- Ady, k ! - K at once? tvorW Q St. - .1- ing this summer. - I W Now Open A 7 o The Deseret News Expert ad takers, courteous and efficient, are always ready to give you instant attention. - large-crow- forRental mm Phone Wasatch 550 - UseSoutherriPacificLines Phone-You- r -- - , t AA L 4 .ok ' |