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Show HIE ny tj7e So - u- PAYSOX CHRONICLE, PYSO 'M b,4 , i I ELMO SCOTT EMBER lit, lSt',2. Along the foot of Maryts lle'ghts In the quaint old town of Ft ederickshurg, runs a stone wall ant! In the sunken road behind It stand the troops of lie Confederate General Cobb. Among them Is Kershaw's brigade of South Carolinians. Across the open fields width lay before them a line of blue-elamen is a charge fop forming the Union troops which General Burnside is hurl Ing into a veritable inferno In a desperate attempt to break the lines of the Man In Gray, Robert E I.eft The blue line sweeps forward Up on b;VU le e Si Ill'll Iwttv time ! lit. ist Wing Ulljrt)--j- usual y I"8 - tli- nuns owners do to I-" have Afferent ' c.dnients v,"ll,lul,s 'e'e'itocateil for 'llls ulhcent pnmi.se j i ji r 3 tlu.r beinB ITdo end 'J ate. hungry Jt Poll, I it since; llte sat, treatments e t 'h.uld lion leaker the cow is a persistent leaks away a good quantity rthen d of her of is usually best to dispose val unless she is an exceptionally It 1, ifr as for breeding purposes, of recoveries are so ie percentages l-it hardly seems desir-t'eti small that in the herd keep suth cows cow Lye ORDS Myrrh valuable. li'Mthpy are exceptionally Herald. -- Montreal Stys el to Find Impossible Any Cows Scrub Profit in Pen the prices of butterfat and are normal, ten cons producing a average of 100 pounds of fat pLira will earn $135. Under the same 4Ht editions one cow producing will earn $13S mils of butterfat hen you multiply the butterfat pro i.ction of a cow four times, you mul your Income ten times and you t rat your feed costs per pound of V -i Uu'.' ,.Si : ; p IL but-itr'a- L half. Id suggested that out of the more million cows milked In Texas t ere must be a very large number at never make a profit for tbeir own-rs- . How much better it would be to sis scrub for butchering purposes zd boy one good cow. When scrub cuvvs are sold to other f iters for dairy purposes the Indus tj fas not been helped Every non (S'aMe cow should be disposed of, ren at sacrifice in price, to the butcher killed and canned for home eon rt tion. Wliat we need in the South- is fewer and better cons. rarin .E IE He Baths room. ery 1.50 ernack ER, a Ranch, Kill Lice in Long Desert ( worm Resot junif f invigorsKj ous fnountw winter ho my IX6S prohleni of live on latt1., nnd t ally calves, m rtv muter p-dif 4'Uit to control hut by osing certain known nietlioiis ns reioinmended V J B Fi,Ph. Katisns state college, t e ins.., fan h(1 reheated. "bib'y the most efficient tre. s tr 'ft for l.,e in an appluatton of a 2 3 f ont solution of n coal tar dip to firts of the -- os t,dv rl a v p i s i l ah d i Valve 'hnmn'e 'Pffdcant.eruhhe.i lII c. j I: Jf, '''ll f r 1 llMI'" "'ll to control b ','W c i tl e ! - t J 0. , t - , r " 1,1 " ' . t ' .di,t nr13 " 1 ' rtit" g ' n "r t , h i!"' -- 1,1 r t til!'. t tliorp over tneie tit of it. The it" .gh that of tho no. mb to K,. grawe c gar s,lVr"?' "e n.,,,.,, rao,( -- .r ,IJr ll" ' "f LIT'" h'" and , S"n ,s use in v or nn. DAmv facts g Games. When mlside throw ing became the technique of warfare the Italian illy youth reduced stone throwing to a fine art, and In winter made use of snowballs on fete days. In Perugia as many as 2 out) would engage in armor was worn this game. Hefeu-iv- e lint many fatalities resulted. Old English laws encouraged an fiery, and Charlemagne sought to popu'nnzo the sport. Play nnd love of comp, ti! ion have niton been the mother of inven- tion. The groat automobile laces have revolutionized t ho automobile nidus-try. Ioiijarnin Franklin, employing a boy's familiar plaything, suit, bed from the clouds a secret that ou'does the pranks of a magic carpet. On the other ham invention node popular jetrtain ways to day. For i unple the Invention of the rul.h. r hi elder "as a been to the game of football and the guttapercha hull added im mensdy to the popularity of golf. Theodore Itoosevvlts indeuie is generally accounted in so, po.iea', .economic nnd Iiteiary (bids; pt time mav show that one of the most i m found lessons he hipis-s-cupon American people was a deeper lagutd for