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Show f SECTION! fContlnu.d ui, them. , p. thsy it from reusing thsmsehrse, fought ths "blus obov Mask cleude rivulet triable q th theerroyo they bad croa4 neareet'pln a, wtiro chickadee ehook Rselfaad pressed, and triad th flavor ef glletealng rain drop. Appleton gotlmly to bl f.et, aad for 'Mia Latham. " I o cant." h aald. My my knee H liftd bodily; aad they Mood, slinging aeh othr until Appleton touched 2 chin, and otrovo to tunr her face npxdsrd to th light. Too please Plata doat! h breathed. Don't T Applton ttnoomprhndl&(. T ou w mustn't! H hold hsr clor;' and know that h wo i trsmfcllng. I want yoni' h said. Tv wantd yon oh, o long!" ' . m got I ean't Und up If you do! ttent ' But dont kiss mo galn Th thought flashed through hi mind that h wouldnt have misjudged bar; no matter If h took oath on ft, h wouldnt believe that h had out him to kies unh4ing. ; - TVh y not?- . You dont knoir you dont know! shemur- - tn dry-sho- hr 1 1 , rpatd, vr It m must Beoauee Ive been pretending te ' you from that first pretending te be somebody else living a kfo that isnt mins; and knownever could again. Just childish ing that wanting to bo with peopis. and apond money, and frd hr t gnurd. - ) Good Lord! whyr. ' J Averting" hsr ' tammrd. r, sh thcr any rea- Appleton, anlll ' ' Again h noddd. Appleton wt his lip lour not married Thr anyone No! Tou donY to to maklto hard for m. It harder now than 1 can H fek himself breaking within; hut it was urly no time for equivocation, for Jndaflnltenea. And yet. In his pain, he wanted to consol her; he wanted to have It all over within an Instant, so that they might understand each ether, and forget. And so he said: Tou Just dont care? Tou dont car. for me? Ik that His heart, which had gone quit dead, was suddenly alive and pulsing; for th head, so close to his, had moved, and not aa he expected. Tou dont mean that you 'do car? he gasped. Tve not to! Mis Latham clutched des int , s itr . - nodded. nd for ton little, ftttle weekal And w ' it so.. But at night we were ashamed. ' W knew that If you saw us at home, you would a' Q loved Listen! Tou Appleton eaid ve" tenderly. make m, care mors by that And aha, unsteadily, half uncertain even jet: "Toji dont despite pa? I thought you would!" "From tbo first evening whan w talked together, all three of us I begap to lov you for Just that thing! Because. you. do. dream! . Because you're young enough, and sweet enough, to do Just what you havo dona and what you do every day. And it you hadn't wanted to bo Cinderella, you wouldn't havo coma hero, and I wouldn't have met you and loved you over nines!" Oh! ah said faintly. Tou etlll do than?. Up the trail from the valley came the forest ranger; drenched, but of Irrepressible spirits. As hs rounded a turn In ths path. ho halted, dumbstruck; for a doien pace ahead were a young man and a young woman, obllvldua to the world. But aa th ranger . (Idled noiselessly Into a long detour, eo that he might ndt disturb thsm, there was no astonishment in his fsce. An hour ago ho had known very well they wer lovers. Huh, he said to himself, scowling at a twig which crackled under his feet. I'll bet they dldpt even know it rained!" - hr, tard incredulous. . Thr i a raon? A bigger reason than want you? h begged. minT When I lov you and ' holding do everything want us for your frienda We felt like hypocrite! And all th time I wee eo happy to be with you and tbo days were eo abort.' - h I X t s .. western map ef the world. left his Impress more deeply on what Is new the Do.mlnlcan Vepubllo than on any ether bU ef land In th New World, say a bulletin Issued by the Nations) Geogrsphio society, concerning this country whose wardship under th United State has keen under publle discussion reoently. Th very name of th eapltal of th republla, Sants Domingo, Is a family affair with th Columbuses. Tb groat discoverer named for hi father thi first permanent olty established by in tb America. Tha sam nama la applied to tha Island of which th republia is a part almost as commonly aa its aboriginal name, Haiti; and finally th paternal nama is further perpetuated in that of tha repub-ll- o Itself. Tba remains of Columbus are believed by Investigators who have examined th evideno In th case to 11 tn.th cathedral in Santo Domingo city. Tbs body of tb dlsooverer was brought to the island - ef hi early triumph from Spain where he died, end wee placed beside that of his eon, Diego. It was thought that th Spaniards removed the remains of Columbus when they Christopher transferred sovereignty of the Island to th French in 175. It appears from later examination of the burial vaults at tha cathedral, however, that' th casket which was borne In such great state from Santo Domingo to Havana at tha end-.o- f th eighteenth century, and from Havana to Spain a hundred Instead th year later,, contained ashes of Diego, th son. The city of Santo Domingo grew to bo a wonderful place during th but early day of Spanish dominion, Columbus did not live to see mueh of th development. Hls son, Diego Columbus, however, engraved the family name deeper on tle city and tae country of which it was the capital, setting up there a courfoTajich rdgal splendor that It aroused the'eovy of . th BpanUh king. Slaves Seise Power. Santo riomlngo seemed destined to become the bustling metropolis of a nu i -- :t hr son beonueo thats where X live." And you think that makes a diffefeace' te mr , not more than one million is of Arabs, origin and the Arabia languaga !Cork---Th- e la spoken throughout. There is, in very distinct dividing Un between the Arabio and tha Turklah-peakin- g portion of tha former OttoBulletin National Geographic Society. man empire. This boundary correspond with th line of tb Bagdad ESOPOTAMIA, Upper' and tery and magic Is la the heart of Mes- railway from th Mediterranean to th Th long fast of th lord mayor of Pereian gulf. It is for th exploitation Lower, vies with Egypt In opotamia. In tbo of thta rich land of Mesopotamia that Cork lend Interest to th cRy over was land This richest ths claiming th honor of being world, th granary of the ancients; yet tha T3nous Bagdad line was built which he presided and the office close the east end Of the Medthe, home of ancient civilisa- in cplte of all that it has been. It to- Syria held. he which Three are treated iterranean is and bounded on the tion. It comprises the valleys of days Uee largely waste, the desert north the issued by the NaTaurus bulletin a in by mountalna Th ferbriefly ths Tigris and Euphrates Tlver Hers sands have encroached upon th and Arabian deserts limit fur- tional Geogrsphio aooiety. flourished the Chaldean, Babylonian, tile flelda while the dogged canals Syrian settlement to tb east and south. and Assyrian empires. The City of have turned other portions into swamp ther .Cork, th third olty 'of Ireland," What population there But In connection with world com-merBagdad, with all its glamor of mye- - and marshes it has always been oloaely re- ays th bulletin, beer a very superlated to th fertile valleys of th Nile ficial resemblance to our own New and tha twin- Mesopotamian rivers and its commercial Ufa of tomorrow York In that its nucleus Is situated on oannot ba divorcad from that of Mes an Island enfolded by two arms of opotamia. . river where He water meet a bay. The Mesopotamia l as fertile today a soon become a contrast comparison whan It was th birthplace of human hietory and when th clvlliaatlon that however, for Cork la a tlty eriese than developed , there had only ths Nil $0,008 souls, ha few publio buildings valley as a competitive geld. But. like or thoroughfare of Importance, and many parte of the earth once populous inand now deserted, Mesopotamia la no waa built on a low, awampy eit Mother of ribs on th land. 8uch reglogs must stead of rocky halfway either he the Uncultivated roaming Earth. place of nomadio tribes or the Beats Th stream that enfolded Cork beof settled government-- and a centralli-A- d state. The Inhabitants must either fore It grew across Its watery barrier be few enough and mobile enough Is the River Lee which rise In a lit? to seek through migrations th food tie lak to the north. From a tiny upon which thelr-floc- k depend, or in the lake cam the ploua herstable enough to keep in repair raet Irrigation systems which cause heavy mit, St. Fin Barre. who established a crop to follow one. anoiber.irUliM-eurin- g menaatarp-an-i- h Island. At the JHQWth regularity. seventh century, in the Various factor delayed th Inevit- of the river c t- able reopening of the historic trade and from this atart the IMITH. x E. 1 Catholic and route across Syria and Mesopotamia has growm' Both th Th advance of the Turk threw Eu- Protestant