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Show - THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH prasiaEiBfsiaaafaffl News Notes Its a Privilege to Live in MEAL Utah a isi'a'aa'aiEraiia'aiSciiiiinnrsfiaiiaitnia'sS Salt Lake City. Ralph W. Seybolt, for whose execution the district court has four times fixed the date did not face the firing squad. H. E. Crockett in conference with the state board of pardons of which he is chairman decided to grant the convicted murdered of patrolman David Crowther his second reprieve. Ogden. The U. S. reclamation service has not yet decided whether to build a high dam or low dam at American Falls, Idaho, hence the concrete operations on the dam have been suspended for about thirty days, according to W. L. Watis, secretary of the Utah Construction company, which is building the dam. The construction of the wall on the east side of Snake river has been completed to a height specified for the low dam. A coffei dam on the west side of the rivei also has been completed and excavation is now under way. Salt Lake City. The application oi the town of Huntsville for permission to charge a flat ratff of $1 a month for each water service connection was dismissed by the public utilities commission ef Utah on motion of the applicant. Park City. Drilling into a missed hole while working at the Silver King Coalition mine, Fred Sundell, 25, and Riley Lake, 26, were injured. Sundell was taken to a Salt Lake The charge struck him in hospital. the face, injuring his eyes. Lake slight injuries. Salt Lake City. Harry L. Finch and Arthur L. Barnes, incumbents, and P. J. Moran and Berkley Olson were nominated as candidates for city commissioner, as shown by the complete returns In the primary election, here. Alvin Keddington, present city auditor and Frank P. Walts were ths successful candidates for auditor. Price. Believing that the salaries paid to city officials at the present as well as in the past, are so small as to bo ridiculous and are not sufficient to so much as compensate them their bare expenses while acting in their civic capacities, members of the city council have decided on an increase for the next two years. of the Bingham. All employees various mines in this district are expected to be inoculated against tyNotices to this effect phoid feyer. have been posted and the mining companies assume the expense. Price. Prediction is made by O. P. Madsen, county agricultural agent, that the Carbon production of sugar beets during 1925 will approximate 6000 tons. This would make the crop just twice that of 1924, which figures just disclosed show ran about 3000 makes your food do you more good. Note how It relieves Chat stuffy feeling after hearty eating. Sweetens the breath, removes OfiS Cl food particles from the teeth, gives new vigor to tired nerves. Comes to you fresh, clean and Inexplicable Neglect With an army pension of $5 a week lying accumulated for five months la the post office because he did not taka time to get It, Jeremiah Kenny of Munster, Ireland, was arrested for neglecting ills five children, after ons had died of starvation. suf-ferre- By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN ATS off! Face to the East! It Is the recurring moment sacred beyond all the power of the spoken and written word the .eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, when silence fell upon the guns. So has It been fdr six anniversaries of Armistice Day. So may it be in 1925. So may it be as long as the 4 United States of America endures. . For when the clamor of eoafllct died on that fateful day the cheers of the victors were more than cheers of victory. Thanksgiving thrilled every heart. Hope once more sprung - eternal In the human ljreagt. Joy can- - e upon the earth once more. Each good American will Interpret the moment of silence of Armistice Day according to his sexEerience and understanding. And may. each say to himself: I will remember while the light lasts .and to the darkness I will not forget. . War .' I abhor; ; ' ' .. And yet how sweet . ' ' The sound along the marching; street ' Of drum or fife, and I forget . . ; . Broken old mothers, ' . and the whole ' Dark butchering wlthqut a spuL , ' ' 1 peace-abidin- " , . , - emb.-innere- . There were'tllen ... .. Oh, it is wickedness to clothe Yon hideous, grinning thing Hats . . - . off! ..... . 