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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH Intermountain NICARAGUA News Briefly told for Busy Readers ' Copyright by Hal FIVE CENT FARE OKEIL PREFER UTAH ALFALFA FORECLOSURES II LTED RESURFACE OLD TR IL rOCATELLO,- IDA. Initial ar- -. rangements are being made here for about three hundred reservations . for the annual Rotary district assembly' and conference, which opens ' ' May 4th. COEUR DALENE, IDA. Flavil- la Plneo; 82, known as 'the sister of the original of Mark Twain's famous fiction character, Tom Saw- -.' yer, died here recently. Mrs. Tin eo was a native of Ottawa, I1L and re, ported as the last living member of the Immediate Sawyer family.MOSCOW, IDA. Beryl, the only . recognized ore of berylium, has been found In considerable quantities In Latah county mica deposits which In the past have produced commercial mica valued at more than-thousand dollars.- BOISE, IDA. The Jaw repealing the gin marriage provision of the marriage license laws of Idaho will ' go Into effect op May 1. This will be in time, to allow Idaho to reap the benefit; .of the May ahd'June' ! . weddings. BOISE, IDA. The Old Oregon Trail between Boise aapd Mountain r. Ilome is to be resurfaced this f , ' sum-..me- . ' . . f . '. . .... .' ST. ANTHONY, IDA. A chlori-natinstalled on the water system of St. Anthony is declared as likely to stop the typhoid outbreak reported here. or Star valley anticipate making this a record year in home beautification, with planting one of its major projects. Arr mgements have been made with the supi rintendent of the state experiment farm at Aft on, to supply valb-- resident with trees for transplanting. AFTOX. WYO. t'-e- e Investigation Throws Light on Civilizations of the Long Past. YOU think it is hard to break ln- to motion pictures in America you should try it in my native country. The Swedish government encourages young boys and girls In their theatrical aspirations and endeavors to remove as many obstacles from their path as possible. This, in Itself, Is an encouragement to the ambitious but, by giving nearly everybody an equal chance, makes the competition even sharper than it Is In the United States. Nicaraguan Boya Robbing (Prepared by National Geographic Society e. Washington". , PEACE L. C'.) has WNU Serrl-- been promised resi-den- ts to with the signing of a recently between the rebels ' who have caused turmoil for sev- eral years, and the central ment. . , govern-.- , . Nett to peace, Nicaraguas .greatest needs are improved means of trans- portation and ' communication. At' present the national railway system consists of a line, some 150 miles long, funning from the principal Pacific coast port of Corinto, via Leon, to the capital city, Managua,- and on to Graline-- ' A' nada and linking Lake. Nicaragua with San Juan del Sur,- a' few private lines,' and a three-mil- e steam tramway swell the republics, total railway mileage to 190 miles. Jn vet weather most of the roads of the country are traversable but' some 3,000 miles, .only by of surfaced highways have been completed or are' under' construction. Although Nicaragua Is the largest state of Central America about .equal in area to New York stater its population is. only equal to that of Pitts" of the Inburgh, Pa. Three-fourthlive in the mountainous and habitants upland western half of the country. . .The history of the republic- Is a chronicle of the- sufferings of the massed, principally .of mixed Spanish and Indian descent, under kaleidoscopic changes of government It Is recorded that in one period of 16 years 396 persons in succession exercised supreme power an average period of control of hardly more than two' weeks per. ruler! Among the most dramatic incidents of Nicaraguas past was the William Walker episode, which In ft measure paralleled the Maximilian tragedy In Mexico. During five years of his tempestuous career this y'oung American advent-uVebeeatne in furn 'liberator, virtual .dictator, president, and a refugee from Nicaragua. Twice arrested ' and deported by United States forces, he was finally made a prisoner by an officer of the British navy and was surrendered to Honduran authorities; .who tried and ' coademnad- - him to be shot. ' He was executed September 12, Dir-iamb- TROYO, UT Farmers, who purchase alfalfa seed for planting this ' spring should be careful- - to select ' varieties grown in the state and ' not southern grown seed,. according 'to the county agricultural agent'. Reports have been received that alseed produced in Arizona and . falfa ' southern California is being sold in . .. ' Tests have shown 'seed . ' . the state. in more humid localities do not pro- duce as good results as the Utah " variety. BOISE, IDA. Gov. C.