cathedrals of Cork are Business men who must epeed up the works and make business rope back upon itself to develop in- dedicated to this early neces-aity the must war recogniae boom during these days after the At the head of on of th Onset ternally, and the discovery of Amercove d of keeping fit. When mind is befogged, when you have dull ica turned th attention of it peo- harbor in Ireland- -as of those aa are waters placid from ple away the who spices and wealth headaches or feel logy, when not up to snuff, keep the bowels of the east to the boundless resources a lak xcork ha been subject elnc by free with a mild laxative. In the morning take tepid sponge bath and rich prises of th west. Vhe dis- its establishment to attack burned covery of the sea route around Africa marauder Invading Dan rub wHh brisk a fellow not does if used it chill), be n water 101. and (cold made available a safer route to op- th nlty in fl and again may founded in are ulent India. Nowhere did trade fol- after th second destruction down; a sufficient setting up exercise in good air until you low th railway to a greater extent on the Ue a Danish trading post, Th ... a warm glow: v Have you tried it lately? than along the Bagdad line, and in ths Irish, again In control of th city, subbut Intestines the in of 1114 Alleppo was a thriving mitted to tho English in 117. who either, accumulate try spring the let poisons Dont center of German trad a for many year maintained a Precarcommercial laxative or a pleasant a dose of castor oil the first thing on arising, At the hotels, engineer and mer- ious foothold. Th Irish eventually e, alpin and jalap, rolled chants crowded the- dining rooms and rerained Cork, not by force of arms occasionally, such as one made up of May-applof a mighty future in Mesopo- but Infiltration,' for before a great in sold ed and every drug store as Dr. talked into a tiny sugar-ooatpill, e tamia. That summer war cam, aad whileby th English poet was of styles was th most Irish city lnlreland.lugov; Pierces Pleasant Pellets. Then a cup of hot water before breakfast, tha burning question by one- - of food enough to ernmsnt entirely in th and youll feel better than a king! If you continue in life thus, you succeeded ' and soul together. keep body of Brin. Cfi . Just south of the lllttlt rums at people can pass a life Insurance examination at sixty. A trifidy overtook Cork the year Carchemleh the Bagdad railway cross- Columbus discovered America, and If you wish to prevent old age coining on too soon, or if you want es th muddy Euphrates and enter waa visited moat heavily on He lord of drink plenty For th present tb Mesopotamia. to increase your chances for a long life, you should city reDuring that year theWar Un to Bagdad and the Persian gulf mayor. beck, assisted Perkin and ceived soft (rain) cr distilled water daily between meals. Then procure at the will monopolise the attention of tb pretender to the. English throns- - The drives Anuric This road builders; but slowly and suroly drug store Dr. Pierces Anurio mayor lost his head and th city It Iron pathway of commerce wUl charter. . J ' the uric add out and relieves backache aad rheumatism, ss well .a? tba to extend north th copper field of wonderful harbor has given V- Corks ' now it add. dissolves urie Anuric Try Asia trouble. where minor, and ths rich plains since early kidney Turkish tobacco la. grown, np through It a maritime importance of this fact 1 aeen Armenia to tha Caucasus, across Per- -' jaya. Recognition in th title of admiral of tb port beela to Turkestan, and across Afghan- stowed on the Lord Mayor of Cork by istan or Baluchistan to tha gales of lord and held by th India. War may not be entirety- - e Edward IV to tho present day. In a trlan-nlthing of ths past, but lhe Syrian and mayorceremony th lords mayor eviMesopotamian routs are essential to dence their right to' th Ul of the commercial and industrial devel- -' by casting a dart out over the cultural opmsntnfEuropannA-th- a harbor. development of Asia. ' Queenstown, at th head of th Fifty miles west of Bagdad, along outer harbor, and practically a part of tba Euphrates lie th region I th port of call and departCork. reand scholars by many geograptjei-trans-Atlantliners. This ure for irof To Eden. ae th Garden garded of sadness a Cork city mad has fact milto Eden" reclaim and this rigate lion of fertile