1 . ' . land-fight- the British. But we had the Constitution American designed, American built and- - American manned. First phe escaped from a whole squadron of British frigates in a historic chase of three nights and two days. Then she fell in with the Guerrlere. The two crack frigates closed like two fighting bullterriers. They knew each other. They were looking for each other. Then Dacres loudly cries: "Make th Yankee ship ' . ' ypur "prize You can In thirty minutes, Thirty-five- " s neat and handy, Oht enough. Im sure, and, if you'll do It In a score, treat you to a double " and grim and great. Fought to make and to save the State; Weary marches and sinking ships; . Cheers of victory on dying lips; s of peace; Pays, of plenty March of a strong lands swift Increase; Equal justice, right and law; Stately honor and reverent awe; Sign of a nation, great and strong, To ward her people from foreign wrong; Pride and glory and honor all Live In the Colors to stand or fall. And' this, too, Is no Jess a part of Armistice Day. For Old Glory the oldest Flag of earth and the handsomest Flag and the Flag that has never, t will be much In evidence at the known tomb of the Unknown Dead Id Arlington, the observance national shrine where the nation-wid- e of Armistice Day will have its focus. And Old Glory and the Unknown Soldier stand for one end the same tiling the old, old American ideal: 1eace with honor and patriotic devotion to counfry. Oid Ironsides and Mayflower. Constitution and Mayflower side by side a fitting picture (No. 4) for Armistice Day "and a suggestive one: Glorious "Old Ironsides, built at tbe Instance of the firs--t President of the United States, George Washington, and the Presidential Sea-figh- ts in seventeen. that stalks Along the street there comes A blare of bugles, a rutile of drums, A flash of color beneath the sky; The Flag is passing by. But more than the Flag is passing by. 1,042 warships ' navy and in the American navy there were Just Hidden music like a queen. That in a garden of glory walks, J. Till good men love the things they loathe; . Art, tho-- hast many infamies. But not an infamy like this. O, snap the fife and still the drum, And show the monster as she is. Tea; War Is hell," as Sherman said. And no small partjof the prayer and resolve of Armistice Day is for Peace, . op earth good will toward men." ; p.ut In that hat And Great Britain was no loss stunned than was Captain Dacres by the Constitutions victory. August 30, 1812, all was gloom in Rpston. Gen. William Hull had surrendered Detroit without a semblance of defense. The garrison at Fort Dearborn (Chicago) had been massacred. On land the wur was a story of disaster after disaster. And then appeared the Constitution bedecked with flags and guns booming victory. The nation rejoiced and took fresh heart. The Constitution soon departed to outsail, outraaneuver and outfight the enemy ns before. Was Old Ironsides providential? Judge for yourself. Anyway, she is a national institution, worthy of her third restoration this time at the hands of American school' 'children ' rfa-tk- ' Without a soul save this bright treat Of heavy music, sweet as hell; g And feet my Go marching with the marching street, For yonder goes the fife, . . . And what care I for human Life; . The tears filled my astonished eyes, ' And my full heart is like to break, . ' ' And yet it is d lies, . A dream those drummers makes . . - yacht of the thirtieth President, Calvin Coolidgel For It was the Constitution that put the American Navy on the seas more than one hundred years ago. And it Is from the Mayflower that the President views the American Navy of today as It passes In review before him as Its commander In' chief. One would wish mightily to be privileged to know the thoughts of this thirtieth President as he paid his homage at this national shrine this summer at Boston. "Old Ironsides Is as truly an American national shrine as is the tomb of the Unknown "KoKHer.? For she was as truly symbolical of the nation In her day as Is the Arlington tomb in this. The Revolution gave us our independence, but left our affairs In chaos. The adoption of d writ ten constitution and the election of George Washbut a nation ington as President made us a without a navy. Said Washington in an annual address: To secure respect to a neutral flag requires a naval force organized and ready to vindicate it from Insult and aggression. Congress turned a dea-- f ear. But the piratical extortions of the Barbafy states enforced the truth of Lis words