- - Ben Ross ' has Issued a proclamation-suspend-- . . lng mortgage foreclosures for sixty ' ' days. The goei;nor in his proelamn- tion invoked the authority of the' banking and mortgage holiday law enacted by the last session of 'the. ' ; legislature. OGDEN, FT. The five cent fare . has been adopted permanently by' . the local street railway. SALT, LAKE CITY, UT. Vig-orous measures will have to be'.fol- lowed to check the- Increase in deaths from tuberculosis due to the ' depression, it was declared by Miss New York, director of L. ' child health-.othe National Tuber- culosis association, on her arrival, for a visit in Salt Lake. . ' BOISE, IDA. A reduction of wa- ter rates for residents of the city of . Jerome has been approved by the public utilities commission. ' OGDEN, FT. Committees of the Utah Canners association and the .' Utah canning . crops committee of the Utah State Farm Buread-fed-- . eration have announced that "they had. .readied an agreement on tile as prices of tomatoes for the season follows: No. 1. $9.50 a ton- - and No.. 2, '$4 a ton: Last year No. 1 toma,- -' , . toes brought $10.50 a ton and No. 2, $4. no a ton. , BOISE, IDA. Salary reductions . for state employes ranging from 12' . . to 23 per cent have" been approel-bthe state board of examiners to . make a saving estimated by Gover- , nor Ross, chairman of the board, .' ' at in excess of $200,000 for the hi- . epriium. , SALT LAKE CITY, UT. More than $100,000 in federal funds will be loaned Utah and southern Idaho 'poultrymen this spring through the Poultry Finance Corporation of .Utah to be ued in the purchase and feeding of baby chicks, it is indicated by reports received here,'. TIIERMOPOLIS, WYO. Mts. Y. ' Bridger Ilahn, the last surviving Indian child of Jim Bridger, famous Scout, trapper and guide, died here recently at the age of S4 years. Mrs. Ilahn was the daughter of Bridg-- ; ' er's second wife, a Ute Indian woman. ' OGDEN, UT. Support of tl.e . Ogdrn river reservoir project should be ghen by Ogden business and men and its adoption by . ' the United States government should be urged, Ir. William Peterson of ' . the Utah Slate Agricultural college, deilarod at a weekly meeting of the Rotary club held here. UT. The Sevier RICHFIELD, district schools are with the Smith Sevier chapter of ' the American Red Cross in raising the $70 quota of the local chapter for relief purposes in the earth. quake disaster region in Cali-fornia. - I IF - . Herman By GRETA GARBO BEAUTIFY STAR VALLEY ' C e - - r I- . - . . noes lying parallel to the Pacific sea- board; and her two great lakes, Managua and Nicaragua, the latter being the largest sheet of fresh water in the Americas south of Lake Michigan and north of Lake Titicaca in the highlands of Bolivia and Ieru. Nicaragua enjoys the advantage of having almost at her door an eager customer for all her agricultural prods ucts. The United States buys of all the republics exports, and s in return the latter purchases two-third- three-fourth- of her imports from us. Three of Nicaraguas cities have frequently basked in the news spotlight Managua, the present capita, and Leon and Granada, each of which have aspired to become the first city, particularly since the devastating earthquake which nearly wiped out Managua in 1931. Managua has a population of approximately 60.090, but its importance is largely political. It Is the distributing center for coffee from the hills Time Well Spent Life Is not so short but that there Is always time for courtesy. Emerson. Tired . . Nervous Wife Wins Back Pepl TIER raw nerves i were soothed. She banished that dead tired" feel lng. Won new youthful color restful nights, active days all because she rid her system of bowel-cloggiwastes that were sapping her vitality. NR Tablets (Natures Remedy) the mild, safe, laxative worked the transformation. Try it for constipation, biliousness, colds. See how you feel At all druggists 25 cents. "ti ims" HIGHEST CASH PRICES for several carloads Draft Horses and Mules. How many can you ship quick? Fred