acre around Bagdad to. many, for perhaps Ina million or largest part was tb stupendous task to which tb more men and women. Turkish government addressed Itself. mere boy and girl forced by ecoto emigrate, have there At Muaaayeb, on tvjs Euphrates, a pre- nomic pressure war traveler saw 4.000 Arabs digging bidden goodby with set face and like moles' Tn the Mesopotamian streaming eyea to th land they love eo for th welU When Ireland suffered what plaln making a was perhaps the moot pathetic of It ,1ver. In the dry bed of this artificial chdnnel, an enormous darn was tribulations, the famine of 147, Cork center of Hs sorrow built. Nebuchadnesaars vast Irriga- became th tion. system, which once watered ell Thousands of miserable, emendated Babylonia, ca etlll be easily traced creature made thlr way there from for mile about Bagdad. One giant all over Ireland hoping to gain passage Canal, the Narswan, run parallel with to America. Hundred died f bun-glb Tigris for nearly 04 miles; It l along tb roade leading to th ths city end te It vefyAreets- ltd feet wide, and all anut itIden-tflno tske off and lateral may etlll be Whtl tber are practlealljr Herodotus aald be found a point ef great Interest In Cork, close forest of verdure from end to end by is on of the best known ed most v hen be vie 'ted Mesopotamia frequently visited spot in all Ireland of Rlarnsr Caa. tt is the reined-dowe- r rflnfcc XK wihr, There Is on automobile to about Sfrtrtichutfd of every If atuden'e registered st th who. legend hae it. Instructedkissby on rd university. A total of 141 Old hag he hd reeeued to care represent 21 different make. ef the mens of the tower th irreete-tlbis. I. blarney stone became i b Tou tomorrow. all unstrung? Dey you b- a motor free , eloquent. maintain Denver .h siem.rh .west, eieer, right. snores MnetlpLtl. headachy, full ef lk!e row No gr'pkg 0 the picturesque, woodedberbor o inrojjven- - ramp, cove-l- n a five acre In tb ren-t- r of bseoMfrl and of Cawarst tonight for your Ttvrr tenc the spacious of ns moat Mghy cultivated city T'hfloren ion xs.r.rets ino and Xr 4 howea will her ) ou tuned u, bj 1. 21, it reo's Tdv7 7 perk. V Cork are many, pleasant resoria 7 1 The Land of Mesopotamia . In COLUMBUS, CHRISTOPHER X hr UCTOHKll .1 G 1920 VII ' I d; tpd " SATUKIMV First Love of Columbus His Last Resting Place perately at him, flghiiug te aveld hie eyea Dearest!" he exulted In her ear, holding her i cleetr. Oh, emit Hew sen I breathe when yeu held me so tight T Teu, don't ralet Den't you know 0 eaid about my my taking all this what though X were a poor little girl rich for a day er two? Well it Isn't Imagination. It's true! , Truar he faltarad. Tea, truel Pkiharand i saved and wor. lied for monthdand months end years te com out .here, so far from anyone who knew us pretend w belonged to feel just once whet H would be like for ten weeks; end that wee nil w could afford. And after that I eaid I'd wake up and J will, la n canon ef streets, and cobblestone six) sea th JOward th against q onshore bieese. Ml! .NEWS .TIIE DESERET FOU9 western 'empire. T But It became th victim of exploitation. After a turbulent Malory, during which tbs native Indlaps .were exterminated and thousand of African slaves were Imported, th Utter, assisted by mulatto freemen, roes, in th last years of (he eighteenth century, abolished slavery, and drove their oppressors from th lalead. Though tho land of tha republic reverted for a while to Spanish oontrol, th Utsr was by tb repubUo of Haiti, with which it share th island. It Its Indspandano la 1144 and has retained its Individuality aluo. Tb territory which now Constitutes th Domtnloan ropubllo has boon subject at different period to a number of nation It has boon twice under tb rule of Spain and has been controlled at other times by French, Th SpanUh English and HaltUn influanr has been tb strongest, and tha languaga of Spain and many of Its customs and institutions are those ef th Dominicans of today. Th Domtnloan republlo la peopled WhtU it he largely by mulatto not been aa badly torn by revolution ss th Black Republic" to th we, its history has by no means been on of peaceful development, and assassinations and coups have playbd their part In determining th succession of He ruler A few year after th close Of th Civil war in th United Stats, th Dominican republlo sought annaxation to thla country. Praeident