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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Circumstances Alter Cases SUCH IS LIFE Broadway Nears End. of Old Glory and Glamour . Gyps and Fakers Move In Great White Way. New York. Broadway, UnishetV-throu- gh 911 they say. ! . be heard-block, away .What would 'the' producer, proud ot Ids Broadway.-thinof the street . today, Who knew hi'm often w.onder. . ' And yet there are those who still love the old. one-tim- e cow trail for all "' its stialdilness and Jack of spirit. "Those convinced, that 'Broadway Is dooiji'ed are already casting about for a possible successor to the citys erstwhile "parade street.' Some think that . Radio. City now growing" up.ahmg Fifth, avenue a lew blocks below On tra.1 park." ina'y in time get to. he the city's uew famous "tiny White Way s Is . Once the fairest, brightest street In . all the world of happy the thoroughfare is fast losing its in divlduality In a riot of cheap movie fake" auction sales, pliys palaces, leal culture .parlors." hot dog and orangeade stands, and a hundred and one variations of the thimble riggers art run ont of" foiie.v island, as too blatantly cheap for' further sufferance. Sidewalk fakers abound on every block. At times .the interest of the moron groups they attract is such as to block the 'passageway find force pedestrians to the roadway. Barkers lie in wait in front of fly hy nigli' firfe and bankruptcy sacrifice 'sale' Joints ready to pull, in the "unwary." Llttle shops, flaunting shirw window displays of the latest .in lady's undies. nestle in .between. A shooting, gallery adds its clatter to the motley din. timke-belie.ve- Appeals to the Morons. .. Around the .corner on Forty-'seconstreet a flea circus is sandwiched in. between a dime a dance palace and ' a high pressure shoe repair Shop Cheap, tawdry, vplgar, rundown at and the heels. With no no- idea of" what means thats the Broadway of today to untold thousands who loved the Broadway. of yesterday. The degeneration ' of the' ' famous thoroughfare, nr rather that midtown stretch of it popularly associated with bright lights and broken "hearts, has become the subject of much lamentation by the dead. guard of the towns citizenry here of late. opera Outside, the Metropolitan house the Empire theater and one hotel theres hardly a- resort of the old. Broadway left between Madison "street where, square and Fifty-thirthe ugly L straddles across the sidewalks and seems to cut off further "progress to. the "north. The best the-- . White Light aters of the ' district now skulk along the side . streets as if ashamed , of the street" made famous. They . theif. predecessors Were driven off hy high rents, .of course, but the effect is the same. Many of those now remaining are boarded up for want of patronage. Others house nondescript movies. On the Whole street there is not tf be found a single .restaurant would class with Rectors,. Churchill's, Shanleys, the Hofbrau, or Browns Chop house. . The larger .cinema palaces which Currently form the thoroughfares theatricalchief attractions have besn "compelled to reduce prices generally to offset "the depression and the ' shows. competition of By Charles Sughroe TheVe has been considerable talk of late of the Metropolitan opera,, now in dire financial distress, moving "to the development and utagic "Uockefelleb .trying for a .new start, although the operas old guard" has .a "conniption offered. fit every time the suggestion-i.if opera should move over and the development was originally planned with a view, fo' making opera its heart center it is believed the best in theaters might follow.. . ' Others, think Fifth avenue, which so far Jias .stood adamant against encroachment by. the- theaters might and sacrifice eventually Capitulate to the towns cry. some of its dignity ing need for a new JktniisemeBt center Strapger things have happened.-. Wherever it is to' be. though, the town must have a new land of ft is written so say those in the know. . are pictured that" there is more good than evil in the world much more. 1 had heard a good deal about Mack before I met him. ne was certainly the citizen, I was given to understand. He had a nasty tongue NAZARETH hard-boile- d . By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Late Dean of Men; ' University of Illinois. in his cheek, It was said :Naza"reth you Will recall, had a very bad reputation. If anyone two "thousand years' ago in a moment of thoughtlessness ad-- , mitted that he voted in Nazareth,- he was given the cold glassy STarel" Anyone coming, from that village had to bring pretty strong recommendations if he expected to break into respectable society. The town was knowp to be full .of thugs . - - mak-believ-- . To the American and British Navies and bootleggers men. The women. in Nazareth were not thought to be all they should be. Society was nt low eb.b. And yet there was good in Nazareth; In spite, of Its reputation, "for there is where the Savior, of the world came