and the Constitution and her sister warships were built. Thereupon we brought the Mediterranean" pirates to terms 'and' taught France to let alone our merchant ships. . But We Had the Constitution. But by 1812 Great Britain, fighting for her title of Mistress of the Seas, was Impressing our seamen and seizing our cargoes. So war was declared to assert our Inalienable rights upon the seas. It was a forlorn hope, If there even was one. s, and-year- ! share of brandy, Oh! Ill That was Captain Dacres to his men typical of the British naval commander made arrogant by easy victories over Frenchman and Spaniard apd the rest of the world; sneeringly scornful of the "American pine boxes with Ihelr gridiron flags. Dacres had laughed at Capt. Isaac Hull Just before the declaration of war, warned him to keep in harbor and bet him a hat the Guerrlere would knock tlie Constitution Into kindling wood In short ' order if they ever met. Let us imagine the spirit of the .Americans as they closed In. Hull had slipped out of Boston Just before an order arrived for him to stay In port ; on the outcome of Ills battle hung giory or death for sailing without orders.. Many of the crew had martyred ancestors who lmd died In the British prison ships of the Revolution'; Hull's, father had so died in the pest ship Jersey. Many bore. Jhq scars of British lashes after Impressment. The war on land had been a failure from the beginning. And for the first time an American frigate was to meet on equal terms a , . warship of the Mistress of the Sens! After Jyst 40 minutes of fighting the Ouerffere was a dismasted and sinking wreck, with 78 of her crew dead and wounded; the Constitution was intact, with 14 dead and wounded. Dacres was too dazed at the outcome to surrender. Hull said, No, keep your sword. But HI trouble you for first-clas- s - Object Lesson In Peace. What an object lesson of pea&e. Is shown today by p.u.r two countries to all the world! 'No' grim-face- d fortifications mark our no huge battle-- . our dividing- waters, no stealthy spies ships patrol lurk our tranquil border hamlets. . . . Our protection Is In our fraternity, our armor Is our faith, and the tie that binds, more firmly each year, Is acquaintance and comradeship through Interchange of citizens; and the compact Is not of perishable parchment, but of fair and honorable dealing which, God grant, shall continue for aU Jime. These words by Warren G. Harding, twenty-jiint- h President of the United frtetes, are written in bronze on the Harding International Good Will memorial recently dedicated in Stanley park, Vancouver, B. C. (No. 2). It was erected by the voluntary subscriptions of 03,000 American and Canadian members of Klwanig International. It was placed there, rather tianTn Washington or Marion, because it was at Vancouver that the first Presi-- . dent of the United States to visit Canada spoke these words. A bronze tablet contains ills profile portrait. Bronze figures symbolizing the United States and Canada stand guard. Another fitting picture for Armistice Day and a suggestive one! In the seven years since November 11, 1918, all the world lias come to know what the Banner and the Unknown Soldier stand for. And the great of earth, setting foot on our shoreR, hasten to pay homage at this natlfiwl and international shrine. One day it Is , President Machado of Cuba (No. 1). And the next It is Joseph Cuillaux, minister of finance of the French who worship the individual hero, as shown by their memorial Seeger, American soldier poet who kept his Rendezvous With .Death (No. 3). We do not know the eminence of this Unknown Soldiers birth, but we do know the glory of hie death. lie died for his country and greater devotion hath no man than this. So said the kindly gentleman and true patriot who lias Gone West to join the boys Over There. And President Hardings words are founded on the eternal verities. We Americans are fortunate in having national holidays that are peculiarly our own. On Independence Day we celebrate our birth as the one nation of earth dedicatedfreedom and the rights of nmn. On Memorial Day we honor our patriotic dead who lind the will to offer life Itself In loyalty to the Flag, tin ThnnUsgiving Day we give to Divine Providence our thanks the thanks of a Christian people for (lie guidance that has made ns the most prosperous nnd powerful nation of earth. Flag Day nnd Defense Day nnd Navy Day are equally in accord with the (rue