Show THE OGDEN Great Summeij Tourist Time For New York Folks More Polite Then and Sidewalks Less Jostling Bt McINTYRE O O Some letters: "New York i& always best for tne Your tourist In the summer time and your people are more polite comI less Jostling sidewalks mend to you sir a walk down Wall - ' of On hy C B Driscqll Prisoners Butchered 0eck Galley Pirate et years I've lived in one jail my —P D Circleville O "I have been knocking about the South Seas for fdur years When I set sail America! was indeed the heard of promised land yaguely Iwoe In a its and the depression I really marine and ship-to-sh- ip smokeexpected to find factories Ar streets the less and rioting i£ crossed I San at Frjancisco riving to New York being in low purseof bv easy stages If four yearsscars depression leave no greater worry? In than fViI have seeifr why rfonrpsslon is a eoasena America isn't so (cocky and In its than humility it has become greater of hard I know something ever — ships Fie on ypur depression j A J New York i "Twenty years ago I decided to become an actorj I was 18 fairI ly good looking and ambitious - and 'played with riLtf-tasummer stock I (took dramatic lessons by mail arid attended night classes Mostly I jhad walk on parts and my biggest fole was so grand It paid $40 a week The nearest I got to New York was uoiumous O and the biggest city I ever wow i nave played was Atlanta a $3500 a year steady job in a fair sized city but can you beat it —I still want to toe an actor? — n S Birmingham "I'll bet you fclty slickers have forgotten what $ 8 will buy in the brush I used to be one of you but I'm out herd now You mugs have no memory of fresh air and the blue sky the flowers the grass and the trees Tell me how long Is it since you have seen a lilac cr a hollyhock blooming on Broadway? And neverjl'm sure did you ever get a kick from being a hick in the big city that I get from being one in a small town You and your stone side Talks! Say after 50 years I have seen a wooden one and hick that I fun I walked over It twice And with my own ears parrot I saw a shoo-fl- y kite— a red was in with outstretched wings It a jrfr window and I bouzht it And so help For my grandson me when no one lis around I'm go ing to fly it myself" — D M Eureka Cal es - I more than 12 years I was a night nurse In a very exclusive sanitarium an hqur's motor ride Our patients from New York were mostly what novelists would call 'rich debauchees' They were those addicted to drink and drugs mostly drugs I a ttended two young ladies who had made their debut but & few years before beautiful finishing school products who came under my care wim moiuea complexions roaming eyes and unclean bodies I heard t$eir ravings in the still hours of the night Finally it was too much for a supersensitive person and I wound up in a sanitarium of a different sort myself I write this now restored to health because you have (written frequently of cocktail parties in New York They are the getjaway barriers for most of these cases Young girls graduate from them to the wild cafes and on into! the hands of the dope peddlers who have a sway over young folk j of America that not even the Narcotic Division of our government gTasps"— L Phoei nix Tor : "You are always kind to the old tempers You never forget them Many of us in ari actor's home ap- preciate it Our professlon is In oui most" extinct but brief little' whirl before the foot lights we lightened the hearts of many At least we tried and it is mighty nice to be remembered So New many have forgotten" — E York I "England from which I have just returned is certainly acting as though it is entirely out of the is world depression Everybody kicking up heels nd there Is much dancing in the streets Across the channel France shivers expecting anything Germany seemed to me in much better Eh ape than either France of Italy j In England they like to tell you jthat America has many hard years jahead and I broke up one dinner party by remarking that it wouldn't be so hard If some people paid us what they honorably promised to pay jin moments when their future wasn't worth a nickel Everybody looked at me askance if you know what I mean All the big English writers seem piqued at America because their big source of graft has dried up They cannot make the fyg dough coming over here to lecture anymore"— W A Philadelphia "I've been in prison out here for enough years to know better when I get out When I came here I could just write )ny name and figure out a few jof the big headlines Not long f go I sold a poem and an article to! first class magazines and I read "Anthony Adverse" 'even