from. . . if there is tine thing more than an-- . ' other that ah- experience, "of many ' years has impressed upon me It is that people are seldom as bad as th6y and hold-u- p " ' ( , j ! d J I . . - ' . ; he had committed all sorts of irregularities. He might with propriety havo been one of the leading citizens of Nazareth, had I given credence to half that waa alleged about him. In reality his loud talk was a barrage to conceal his and embarrassment . Brown was pledged to an organization, soon after he entered college and shortly afterward he came to me to say that he was quite dissatisfied with his choice. He didn't like some of the fellows and he was minded to break his pledge. Dont do it" I suggested, for a month at least, and during that time try to forget the things which have annoyed you and to find In these young fellows the fine qualities which I am sure they possess. I haven't any doubt but that the things which irritate you and make yon dissatisfied are superficial and will disappear when you know the men better. It was quite so. At the end of the month the men whom he had liked the least were his closest friends because he had come to value them for the sterling qualities which they really . possessed. Had we lived in Nazareth I am sure w'e should have found. many very people. ! self-respe- ! self-respe- ct d d which-old-timer'- s - They Still Love It. a tradition that Charles is There Frohman, walking up Broadway from his "office in the Empire one day, noticed a sign proclaiming a new bake 'shop or some establishment equally unpretentious, and was moved to let out a short o indignation that could ' ih' Marketer of Grain strife." In these days" of curtailment there Is a sense.of refresh' ment In the' words. In many homes when money was plentiful, there was ing with . If it was- epjoyed with a feasting. spirit, . if true pleasure peaceful abounded as well as good food, "then there was t mental and spiritual quietas well as sue ness, tain. But If hilarity only accompanied the good things to eat on which .so much money had been spent, and un derneath.all there was' a sense of un easiness, of living on .the surface In apparent 'harmony which crusted over a volcano of 'discord' which- - would .break forth eventually, jfhere was feasting with strife and It was fffr void of actual pleasure hnd-.o- f hap . pines8. There Is no discounting thp value'of meney'ln the world qs it Is, or" the equivalent of gold find' silver should form of exchange In fuThis meuioria'l arch is being erected .by the United States .'at Gibraltar- in some-othe. ture years be substituted. But . with honor of the of the "American and 'British navies In the World in the past two years there has come ". war." Warships .of both nations wifi be present at. the unveiling. ' In. many homes, the realization Hint money ls.ijot everything, to use a trite cares for the comfort of her, guests." term". Members of- a family who, when It is surprising how many bfth'e virabundant, could go their money tues of good entertaining are negative. own- ways independently, of one an The. do not's are almost as numerous other, whose'interests clashed, or were; as the dos The role do not make so divided that they scarcely touched, . includes "your, guest uncomfortable made a house divided against Itself. By LYDIA LE BARON WALKER many details." L)o not iet the. running-o- When such strife enters In,. the dec. the household he felt any more laration Is "IT canned stand. . Better ' than absolutely necesshry. do not ik a A tactless hostess" "who "stresses the dry morsel, with quietness, there loss of some article during the stay" spread word .of any friction. It the wlt.h, than a house, in which there, is wrong order is sent from" the. store, lack of unity and consequent nnhap of a friend in her home, may occasion "let It only be very lightly mentioned, the- latter much' discomfort. that piness, even- - though . in . It there is .Is necessary to. do. so at all. .A abundance of- worldly .substance and it is suggested that "the guest is in any if it would rattier eat a less" Impos' sustenance. way responsible through intentioii or guesf ing meal In comfort, "than" to" know Of It Is when a "common bond of inter rarelessless. But It mars the smooth elaborate plans- - gone wrong. Some est "exists, bidding fill members togeth ness of the household, and-ikept times, 'to "very Iqtimnte friends, It may er, that" "clashing diversions . sink" to. a .long time the' guest may read be- mentioned with humor and .en their level of insignificance In a fam ihto such lnsik; as a joke, but even this may : joyed Inily.' a false tehee, not. prove, Us merry as not mentioning WNU . 