Chandler, Chariton, la. The quickest relief for a headache is two tablets of Bayer Aspirin. The tablet bearing the Bayer cross dissolves very rapidly and brings rapid relief. There is no known medicine that works quite like Bayer Aspiriu for the awful head and face pains of neuralgia. There is nothing with quite the same effectiveness in relieving rheumatism. . - cattle. The most striking physical features of Nicaragua are her chain of volca- a laxative three for a cathartic. Adv. - - ... - Dr. Pierces Pellets are best for liver, bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for . ; - to the south, which constitute the leading coffee section of the republic. An ancient Indian village existed on the site of Manngua when the Spaniards arrived. The town was of little importance until 1858 when the filibustering expedition oMVilliam Walker strangely Improved its lot. The rival cities of Leon and Granada had been capitals alternately. Walkers in- -. vasion' united the factions and Managua became the compromise capital. Making Managua Better. 'Hie towh is laid out in squares. Except for the National palace (the Capitol . building) and the president's residence, most of the buildings in Managua were small and low. They were constructed for the most part of a soft volcanic stone or of mud bricks (adobe).- These large, crude bricks are laid in a wooden frame and are plastered inside and out. These buildings were not highly Inflammable when standing and fires have been confined usually to single structures. Until recently Managua has had dirt .. streets alternately dusty and muddy and has lacked sanitary convenl- ences. During the last few years a campaign has been carried out under the supervision of American contractors and engineers. The town has been furnished with electric lights, waterworks, sewd ers, and paving. Approximately of the streets have been paved. There Is a good sized American colony In Managua, probably several hun--' dred civilians. A modern airport built by the United States marine forces has helped Managua to become one of the leading air terminals in Latin America--. Here passengers en route rudiments of technical grace as well to or from South America must change as to develop stage presence. planes.. It came to my mind that I might Leon and Granada are centuries-ol- d make good on the screen,' but since of being Nic. rivals for the distinction there are so few motion picture stuaraguas capital Each city was founddios in Stockholm, I thought I would ed in 1523, and In the succeeding two not really have a chance because so and a half centuries the seat of gov- many other girls were applying for ernment alternated between them. film work. Leon has been second in population Sweden has a traditional character in Nicaragua since Managua's rise to whose life lias been dramatized into po.wer. Located on the railroad that "Gosta- BerlingS Saga, which, in Eng .connects Managua and Granada with lish, means the story of Gosta Berllng. Corinto, the countrys principal seaI was familiar with the play, so port, Leon has enjoyed a consistent' when I heard that Director Mauritz flow of trade and has become one of Stiller was to produce it as a picture the transportation centers of Central at the Swedish Film Industry, Inc., I In the fertile mountain A.merica. determined to seek a role in the cast country surrounding Leon corn, sugar didnt have much hope of success cane, cattle and dairy products are but I put on my newest dress and tiie principal sources of wealth. squght an interview with Mr, Stiller. The town itself Is typical of many . . When I. talked with him 1 was much' small cities in Latin America. Low surprised to learn he had noticed me houses of adobe, covered with red on. the stage. The result of the interstreets. view was Unit I was given one of the ti.les, line the cobblestone Leons cathedral, started in 1610, is three important feminine roles in the one of the show places of Nicaragua. picture "of which Lars Larson, who is The city shows the effect of numerous now well known to screen audiences, revolutions, but its plaza is still one was the star. Of the handsomest in the country. The picture' was well received Leon Makes Lots of Soap. throughout Europe and many critics of it as one of the best ever Leons" manufacturing establish- spoke in Sweden, the country produced ments include a large soap factory, which is said to