with my limited time for reading in less than three weeks Bo that's what prison has done for one tough muz jBut even so what 111 do when I get out is something1 else again I'm j always fearful of a future of freedom"— D' Oregon - 4 i "fc V A rumnlwhT S — — 4 - 1 f trumph j The battle was progressing well nent He collected and manned a goodly fleets and went to sea Again and again his wild men fell upon great Spanish galleons and Neapolitan or Venetian merchant ships and - brought th& prizes safely to port Algiers began to take on once more the appearance of a wealthy port 'All the merchandise traded in was stolen it is true but the cost of robbery at sea was not high in those days and the proceeds were almost clear profit The new pirate king was waxing rich Alliances were made with several Arab tribes of the interior and when the tribes were not quick to make alliance Hare Youdeen found time to march upon them and punish them soundly for their hesitation" He got Arabs for his land defenses and his Algerines manned the guns that won the day at sea There were plenty of Christian captives to work the oars EXPEDITION FAILS The king of Spain now realized that his expedition against Barbarossa had been a failure even when it had seemed such ah unHe sent a fleet qualified success of fifty ships including troop transports under Admiral Don Hugo de Alas the final extincMoncada rs of the Barbary coast tion was nearly 300 years away at this time and a young republic on the other side of the world which ws not to be born until two centuries ing their lives away In desperate battle PERSONAL LOYALTY Barbarossa had been able to unite the army tribes of his pirate state and to exact from them a personal loyalty that made him formidable But Hare Youdeen had a good deal of statesmanship in him and by threats and demonstrations he was able to : bully his allies when he could not coax them Toward the sultan of the Ottoman empire Hare Youdeen was all deference and respect He sent ambassadors to say to the Grand Turk that he Hare Youdeen successor of Uruj Barbarossa desired to present to his majesty the corsair state of Algiers with all its dependencies and loyal tribes as bea part of the empire He let it to known that he would continue -- be boss at Algiers The sultan who loved to extend -- his empire and had recently added Egyp- to it was delighted with this voluntary submission of a powerful pirate prince He sent a guard of 2000 Janissaries to represent him in protecting the person of the head of the robber state and invested him with the title of Beglerbeg of Algiers with horsetail banner and v r official scimitar COLLECTS FLEET Now Hare Youdeen began to jus-fclhimself to his subjects by enterprises of freat mo- - This was rare luck for Hare Youdeen brother ojt the fallen chief He knew his Algerines his Moors and his Arabs He knew that these fierce fellows f ight just as well in defeat as In victory They must fight and In a thousand years they have not fousht as conquerors but more often as the minority party harassing the majority and nmg- - piratical sea-rove- fv 1 written History intelligently with all it inevitable Inaccuracies tells a story of encouraging progress from the brutal apparently hopeless late Stone Age of only 12000 years ago to the modand general ern era of science ' knowledge Men with thflr wars murders brutalities- - selfishness and exyet ploitation of the poor are not worthy of the knowledge or the cience But they possess them and that possession will ultimately civilize humin beings making them realize that a world which could' supply peace happiness contentment and plenty for all haa nothing to lain by war or exploitation of other men HOPE IN EVEBY CHAPTER Henry Thomas Buckle's "History of Civilization ln England" a study of the world's errors and progress takes j you through a thousand pages of calamity famine injustice oppression plagues and vilest superstitions darkening and oppressing the human race But every chapter Inspires hope and by the contrasts that it presents with modern days makes the reader reaUze that our race which has risen physically' from to the airplane will in the rt time rise mentally from superstition selfishness and cruelty to emulation benevolence and hap" ' I piness Consider the (matter of disease and famine l used to be con- isedered natural that millions should die of famine every year Begging was a £rime The starving were expected to die "decentdisturbing their betly" without f ters ' The Black Death In Europe killed nearly h4lf the population We read today of leprosy as a strange curious! far away disease connected