Grant sent a commissioner to tho Uland, an annexation treaty was drafted and adopted by th Dominican sonata, and It acceptance by th American senate was recommended by our president. Th senate failed to sot favorably on th matter and San Domingo has continued Ha independent existence. Tbs country ha been assisted by the United States, however. In the administration of Ha fiscal affairs ainca 1I0S. After it had entered financial strait and foreign creditor wer threatening intervention. President Roosevelt arranged a treaty under which an American collector of customs was appointed. A certain part of th collections has been paid to th Dominican government and th remainder into a fund from which creditor are - paid. , aon-quer- ab-lish- Id-la- Old Age Deferred P" Irh land-locke- 'The J R IS HERE . And yon will hear many beautiful rcudi- - ' 't ions, by artists of note. After hearing compositions of great masters played by. real artists, you will wish you could hear these same artists itr your home whenever you desire. This is possible if you possess. . SC AMPI CO that marvelous invention which reproduces their plavinc so exactly: ' Music of all kinds , ideally played , is provided by toe Ampico , and when encased in the World "V Famous v r mg r Oflrelands Cities - . ojfyCuscaf Season -- Most Irish f. V. tEere is coupled the ideal tone of this ex- - : with the flawless per-- , ?uisite instrument of the AMPICQ. We would be Y of glad an'opport unity to demonstrate this marvelous reproducer, and pleased to talk soon. it over' with you Come'in v - On of th latcountry place ter, Trivoli, the home of Sir Walter Raleigh, Is on th estate given him Edmund Speo-eby Queen Elisabeth. waa th recipient of many acre at th sam period- - In Kllcolmao The Castle, near Cork, he wrota Faerie Queen. " fin er . Wife of Vernon Bishop Answers Death's Call f 4 (Special Correspondent.) Glen II. Funeral I. Oct. ST. JOHNS, ArMr Winnie J. Whitfor ing were held Jtt Academy building Saturday. Many worthy tribute wer paid her by tb speaker Bar body was brought from Albuquerque where she went to be operated on. Sb rallied after th operation and lived day or two, being conecloue till hour before her death.' She was ths daughter of W. Derby and Chartsella Johnson Derby and was born Nov. dr ISIS, iff Colon! Dias, Chihuahua, Mes., where ah resided until tha exodus, since which time she resided for sometime In 8t afterwards in Snowflake, Johns,' where her husband taught In th academy and at time of death her home was in Vernon. Mr Whiting was married to Bishop Frank M." Whiting, June I. ltlt, in the Salt Lake temple. Besides her husband, ah leaves three young children, her father, five sisters and thro brother She has been a worker in Sunday school, T. I M. L A. and Frlmary. i CHICKERING HALL Piano Co. Bros.-Robe- rts 161 South Main. y - - Phone Wasatch 3353 I to th canyon and it is an ideal placi Driggt Commercial Club ; for summer ontlnga, fine fishing anl and delightful scenery, Favor . Improvements hunting that next year It will undoubtedly bi (Special to The News) Id. Oct DRIOG8. Commercial club heldTh a rousing good meeting last evsnlhg. A camping sit was selected for the us of tourists and a committee appointed to arrange for Its construction for next season, - Tho club also mado arrangements for a children pdayground. to he installed with all kind of playground apparatus Fifty member wer present eaid they voted unanimously in favorleasof applying to tho forest service for of ground in Teton canyon to build summer cottage Tber le fine road- 15. ' to a popular resort. Sandwiches and coffee wer serve! and Now you tell one" brought or That remind me eo tha( th meet lng was thoroughly enjoyable. IA CASTOR t ud For Inftia Children In Um Fcr Over 20 Yczrs Always beam the Mg namv ct - one-tim- (anti-uric-aci- d). When the recipe says milk use Carnation. It is the most eco-nomical milk for cooking and is remarkably convenient One half ' water, one half Carnation is the correct formula for cooking and drinking. For desserts and in cof-fee, use rich., creamy Carnation undiluted. Buy this good milk ' J regularly from your grocer al Ad-trttr- el ic They Work while you Sleep new-cham- el -- - 100 tetted recipe free. Write Cxmxoot) Milk Products Co., Dooly BIk., Salt "i Lai City ' er et Ha-vs- fl y 1 - I r0m C n 1 1 n t tl CF v iiLk 7"X laid it reJ mnJ |