Show - rA W4t t Vi f w r I - ? Busy day ahead? Begin it right with Post Toasties There’s an ample store of brisk new energy in each crisp appetizing mouthful Easily digested energy that turns quickly into seat for the day’a work ELMO SCOTT WATSON E ENLISTED in a Pennsjl vania in Jane regiment 1775 and marched to the Boston He fol- siege of 11 lowed Montgomery I to Uj bee nnd starved and froze amid the snows of Canada the Continental Wearing Butt and Blue he fought under Washington at Trenton and at I’rlnceton nnd In the summer of 1777 he went with Dan’l Morgan to repel Burgoyne's Invasion of New York At Saratoga the bayonet thrust of a Ilesslan grenadier struck him down What If the historians of the future were to call this conflict whose din was now sounding faintly in ids ears one of "the fifteen decisive battles of the world?" lie was conscious only of the torture of thirst as his lifeblood ebbed swiftly away until denth finally stilled his cry of “Water! Water!” A great monument stands on the spot which once witnessed the "pomp and circumstance of war” — the surrender of a British army But the smooth nearby green sod gi es no sign that the soil beneath holds of dust a young Pennsylvania the backwoodsman one of the many who died in defense of American liberty Who was he? Just an Unknown Soldier of the Revolution! Before the Ink on his enlistment papers in the First infantry was scarcely dry another boy who had never before been beyond the confines of the acres of the little New England farm where he w as bornt was ids way to the western frontier there to serve In a lonely outpost called Fort Dearborn It was as though he were on another with plnnet so far as communication the world he had known was concerned Bdt somehow he managed to live through the cold desolate winsumters nnd the hot mers amid the swamps along the Chicago river With the summer of 1812 came the news of war with Great Britain and more alarming still the threat of an Indian outbreak Then —orders to evacuate Fort Dearbdrn One hot August day the retreat began From out of the sandhills along Lake Michigan swooped the fierce Pottuwatomles A short desperate fight and the Fort Dearborn massacre was history That night there was a hellish orgy In the Indian camp and the pitying stars looked down upon a writhing figure at the stake What If this was one of the acts in the mighty drama called "the Winning of the West”? What if the future was to see one of the world's greatest cities rise on these sandy shores? Could that knowledge have been recompense for the fiery agony of this New England lad above whose unmarked feet of grave the hurrying Chicago’s millions today beat an endless requiem? Who was he? An Unknown Soldier of the War of 1812! deThough some of his neighbors nounced It as an "unholy war” into which President Polk wns leading the nation a certain Middle Western farm boy was one of the first to respond when the President on May 13 1S40 to drive called 50000 volunteers the Mexicans' back across the Rio Grande And so he was among those who landed with “Old Fuss and By ”jl & jn -- L Feathers” Scott at Vera Cruz nnd started toward the City of Mexico To Ids parents back in Ohio came cheerful letters from the boy telling of the rapid succession of victories won by the American army and assuring them that the war was almost over and that he would soon be home His last letter was written the night before Scott's soldiers stormed The boy’s parents awaited his return in vain Today In the environs of the City of Mexico there is a little cemetery in which stands a small granite shaft bearing these words: “To the memory of the American soldiers who perished in this valley in 1847 whose bones collected by the country’s orders are here buried— 750” And so this Unknown Soldier of the Mexican war sleeps among the 750 lu alien soil Fort Sumter had been fired upon In the upper Shenandoah valley of e Virginia a father was bidding to bis two sons "Pray God you two never meet In battle" he aald And one rode north to wear the Federal Bine under General Patterson and the other rode south to become a member of Gen Thomas J Jack- - The t $ V $ Dead Blow out you bugles over the rich Dead! There’s none of these so lonely and poor el old But dying has made us richer gifts than gold These laid the world sway poured out the red Sweet wine of youth gave up the years to be j?nd l°?i and thatjm- hoped serene That men call age and those who would have been Their sons they gave their Immortality Blow bugles blow! They brought us for our dearth lacked so long and Holiness Love and Pain Honor has come back as a king to earth And paid his subjects with a royal wage In our walks And Nobleness ways again And wa have come Into our heritage — Rupert Brooke on’s "Stonewall Brigade” Whether or not his prayer was answered the He never saw father never knew either again I’erhr s in some Valhalla two warrior spirits lemlnisce of Chanceliorsvllle and of Manassas and Malvern Antietam Hill but there is no bitterness In their tones as they call each other “l’ank” Reb” The crumbling and "Johnny which once bodies of the dust rests under a housed these spirits great monument of rough hewn granIn Arlington marble ite and polished D C On cemetery near Washington this monument Is an inscription which reads this stone "Beueath repose the bones of 211Lunknuw£L soldiers guih ered after the war from the fields of Bull Run and the route to the Rappahannock Their remains could not be identified hut their names and deaths are recorded in the archives of their citizens and Its grateful country honor them as of their noble army of martyrs May they rest In peace” It was the sprinr of 1803 A Colorado miner coming oil the night shift Joined a group of his fellow gathered about one who read in Denver paper the headlines: “War With Spain” A month later he was on an army transport that steamed Into the through the Golden Gate broad Pacific The next year he was one of a detachment which set out through the Philippine Jungle In pursuit of a party of Moro falders There was a deathlike hush as they pushed on through the steaming heat of the Jungle A moment later Its stillness was shattered by the sounds of men com engaged In furious bat bayonet against bolo a swarm of little brown men clawing at a group of swearing figures and bearing them down to earth by sheer force of num A few months hers late back in the Colorado a band mining town played “There’ll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight” for the troop of “our boys” was home from the wars But out In the province of Sulu a rusted and a webbed cartridge bait already nearly bidden by the lush Jungle vegetation marked the last resting place of one who didn’t come home — an Unknown Soldier of November 11 1921 In Arlington cemetery a great throng stood with bared heads as a bugler blew “Taps" over a new white marble tomb In which had been placed the body of a dead warrior Of him it has been written “Once he trod our streets— perhaps the very pavements whlrhwe It never entered his dally travel head that he would become n sj mbol of sacrifice and Ills tomb a shrine of pilgrimage— If "tmy one had foretold as much to him how he would have If anyone were to reveal laughed! to us who he really was— that he hud been a enshier in a New York bank or a taxi driver In Chicago — would he still retain Ids power so deeply to move us? Who was he tills Unknown Soldier whom we have alted out of humanity into of idenrty can never That question be answered But of him tlds can be said: Bince tliut day seven years ago Memorial day has hud a new meaning On tids day idi tomb is n shrine before which in spirit all Americans bow reverent heads For thus they honor not only the known Soldier of the World war hut the Unknown Soldiers of oil of our wars—the Revolution the War of 1812 the Mexican war tha Civil war the We canwai not decorate their graves In accordance witli the Memorial day custom for their last resting id aces un marked are scattered far and wide over the face oftlie globe Some of them fell before Indlun bullet and lance on the plains of the Great West Some of tlrein died in China in the Philippines in Mexico Some of them “went West" ori the battlefields of France and Belgium So in alien soil they kc'p their lonely “bivouac of the dead” and while we cannot puj them the same honors on Mernoriul day tliut we do the others who gave their lives for their country we can offer up to them our tribute of gratitude by remembering on that day what they did even though we do not know w ho they were n And it’s so good to eat! Pour the crumbly flakes ont of the handy package into the sancer Then add cream and sugar if you like We’ve found that rich natural corn flavor and the toasted crispiness make a perfect combination Everyone likes it! Ask your grocer for the genuine Post Toasties in the red and yellow package Postum company Inc Battle Creek Alien © t Look Senator Edwards is the subject of a story that they are telling in Trenton ' It seems that the senator made an anti prohibition speech at a Trenton banquet and was congratulated on his who had eloquence by a politician been changing from wet to dry and dry to wet every month or ao for the last seven years senator I” said the politi"Splendid cian “I never heard a more brilliant and moving speech And yet you don’t look like an orator either” “Maybe not” said Senator Edwards "And no more do you look like a weathercock” Silencer for Engino