with sacred history But in Sprengel's "History of Medicine" you read that in the Thirteenth Century there were in JFrance alone two thousand settle ments for lepers and throughout Europe nineteen thousand such establishments i Even in England in the Eleventh Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries there was a desperate famine on the average - "I ox-ca- "once every fourteen years" BURNING OIL! IN HIS EARS We speak ofi the "oppressed working classesf today and good men sympathize with them although in good times great numbers of them earn five dollars a day or more' 'possess bath-tu- bs and 'automobiles and have free libraries and museums at com- - mandl - Consider conditions in ancient India' among the masses of the population If one of the! great bulk of the people of India j occupied the same seat with his superior he was mutilated shamefully "if he spoke of his superiors with contempt - — r- - ' ' mi his mouth was to be burned if he actually insulted them his If he tongue was to be split was a he Brahmin molested put to death if he sat on the same carpet with a Brahmin he was to be maimed for life" The rule in our days of slavery forbidding' a slave to be taught to read might have been borrowed from India If a'Sudra "moved by the desire for Instruction even listened to the reading of the Sacred : Book burning oil was to be poured into his ears if however he committed them to memory he was to be killed "When he committed a crime the punishment was greater than that to be inflicted on his superiors but if he himself was murdered the penalty was the same as for killing a dog a cat' or a crow" PHILOSOPHY LIES DORMANT V Buckle finds little merit in the professional philosopher little re- suit from his work For him that the philosophy "notwithstanding influence it has always exercised over some of the most powerful minds and through then over society at large there is nevertheless no other study which has been so zealously prosecuted' so long continued and yet remains so barren or results In no other department has there been so much movement and so little progress Men of eminent abilities and of the greatest integrity of purpose have in every civilized country for many centuries been engaged in metaphysical inquiries and yet at the present moment their systems so far from approximating towards truth axe diverging from each other with a velocity which seems to be accelerated by the progress of knowledge" MATERIAL SCIENCE RULES In our day much to the benefit of the human race positive science takes the place of abstract Instead of Socrates philosophy -Kant Comte Aristotle Plato Ediwa rest have the and Hegel son Pasteur Fulton Arkwrlght the great chemists mathematicians physicist and astronomers Some day with knowledge increased men will return to "abstract philosophy which is the study of man himself of original causes and final endings What man is why he is here whence he came whither he is going what purpose he has served with all hii striving and suffering are questions that will interest his race after all the suns in the Milky Way have been counted and named" and the visible "outlying nebular universes" catalogued and explored and every man enabled to earn one hundred dollars a week for three days of five hours work Perhaps ten times one hundred dollars There is no limit to wealth EVEN DIVISION OF THE The Spanish soldiers landed on the beach of Aleiers The 200 soldiers in the Spanish garrison within the heavy warn aDove tne city opened a cannonade upon the town Th' battle was progressing afavortembut ably for the Spaniards pest was rising upon the sea and the powerful armada was lurching toward the "shore so violently as tr disconcert the Spanish commanders somehow the wind and wave always seemed to Interfere just when some glorious victory seemed in sight for Spain! PRESTIGE GROWS Moncada was forced to draw off half his fighting men to save the ships and even then more than a third of the vessels perished upon the rocks or were stranded on the What remained of the beach were forces Spanish under a withering attack led by Hare Youdeen in person The victory over a highly organized and Spanish force vastly increased the prestige of the corsair state Hare Youdeen might be described as sitting almost on top of his part of the world He was regarded as a miracle man by the Turks in Constantinople as well as by the Arabs well-advertis- ed 1 " SEXES As we struggle along Buckle in- vites us to observe how nature - with definite rules takes care of us prevents conditions and mistakes that could neverr be repaired He praises- especially' nature's 