supply 80 per cent of which for some years led the Eurothe laundry soap used on the west pean producing field. Louis B. Mayer, head of the Metro-Golcoast, a candle factory, two bottling r studio In California, works, three tanneries, and ai watersee .to the picture , while happened electric power fighf plant Granada, the oldest, by . a few abroad three years ago, and offered tne months, and perhaps the wealthiest a contract to come to America and city in Nicaragua, was' founded by appear in pictures produced at the Francisco Fernandez de Cordoba as M G M studio. I accepted and have an inland port at the western end of since been with that company. My only secret of beauty is scrub Lake Nicaragua. During Spanish Cobing the face with a complexion lonial days boats from the Caribbean sea came up the San Juan river and brush and soap and water. Nothing across Lake Nicaragua directly to the more exotic than that In my country, Sweden, we do not docks of Granada. While this acces1 use cold cream so much as In America. an made Granada sibility important sounds It a strange to American ears, trading center, it also left it target for early pirate attacks, and it was I know, but a good soap, plenty of several times sacked, but always re- water and a small scrubbing brush Is the best skin medicine cosmetic. built One of tiie recent pictures in whi'di Granada is the terminus of the PaGrand Hotel" with cific railroad, which connects the city I played was with Manngua, Leon, and Corinto, a Lionel liarrymore, John P.arrymore, distance of 171 miles. The railroad Wallace Beery, Joan Crawford and operates a small steamer on Lake other prominent movie players. Nicaragua connecting Granada twice a Mae Clark Advance Rapidly week with the other towns on the lake. Mae Clarke first came into screen is in coffee, Grnrada's principal trade prominence with her outstanding persugar cane, cattle and dairy products. formance of a bit" in Front Page. It is the smallest of the three princihas since greatly enhanced her She 000 22, only cities, populahaving pal tion. Granada has always supported reputation as a screen actress with conservative the ideas in such productions as Fall Guy, The Waterloo Bridge, government, while Leon has favored Public Enemy," Reckless Living," Frankenstein, the liberal side. and Columbia's "The Good Bad Girl" and Three Wise Girls. Electrical Wind Indicator An electrical wind indicator at the Hamilton an Old Timer National Academy of Sciences In Hale Hamilton launched his film caWashington will tell you which way reer many years ago, coming to picthe wind is blowing. This- Interesting tures with a lengthy stage experience little gadget is connected above the as a background. Included among his building with an anemometer and a productions are Good Intentions. wind vane. By pressing on a button Common Clay," Paid, "Murder at lights flicker indicating the velocity Midnight, Great Lover," New Adof the wind and the direction the wind ventures of Quick WallingIs blowing. Pathfinder Magazine. Cuban Love Song, The ford, thamp and Columbias Love Affair. Dedication of a building at the University of Chicago devoted to the investigation of early man a build lng which finds no parallel In any other university, either In America or abroad" draws the Near East still nearer to the West. It is In the East that the origins of the civilization we have inherited are for the most part hidden; and the Oriental institute under western skies seeks now to help man in a literal sense to orient" himself to get his bearings and 6ee in true perspective the history of the human race. Especially is it to help bridge the gap between the savage of the paleontologist and the historians story of the people who emerge in Europe as civilized beings. Dr. James II. Breasted, with his general headquarters In this build lng, has an army of diggers not alone with spades, but also with modern excavating engineering, directed by an archeological staff, on a 3,000 mile front, stretching from Luxor In Egypt northward past Sinai, through Palestine and Syria to the uplands of Anatolia, eastward and southward across Mesopotamia to Persepolls In Persia. Many other groups are making independent research, but for the first time a single organization Is able to control and correlate research and excavation throughout the leading early civilizations in a single composite construction" of course of human the life, when for thousands of years man was advancing along a front as wide as the United States. Of special significance is the evl dcnce that in this period man in Egypt began to hear remote voices that proclaimed the utter futility of material conquest." It was then that conscience and character broke upon the world." The coffin lids of F,gyp- one-thir- - Twice.'has Nicaragua felt the .pun: force of European powers in . ttive 1873, when Germany blockaded the re-- '. ' publics principal ports to force the payment of n indemnity- of .