national spirit of the American people, All. the holiday embody the genius of the American nation. Armistice Day has something of each 0f these truly American holidays. The Unknown Soldier truly symbolizes every man and every woman who give their best .when, the cation calls. ng Star-Spangl- -- - tons. of Ogden. With the completion Gibbons pass in Idaho, now under construction by the W. S. Craven Construction company of Ogden, the automobile route betweeh Ogden and Spokane, "Wash., will be approximately 200 miles shorter than the present auto route, according to B. J. Finch, district engineer of the U. S. Bureau of public roads, who has returned from an inspection tour of Idaho. Flapjacks and syrup how they spread sunshine in hearts and stomachs these nippy days! Tempo ing (Tender ! Easy to makel Easy to digest! Albers stands fin Better Breakfast Find Dinosaur Track In the PiiPther mine of the United States Fuel company, near Salt Lake City, great dinosaur tracks, two and throe feet across, have been found. The tracks are in solid sandstone, surrounded by black coal. A Lady of Distinction Is recognized by the delicate, fascinating Influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores followed by a dusting with Outicnra Talcum powder usually means a clear, gweet, healthy skia, Advertisement Nothing but Leaves "What do you think of the trend oi feminine fashions? I have Just planted a fig orchard." New Haven Register. Provoi An explosion at the Republic Creosote companys plant destroyed two stills and otherwise damaged the plant to the extent of about $500. Four men who were working in close Your heels stay neat end to the stills miraculously-escapeinjury when the explosion Coke and tar were sent occurred. 250 feet ifitO the ain proximity Salt Lake City. On last Monday morning the work of razing another of landmarks of the city was started. The church historians building at 60 East South Temple street will yield to the inarch of progress and in its place will be built medical arts building the eight-storThe historwhich will cost $350,000. ian's building has stood for sixty years and has been closely associated with the history of the L. D. S, In 1917 the office of the church. church historian was transferred to the new church office building and eince then the Utah Conservatory of Music has occupied it. Of late the building has housed several musical studios. y comfortable twice os lonq with fijSKIDE J'OPUFTS GET THEM ssw NEW SHOE 9 BEPAUtMAM OM United States Rubber Company ARE YOU GOING HUNTING, CAMPING, touring, or (Maying at home? In any event will prove Invaluable to HOT-PAyou. KOM-iSis a chemical heating pad that replaces hot water bottles and other devices, but requires no FIRE, STEAM or ELECTRICITY, la ready for Instant use wherever a tablespoon of water la obtainable. KOM-E- HOT-PA- T C Will ODORLESS, SANITARY, HARMLESS. not rot or leak; can be carried any place. Regular $2,611 value. To Introduce, $1.6t postpaid anywhere In U, S. Dealers wanted. KOM-K- T MFG. COMPANY 209 (tan Fernando Bldg., Lot Angeles, Calif. L. D. S. Business College school or erncicNCY Catalog free. SALT LAKe CITY. UTAH All oocunercial branches. Salt Lake City. Comparatively cheap chicken feed and particularly god prices for eggs are proving stimulating to the poultry industry in Utah. This situation has created a strong demand for pullets, which the All poultry-me- n market cannot supply. who have what in other years might be considered surplus numbers of pullets are holding them and if they can obtain more. won-lerin- OO N. Mala SL INFLAMED EYES Use Dr. Thompson's Hyewaber. Buy at roar druggist's or 1161 River, Troy, N. Y. Booklet. BARBER COLLEGES Learn barber trade. Catalogue free. Diplomas leaned. Holer Barber College, 114 Regent St. g Salt Lake City. Removal of the municipal waterworks from city politics by placing this department un-le- r a board to be elected and to have powers analagous to those exercised aver the school system by the board education and the furtherance of legislation to this end, was indorsed by the board of governors of the Df chamber of commerce in considering a report submitted by the chambers committee on municipal water supply covering the results of more that fifteen months' research. tt tends to promote good health, strengthen tbs digestive organs and to keep the stomach In good condition. At Aft DruypteU. xsb HotHcrna oo.. pirrabucon, pa. W. N. U Salt Laka City, No. |