'wisdom in keeping the "Rjths of the sexes" approximately even "If it (the birth rate Of sex) were to be greatly disturbed iri any - gun-pow- He e - -- ! an war-whol- -- didnt he was know to be frightened He thought the Spaniards were afraid to fire So he bent all energies to the attack and before the day ended seven of the eight galleys were theirs: Porfundo was dead and the one re- maining galley was fleeing under full sail for Spain This was another great victory Hare Youdeen for the Algerines celebrated it by launching a stormy attack upon the Penon or Spanish fortress overlooking Algiers After fourteen days of cannonading with guns taken from the Spanish galleys the thick walljfwere breached and the Algerines entered putting every Spaniard to the sword Now began the building of the great mole to protect corsair fleets from such storms as had destroyed Moncada's ships and many others Thousands of Christian slaves were available for the work and - the sooner some hundreds of them were worked to death the better for the national larder of the pirate empire WALL STILL STANDS So the great stones of the Spanish fortress were removed one by one and transported by man-powto the site of the mole and there laid down under direction of Moorish engineers Masonry from the Penon was supplemented by stone hewn from the nearest quarries and by sweating 1 dying transported Christians The work went on until the noble mole was finished and there the wall still stands testifying to the barbarism and enterprise of a dark day that is happily gone forever 'Copyright 1934 Charles B Driscoll) There was a trusted lieutenant of Hare Youdeen's who was called by and whose Europeans Drub-Dev- il was name Turkish Aydln Rels and this fellow was often given important tasks to perform for the chief of corsairs 4 There Is an island of the Balea ric group called Majorca which has long been famed for its climate and ita historical traditions It is owned bv Soaln today £s it was in 15TS when the events here related took place It is now a xavome vacation resort for wealthy English families' but in 1519 it was occu pied largely by Spanidi grandees and thet innumerable slaves upon extensive estates The neighboring Balearic Isles were also well popu lated with wealthy families WANTED TO RETURN Most of the slaves werr Morlscos the Moors who remained ia Spain and the Spanish possessions after the conquest of Granada in 1492 and the descendants of these Moors Some of i these blacks - became Christians and their lot was not so sari as that of the Morlscos who remained obdurately opposed to Christianity' Nearly all of them however wanted to get back to Africa was sent by Hare Th Drub-Dev- il Youdeen to gather up a great num " er 6 eminent men grow unwilling ' to enter any profession the lustre of that profession will be tarnished: First its reputation will be lessened and then Its powers will be abridged" FIRST RATE WARRIORS It has been remarked that no military genius was developed In the late Great War The men engaged in the war had practically nothing to do with its direction or control Control of the army was in the hands of aged civilian Clemenceau in France Lloyd George In England man head and he that has sev- eral may be distinguished by his proud and lofty bearing for is constitutes his patent of nobility" Grote's History of Greece tells you that "among some Macedonian tribes the man who had never slain an enemy was marked by a degrading badge" BRAINY AND FIGHTERS In ancient Greece Intellect and fighting ability were united in the same individuals one was little considered without the other "The three most successful statesmen Greece ever produced were Solon and Themistocles Epamlnondas— all of whom were distinguished military commanders Socrates supposed by some to be the wisest- - of the ancients was a soldier and so was Plato and so was Antisthenesi the celebrated founder of the Cynics" That condition in Buckle's day did not long exist in England where "if the inferiority of the boy is obvious a suitable remedy is at hand He is made either a soldier or a clergyman he is sent into the army or hidden in the church And this as we shall hereafter see is one of the reasons why as society advances the ecclesiastical spirit and the military never fall to decline As soon as — Buckle says "Cromwell Wash- ington and Napoleon are perhaps modern waj the only first-rat- e rlors of whom It can be f alrly-sal- d that they were equally competent to govern a kingdom and command an army" ' MORE OF BUCKLE LATER This ends a second chapter of extracts from Buckle's monumental "History of Civilization