It Is sometimes necessary to take to preserve our alheroic measures ienee Consider the problem of the Tucson Light and Power company which bus a Diesel engine with an pipe 32 inches in diameter the roar of which' could be beard for 14 To overcome the tremendous miles noise which the enand unbearable gine would develop a Maxim silencer has been built which weighs 26000 seven feet In diameter and Is pounds The first silencer is 20 feet long f this type was six Inches long and went on the end of a gun barrel f old and weak may these memories more of peace and sweet life than war and red death! be of longer a day martial times less and less of guns the Extreme m Cemeter!ei The annual report of Quartermaster General Cheatham says that Ar more and more to quiet and Individual 'strengthening of that "bridge of love" that stretches from the dead to ttiose who live “It Is a day set aside for memory When the new and shining link sf World war veterans grows tery both In area and number of inThe smallest is at Balls Bluff terred Vn about near Leebuigacre In extent and containing the bodunies of one known anti known dead Memorial day Is no of the recollection alone It Is a day given to parades the salutes for "ciatnrsr Man’ Uppermost Thought Whatever one may read into the name of patriotism however variously the citizens of a nation may love their land with whntever admixture of criticism and doubt they jieTd their support love of home and feliowdilp them II be would The beat of their drum Is in his blood and their memories march as banners In a lasting parade mon lot Be wbo than COD if yon say ao DESERET BOOK COMPANY 44 East Soaia Tmgia tt r0BoxlTS iaULakaCtty CREAM WANTED McCnae Schoel of Mode and ef Kmtnent TorHv Faculty Mualc flrhool In laUrmovutnln Mimlfl Irtnu41o Art 0 Horth Umim HU CMj l4lo A NICHOtdl CRISMON AND CHEMISTS ASSAYERS a Woo l ortlco anil Laboratory Tmplo St Halt Lako City Utah F k ana prim Siallln Hoi IK aovolopoa lurnlohtd oa raquaat Cullen Hotel Fr4 Fool J Iooorl Maoagtf Porlot A oat Mgr Old Friends at the Meet Y our v A Cullen and Cafeteria Cafe S3 W hi Sa St Salt Lako City tiak CULLEN GARAGE Wa ST Vi at Sa4 Sa AND SERVICE STORAGE Columbian Optical Co 337 So Main Salt Labs City Oppoaito Pootofllco Lmjti PnpliatriR MEDICINE CO LYNN MASS us First mb your ct!p lightly with Then Cnticura Ointment shampoo with a liquid soap made by dissolving shavings of Cnticura Soap in s little bq wafer Rinse thoroughly in tepid water 'A clean scalp is essential to good hatt Sotp 25c Ointment 25c and Tiicurn 25c Simple each free Depc B6 MiMeo Mist repairs 167 Main Street SALT LAKE CITY Rooms Rlnr’e W'thont Both perdty II to ft IS Houma Double Without Both per day It 65 60 to I 05 Hooma8lo?i With Both per days mi Double With Both per dy II 00 to II 60 All Depot Street Cars Pass the Hotel Moo KEARNS DLDC tlppolt Littio Hotel L Dr C Crooo ojeo 1 1 Cut 24 GARAGE FIREPROOF Evens Optometrist EVKS EXAMINED otrxigbtened Olooo IttK SALT LAKE CITT UTAH Sooth Fittings Pipe Valves PURPOSE USED FOR -- -- ANY NSW AND 475 C SALT LAKE PIPE CO Salt Lot City Utah W Sixth South &L S ERVI C EGARAGE - FKCK W Ctab 4th BRFWP-UlOkjtrt Gant W N RAT litoral Utfsys Halt ead Moia HtmH Xewbooee Adjoining "Cedou" Ctlen Ihirlnf Itkk I5n Lytt Hotel ILittSe yourself tcith Cuticurn Soap A jt Eye Examinations your broken glass for Work returned' same day Send E Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound Utah Artificial Scientific ILtjclia AdJrtai Art Rtfkni Ijolnc lteh Ml Uki “Have you received benefit from taking Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 1” PINKHAM w Lko fiBBol actual record LYDIA E nM It I proMum wLn you 4orl1 UHCAMRR hlpplmr ts th ISKOOKLAWN IK CUr lot Waat St Bolt Writ hr Biliks Tot 400000 Women Report Benefit by A questionnaire enclosed with every bottle of medicine has brought to date over 400000 replies The overwhelming maout jority — in fact ninety-eigof a hundred — says “Yes” If this dependable medicine has helped so many women isn’t it reasonable to suppose that it will help you too? Get a bottle from your druggist today A to Learn Moro at Pabllsher’a lrfcca Wtll Mod Part of tha Job here Mistress— You’ve only been two days Marie and I catch you entertaining a man In the kitchen — Marie Weil mum he told me he used to call on the last girl so Any girt In the act of handing the railway conductor a ticket Is passing thought be went with the place— Bulletin Sydney fare Man hesitates To Read Afore— All Bsoka Maybe Se "My dear you dress too daringly All you flappers do” In a few years dad “Nonsense to us as old they will be referring —— s fashioned-gir- l Shampoo Day for Thoughts of Peace Salt Lake City Directory U Salt Lak HvteL Brvf La! to City No Is bonked f |