19SJ Servtea. Balt Syndicate, terpretation. There it at "all. (lire the hiirden of your dis are 'many visitors-sensitivnot to the guest In-- your enough td pleasure,but to the one. responsible for home,be made to feel ill at ease by the .fhe mistake, if spefi it was. . . . Cementr Home Harmony Jack of harmony in such a- c 1 r c.u in- . . There is .an old proverb which says stance. They .may Better is & drymoTsel, and qdletness also begin, to wontherewith, than a hotlse full of feast der why t is being continually . men-t.loneGrimes Limbers Up. before them, Bat kan'i oar chanea whin our homeland ncodi mi moat, Lat PATRONIZE and PUSH and BOAST. For LOCAL INDU8TBT. I Runners Slip Along Horses can pull far heavier loads on runners over snow than on -- wheels. EXCHANGE I MUITY MIT CHICKS POULTRY SUPPLIES for. Grain, Field Seeds, or Write, phone, or call for particulars. Phono Hj. 8672 Hur. 68. Smith Cash Feed and Fael Company 110 Weat SSrd So. Salt Laka City. UL Exchanged Livestock. Lighthouse Leaning for Years Cape Romain lighthouse, one of the earliest on the South Carolina coast, has been leaning for more than 60 years. 3,1 flw M am Uki Qtf, Utah luitj Ciltm Prelistiii Run m Dipmsiti Tm cm m Inn i rtluslM dut m nik, ym MiytM mt Tin name ADDRESS l THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY the While wo iro concerned with wayi end means of rcetorinr cur country to its former prosperity, )ets remember that ono of the moat effective ways and ona which will briny about quicker results to us, is to patronize cur Inicrmountain Industries We can build up our Intermountein Region hr nsin g luternuunta n Made Goods and hr uainff Intermountain Labor, thus brine Inc prosperity and t?ood limes' to ourselves ard out c untry. MI33 ALBERTA MICKELSON, 8t. George, Utah StBaByTCKicKs1 Place Your Order Now iKki Hi r - U Ramshaw Hatcheries J III w-a- f up-fo- r , lit, City, ASK YOUR DRUGGIST . - Ji. Sun Stmt. Jill Hit There are only a very few wild ostriches to be found in. South Africa, and these are. protected by law. f - if fnlicIlM - The Household lull, HUN yiyilw liilints, lilt, IccllniliL N MlHlti Ina nr Inf yur kiMfiri. Hi try flttrlbylyri hr bmfirt, ni Lincoln cklct IhIiu. grin In lyielil yrlcn if ent llteiuu u wfiri ylicif Mu. Willi Fm Recognizing the unusual ability of Miss Lucy Ilennon, who lias marketed nearly a billion bushels of grain in seven years, directors of the Ohio her Equity exchange havetheir secretary and manager. At the helm, of the' marketing concern. Miss Ilennon in seven years has handled $.',732,440 in business. ODD THINGS AND NEW - if the hostess bell e v e s there Js some .point in her so. doing, and eventually to. become definitely upset by - -By Lame Bode APEX FOR ASPIRIN AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT JPEJP BB GASOLINE - Packed With Power America, from the days of the. Pilgrim Fathers till now, has attracted the most intelligent and active of Europe. In Trade For Your UTAH WOOLEN MILLS BLANKETS Salt Lak, City, Utah for Sampl, Excellent Velnee-Sen- d Wool Pathfinder Phil says: If the average man could live his life over again hed probably be a bigger fool than ever. it Case in Point. s i v e.r vase was the lost Article in one incident known tome. A 1 frequently was its loss spoken of in the presence of became the chief re So CASH PAID . a guest that It current topic of conversation for some days. The subject was not an inspiring one, and bood became very tiresome. Talking of it did no good and made a guest in the house feel uncomfortable. A member of the family who had been away where the vase was. He had taken It for flowers and It was in use at the very time In the hallway. Being an accomplished host he made every effort to make up for (he social breech in entertaining which his wife He was filled with had committed embarrassment that such a subject should have been dwelt npon at Guests Viewpoint. A certain amount of imagination Is a good quality In any hostess, wb-knew-ex--act- A reversible full length cape of checked cotton faced in white broadcloth. The apache hat and the umbrella with rubbers folded into Its handle are also in the fabric. I NOW In Si rad el yam Uys. SIS hi nmtk mty tor tu nayiiig new N tii onto. ItmUyiti mt tin while ym Inn pUfc New a grin In mt uUIhm. Mill li cnyec. - - For the Rainy Day nt thing." warn t. Bali things go. hard war Utah High School of Beauty Culture - J" tin, low. Tha (), 1913, Western Newspaper Union.' - - Sally Sez Fir Jiwilrr Distal Crown. Bridgts GuM Ms W. M. LICENSES tilt 64 Sill Reftrtnet Ut. Si. Nitl. Bank. I Sll t Etc. Jewslsr CONAHAY, MTU tl Sill liki City I ml yirctl ynt I ficktkrilf tuff ip tifiy rijkt will ki ritirul u yei N ny cisk NIn It (I. S. in uiliiiciwy. Aiuy Office Dirw Pikes Peak Railway There i3 a cog railway, 8.75 miles "long, to the top of Pikes peak. ly all.-Th- e DM per week will be paid for the beet article on Why you made ehould use Intermountain Goods' Similar to above. Send your story in prose or verse to Intermountain Products Column, P. O. Box 1555, Salt Lake City. If your story appear in thie $3.00 Burleigh Grimes,- - famous pitcher of the Chicago Cubs, is seen limbering up his throwing muscles at the training camp of the team on Catalina Island, California. . rd column you will ceive check for re- WNU Service.. W.-v-k Nj. 3313 W.N.U. Salt Lake City |