in England" all taken from the first 147 jof the 1000 odd pages that make' up the book More about this book will be published on this page later if it proves interesting to readers ARTHUR BRISBANE BOOK REVIEWS slaying old man discouragement to by KATHERINE-Adammarket tips and the MacMIllan Company gether with helpful New York prize contests ' The Issue also con A mystery volume full of suspense tains the quarterly handy market i Is this book by Katherine Adams list and illustrated by Marguerite BY UTAH WRITERS whose books i The author from- "Mehltable" to "Blackthorn" Colorful Is the June Improvement GREY EYES s De-Ange- lL - have sold over 100000 copies in America will make new friends with Janet her new heroine Janet is an American girl who has been sent to Europe to travel with an aunt and governess who is bored with cathedrals and sight seeing and longs for closer contact with the real French people whose language she speaks very well Through an accidental friendship with a girl who works at one of the flower and vegetable stalls in the market place strange adventures Era (Salt Lake City) appearing in a cover of columbines and filled with There are attractive illustrations valuable editorials and entertaining articles together with five interest ing stories and a number of poems in addition to the usual helpful de partments THE ART OF MARRIAGE by J B Sc Union library association New York Happier marriages will result from the reading of this open and come to her frank volume The author handles She fulfills her dream of explor- a delicate subject in a helpful way The work is said to be one of the ing the Comiche on foot and not best in its field written especially French several know she does only for married couples newly to solve people well but she helps treats eugenics and of The the author the mystery of the parentage all similar of best likes subjects openly and plainshe and boy girl ly He Is in favor of birth control her new friends ' as a safeguard to health as an aid to earlier and more marriages The CANNIBALS HAVE NAME of the volume is to be a purpose The Cannibals Have a Name for in the art of marriage and inguide an is It" by Hamilton Cralgle this it in accomplishes its aim "tabu" on policies teresting feature for writers contained in June CRIME'S PARADISE by E E Writer's Digest (Cincinnati Ohio) the Baylor Co San There are other features about Klrkpatrlck Texas Antonio Sunday novel" First 'selling "your The reader's interest is gripped School stories" etc together with valuable market tips and usual de- by "Crime's Paradise" an exciting true detective story about the fapartments mous Urschel kidnaping case The volume in addition exposes the kidCALENDAR FOR WRITERS ' Writers should now be doing New naping racket as It exists In AmerYear greetings calendar articles ica today etc according to "A Calendar For The boot is profusely illustrated Writers" by Hazel Harper Harris in with photographs of Mr and Mrs the June Author and Journalist Charles F Urschel their home and Other features are on scores of others as well as sketches (Denver) plotting stories for the love pulps and layouts by Daniel Esser There H Hayden IS He and Will See Mission Built During Famed "World Series' I By WILL ROGERS Well all I know is just what 1 read in the papers or see high and low Youknow I wrote to you iii one of my little daily epitaphs tbi other day about meeting the Secrti tary of Agriculture Wallace in one of the old Cali fornia Missions Well it was no made-u- p 3 You joke ee he had been out here on a speaking and inspection tour and he was naturally doing a littl '' on Wall I had been d' J to La roil" Bicht-seei- supposed By Arthur Brisbane lus ng Industries and Spanish culture with hia motley population at Algiers Drub-Dev- il managed to embark 200 families with their most valuable possessions at night Eight Spanish galleys under command of General Porfundp were returning to Spain from a ceremonial occasion at Genoa Por- fundo received a message from his king regarding the pirate fleet off Majorca &d made directly for the island AFRAID TO FIRE As the big Spanish ships hove in began landing sight Drub-Dev- il his Morlsco passengers and prepar ing to fight Porfundo with great er sail preponderance of ed close without firing He had been offered a large reward for re turn of the Morlsco slaves alive and unhurt So he risked all upon the chance of scaring the Algerines into surrender The Drub-Dev- il misunderstood barr liver! perors cared little about Chriscountry even for a single generatian violation of law or defiance tion it would throw society into