$30, 000 for an alleged insult to a German .consul, and In 1895, when. Great Britain collected $15,000 damages for the arrest. and .expulsion of one of its consular officers' at- BluefieldS, who had been charged, by Nicaragua with' conspiracy, against the government. '' Should Prosper Wjt-- Peace. The United States has repeatedly endeavored to bring peace out of the Nicaraguan chaos, an.d United States marines- were, stationed In the republic Intermittently for ' many years. .' When Nicaraguas political parties eventually permit, or are coerced Into the populace to settle down . permitting, to cultivating the country's rich banana lands, her coffee plantations, her cacao groves, and her cotton fields, there is no reason why this largest of the Central. American republics should not become one of the most prosper-- . ous. The agricultural wealth of Nicaragua constitutes only a part of her natural resources, for there is a magnificent growth of mahogany and of other cabinet woods in her forests, and her. Mils, are rich in gold and silver, while on the upland plains there is excellent pasturage for thousands of an Alligators Neat. - t, 1860; Ever since I can remember I wantei to be an actress and would have qul school at an earlier age to take m theutr'eals had it not been for thi wishes of my parents to see my education completed. Neither my father nor mother were professional people, but when they saw I was determined to achieve histrionic success, they did all they could to help me. My first public appearance on the stage was In a spectacular scene In one of the old Swedish plays. I was only one of many young folk who appeared in it for the experience and to observe the technique of the finished artists who headed the cast By working In such plays with many other young folk, I began to learn the R00 years after the Pyramid two mlllennlals B. C. reand age vealed a longing for felicity beyond the satisfactions of food and drink and shelter. In the spaclons walls of the Oriental Institute the East walks again in its beauty and majesty, but with sobering if not frightening suggestion to the present, which sees 1b every object reminders of a perished past of the death of civilizations that dreamed they were Immortal. Yet every earthen fact Is touched by the spirit of skill that begat It and is passed on as a symbol of struggle toward an Ideal The great winged bull that looks with steady gaze Into a strange world may be bnt an early dream of human flight the man's face appearing above the wings, the strength of the bull suggesting the power of the motor that has taken the place of beasts of burden. tlans How I Broke Into Bridging the Gap in Human History The Movies1 Bayer Aspirin does not depress the heart, does not upset the stomach, does not have any ill effect. Its purity and uniformity are tested thirty-si- x times 1 Time counts when youre in pain. Stick to genuine Bayer Aspirin! And Bayer means Safe I d . wyn-Maye- . - Get-Ric- ENJOY A TRIP TO SALT LAKE AND NEWHOUSE PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Hair Fallinp Ifrgniyw Dandruff Stop Imparts Color and Faded Hair and to Beauty Gray and SI 00 at Drogifiita Chem Wk . Fatehoynp.N 60c T Ideal for uae in FLOREb 1 ON SHAMPOO connection with Parkers Hair Balsam. Makes the hair oft and fluffy. 60 cent by mail or atdruj? gist Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogrue, N. Y. ADVERTISING is as essen-v- jl tial to business as is rain to growing crops. It is the keystone in the arch of successful merchandising. Let us show you how to apply it to your business. h W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No. 13-1- 933 MBS. J. H WATFRS, Free. W. E. SUTTON. Mgr. 400 Rooms 100 Bathe $2.00 to C Family Room 1 or 5 Persone $ $4-0- f 3C S250Txixirj250 t" Boom with Bath THE HOTEL NEWHOUSE SALT LAKE CITT. UTAH |