of old religion the most serious confusion and "The Roman emperors as is would infallibly cause a great inwell known subjected the early vices of the people" crease in the Christians to persecutions which Men have tried to control the though they have been exaggerasex of children and the theories were frequent and very grievted In Buckle as told of the ancients ous But what to some persons will Interest you But Divine Ommust "No extremely strange is appear that powers says nipotence active authors of the that among among others I reserve to myself" we find the names cruelties these been "We have Buckle writes: of the best men who ever sat on able to eliminate all casual disthe throne while the worst and turbances and ascertain the exmost infamous princes were preistence of a law which expressed those who spared the Chrisfor is that numbers cisely in round and took no heed of their are tians there twenty girls every The two most thoroughwe increase may boys and of all the emperors the depraved that although confidently say ' ly Commodus and were of are law of certainly this operations of whom perseneither course liable to constant aberranew the so cuted is religion or indeed powertions the law itself measured of the funo we of know any adopted country ful that too in absorbed ture too selfish in which during a single year the own infamous theirnot been greatpleasures to male births have mind whether truth or error preer than the female ones" vailed and being thus indifferent That extra man in twenty-on- e to the welfare of their subjects births allows for the greater danto men in hunting they cared nothing about the progger of deaths ress of a creed which they as for also the and fact fighting that women after the - age of Pagan emperors were bound de-to child-beariare less likely to die regard as a fatal and Impious lusion" men than Those who have believed that CHARITY PASSES SOON Buckle attributes little Importonly absolute wickedness would throw good Christians to hungry ance to charity the passing benevolence by" which a good man" lions are surprised to read in Buckle "We find accordingly gratifies himself ' usually more that the great enemy of Christhan: he helps others Charity soon is tianity was Marcus Aurelius man passes and forgotten of kindly temper and of fearless Buckle quotes the great naturalist Cuvler" who said "Le bien unflinching honesty but whose : aux Ton fait hommes quelque reign was characterized by a perque er from which he would secution est pas-sagsoit toujours grand qu'il have refrained had he been less les vertites qu'on teur laisse In earnest about the religion of sont eternelles" his fathers And to complete the "The good that one does for men however great it may be is argument it may be added that the last and one of the most always temporary the TRUTHS strenuous of the opponents of one to men eternleaves are that al"v Christianity who occupied the throne of the Caesars was Julian Like many other students Buca prince of eminent probity whose kle disdains to translate French German Latin or Greek quotaopinions are often attacked but tions assuming that everybody against whose moral conduct even understands at least those few calumny itself has hardly breathed a suspicion" languages EVEN WAR IMPROVES "That convenience for less eruWe contemplate with horror the dite readers Messrs D Appelton few wars in the memory of living & Company might correct in later men—the Civil War the Franco-Germ- an editions of the History War the Spanish-AmericBuckle emphasizing the slight War and the Great War importance of private charity esale shows that even in out Buckle the danger of good inpoints murder— civilization Imtentions based on ignorance proves danger : that agitates certain Americans at present He writes The Big War seemed long Think of the Seven Years' War "For the deeper we penetrate into the 'Thirty Years' War the HUNthis question the more clearly DRED YEARS' WAR shall we see the superiority of inBuckle reminds you of "the Midtellectual acquisitions over moral dle Ages when there was never feeling- There is no instance on a week without war" record- of an ignorant man who Among races even lower than having good intentions and su those to that make of what we are enforce them as preme power not done far more evil than good pleased to call "our civilization" the killing of one human being And whenever the Intentions have been very eager and the power by another has been and still Is looked Upon as an act of distinct very extensive the evil has been virtue no matter under what cirenormous" cumstances You might mark thatnast quotation and send it to Chancellor V ln perfectly barbarous countries there are no intellectual acHitler and some others now exerquisitions and the mind being & cising "Supreme power" with inblank and dreary waste the only tentions based on ignorances resource is external activity the THE BEST WERE THE WORST No Devout Christians will learn only merit1 personal courage unaccount Is made of any man from Buckle with surprise that less he has killed an enemy and in Roman days - the GOOD Emthe more he has killed the great-- er perors persecuted Christians enerthe reputation he enjoys" Emwhile BAD vicious getically In Borneo "a man cannot marperors paid little attention to them because they the bad Em- ry until he has procured a hu born-twenty-on- nt Three small strongholds of European powers in Middle Barbary were conquered by Hare Youdeen and the scourging of the Christian commerce t sea was resumed on a ever before The bigger scale thanwere everywhere in galleots Barbary and up and the Mediterranean down the African coast MALES BUTCHERED At leas once a year Hare Youdeen himself went to sea aboard a great galley captured irom uie Spaniards and rowed by acaptive pickSpanish Christians leading ed squadron of eighteen galleots each one commanded by one of his favorite ruffians Then there was m Jt¥ ' great havoc upon the seas and woe to the Christiana who chanced to be abroad in those waters! Hare Youdeen himself passed sentence upon the captive Sometimes not a prisoner was whim brought back for it was thecorsairs of the great despot of the to see them all butchered upon the deck of bia tall galley Sometimes when there were plenty of oarsmen and no more slaves were needed upon the mole the male prisoners but the wo after the death of Admiral Moncada were all desnatchedback to Algiers and his king was destined to strike men were brought as gifts holiday the blow that Spain in the zenith to be distributed m Barof men strong-arthe deamong her power was unable to ciexice Ousting Superstition Springs and New Orleans A faro dealer in Tia Juana and Cripple Creek a croupier 'in Palm Beach and am still at It You are 100 per cent correct! There are no hon"Re your' remark there axe' no est gambling houses"— o Sa'n f honest gambling 'houses I've been Diego a professional 21 yearsA hou (Copyright McNaught Syndicate Inc) players in New York Chicago Hot - their passage and Hare that was being dug out of the earth well- for was anxious to have them Youdeen the by red Indiana in of Spanish shar their knowledge Americas far-dista- " Economy Note At Capistrano - All 4ber of these Morlscc at Majorca were his close neighbors to Algiers ms return with and them service in to take were willing to pay were of The willing gold passengers galleot for the acquisition Christian slaves toiled under the lash of Turkish piasters and Moorish foremen for :f our terrible years to build the great stone mole that protects the harbor of Algiers from the ocean rollers on mt nas wiun-itnn- H is of solid masonry that th buffeting of countless storms over a period of 400 years Algiers was the capital of the the n pirate empire of! Kehyr-ed-dlwho Barbarossa brother of Uruj ui took over the government tu klu-mA corsairs when Barbarossa was a in desperate hv th snuniards battle on land just outside 'Algiers The name of the successor oi is pronounced Hare Youdeen and we ShOUldn t spell it as it is pronounced usince there is mucn aouoi dou& nHHnniiv swelled anyway Hare Youdeen also was called Barbarossa or Redhead Mi was ms oroiner conUruj so that the! two are oftenactivfused in accounts of their - Tn nvoid confusion I shall — ity wv leave the name f Barbarossa to the first of the Barbarossa who had the best claim to it since nis nair and beard were really red while Hare Youdeen's jbeard was a dark ' auburn ARMY WIPED OUT war Youdeen inherited from his notorious brothet a toppling pirate Barbarossa had been sucatate cessful in creating a barbarian empire but when the king of Spain went after him In deadly earnest wHh an armv of 10000 veterans Barbarossa and jhls whole active army were wiped out The king nf finain had a victory that would have meant the pnd of the Barbary corsairs forever! li tne epamsii soldiers had settled down to garri son the Barbaryi ports But the SDaniards blundered as they so often did In the height-othir' nower The Marauls de Com- ares who won tHls brilliant victory and left not ones man living out oi the little army that had been commanded bv Barbarossa put his men back into his siips when he had mopped up the job he was sent out to do He wen back to his post at Oran and most of the fleet presently set s4il for Spain in Wallace Gets 4 who J Women Were Distributed As Holiday Gifts To Helpers H Street in the early evening all with town small there Isn't a chatter its easy And t I dont know a jsmall town 51 across-tjie-stre- SUNDAY MORNING JUNE 10 1C34 STANDARD-EXAMINE- R nr the side I ''A f v J I the funeral tf a friend and a Will aOOERS very very dea$ old friend of Hennock a Lew Mr Fred Stone's retired business man from Chicago Just about as fine a character as He was a great you would find citizen and a big loss to the town SERIES WITH ENGLAND Well one should never pass any of these Missions without stopping and going In They are among the great historical spots of our country This Thats the one was built in 1776 was over series world our last year with Enelafcd I don't know mucn historyr but I have looked at many a one of those pictures uoeuea Spirit of 1776" It stirs the spirit of you I expect its a terrible bad painting and maby worse music out OM its a heroic lookina ffrouD has his head tied up I rememb one's got a flute and I believe thj little fellow has a drum It and Washington standing up in that boat crossing (I think it was the Delaware) those two constitute those ayi air the art they had Innow will ever Nothing being painted live that long w tore ourselves loose from Eng land in that year its a question of who it was a better deal for There was an awful lot of things before 1776 that we w a sent "blessed" wltn When we were under England Just mention any problem thats facmf our country today and it wascnt with us before 1778 Do you realize there was no senate and no congress? Then you talk about freev No inflation deflation redom forestation sophistication PAUL WAS SURE FIRE The only thing like today wa J had no money But we had no debti: Course you had a little Indian as much as trouble about one-ten- th you 00 loaay witn your aianappcra It any trouble showed up why you had Paul Revere to saddle old "Ned'? and come down the valley and holler "The Siouxes or Blackfeet are coming 1" And Paul was more sure fire than a telephone Suppose the fellow ihat wanti to warn you that somebody U coming after you hasent got a nickle he can't warn you But In thota days everybody had a horse They must have been great old days at that The tax in those days thit we fought to do away with must have amounted to at least five per cent of what it Is today They were very religious people that come over here from the old country They were very human They would shoot a couple of Indians on the way to every prayer meeting h But whats all that got to do what was happening out here west side of Uncle Sam? An priest had come up into the coun-1 try Father Junipero Serra and built missions and schools a f taught the Indians trades and the churches were run like big ranches - v j iicjr caul iinu nijvmand horses and sheep He was an odd old fellow He could pray without shooting an Indian first He w?4 a greater humatarian than all th Pilgrims combined including the three million that come on the May flower No such man ever set foc f on the eastern shore BIBLE CIVILIZED WITH He civilized with a Bible and the old Pilgrim boys did it with blunderbuss There was never church of the east built for Indian 4 to worship So as I accidentally run c 'n t Secretary Wallace in San - -Los of out 65 miles i Capistrano geles although perhaps like me not of that faith he viewed it with ztttt reverence Each community fan? 4 and raised everything (and the Missions were not In a great watered country remember) but they did it all no overproduction no urdri consumption no tariffs no prtc-sing taxes no birth control wit hogs no plowing under every thirtf row of free holy beans Thousands lived In each cf th?V valleys until the Gringos come I They gummed it up proper think Mr Wallace's thought must have been on the way these popif did the thing that all our clvilimtion seems to say wt cant do Wallace knows there is a way he stood on the very grcars j i where it worked (Copyright 1834 by the MerTausht Syndicate Inc) v ti -- U-cau- mrm vTltm full XttM9 se lllUltr&ik- i- In the book Urschel called by rv eminent oiiioai w known to erim' ( "vmrKt v " victim Honors go ta Qui tells his story Jones cpeclal agent of the div' ' ' t nt fnvfittiffition to whom r Patrick gives the chief txttit ) the urscnei case ana r - solving (n 1 nmmi ta the tenitr-- " — — t - T Kirkpa trick calls Jones Arr:::: FrotcVy t greatest detective mftit sensational ehapttr H f book Is the one en lawyers la wr xurxpamcx chapter American Bar association t ta task for net weedlnx out scrupulous merabera " v lj r ' |