healthful, vigorous, strenuous out door sport. The story of how the weakling Roosevelt went to the open lines of the West and played at hrom ho and later busting nnd cattle-herdinseven relaxed in African jungle years in the hardest job in the world, is an tale. Such an uproot ing of one's life, thanks to our n.i tional parks, is i.ot todiy. More and more it is the h ib t of voi.ng men and old to seek the In iPh bv At of this m oft-tol- .urn 1 t ,, ,, " 1? ' .U" " in Hoards - had Iti.s m t is hem the1 a t Missle-Tnrowin- I h' ' vr 'i 'I' n Cow fl,r'' "d the Irili.t , v walk- joy ing. I Qjjpi j,.p " i !I a if Sucking- ' uMinllv coa-.ln- f1 ,CW 5 dry Dnring mixture of equal ani lilr(f nr BOO(, wJ''ul0r t ' diys later, 0f the moq This in o a oni sh.inld he ap to whon are m a warm A 0 P r'"9 or ten nsnallv - jemists Calves T..e cannot compare with ing waning, enterprising of the play industry in a western city substituted fishing poles for golf club, fish for golf bnlls, and transformed the diminutive golf courses into fishing ponds, tlus ushering in the "pee nee fishing grounds. Play knows neither geographical boundary, nor historical limit. There was a law among the Persians by which all children were to he taught three things: horsemanship, shooting with the bow, and telling the truth. Carthaginians and Phoenicians owed something of their maritime glory to a love of swimming, the sport h.v which they first mastered their fear of the sea. One wonders whether the more rapid strides made In England to-- ' ward the political emancipation of women may not be traceable to the ardor of Ilritish women for outdoor exercise nnd sports. Climate often determines the way a people play. It Is obvious that coast ing is popular in a zone where snow falls, and reasonable that those peo pies most generally profirient In swim-ming should he found In the equatorial islands, where limpid waters invite surcease from the scorching sun ; but less well known, perhaps, that card and board games developed in southern Aia, where ze-- t for play is Just as keen, but temperature dampens the ardor for exertion. To the Netherlands is traced the origin of stilt and skate which even yet have use in Hooded nnd their frozen areas, but to the rest of the world they are playthings. Norway once had a regiment of skaters and Hollands soldiers were taught to di ill and play on ice. Just as the individual adopts games which meets his bodily needs, so national pastimes are modified to foster and fortify the peoples who play them. In tlie age of personal combat, there were men like Milo of Crotona. a veritable Samson, reputed to have been able to break a cord wound about his head by swelling the muscles; or Iolydamas of T!ies,ii;u. s.iid to have slain an infuriated lion, and to irave been able to hold a hariot In its place while horses tugged at it. Those were the times when boxing and wrestling, most ancient of sports. were in their lieydey, though they .were not always gentlemen's diversions, reckoned by modern standards. work-a-da.- It is tla. Society, (Prepared by National Geographic Washington, D. C) WNU bcivice In miniature golf I'll interest Wl Rem-rall- rubher no. teats the around b plnml oiT with tape t.ed be teats . ad he too bad lenders are not he,e the m the end .d the openings rwonally contracted slightly by .teat caD be or with tincture of iodine (.me of solution saturated makirt! a it Jnt inside the injecting D r(j any of Most owners find .nn to too troublesome Jwich The Philippine Slapping Game. "f tlllse an V. n the "U (auses this Cl,ws three f, " is ent to do this, it ttn'eti Nop , i d.i. a these ,,,.11, u, L p.erall, "tit the dis. iy niilhirig Tt rtl' 'f tie I, ' em'U: of the 0ulv 8 l5U;',' UU; (on , Jarian pre'Put tins to vv to Pri''(1 J t . fj ai0 "' Nof l. n l learnii - bom- u-- I r l i The Instinct Is Universal. Sports of a nation afford an almost invaiildp barometer of Its progress In civilization. Iascball Is one of the most complicated and highly organized pastimes known to any people. It is a veritable Instrument of the most delicate precision in the world of sport. A South Sea Islander no more could play It than he could operate a linotype machine or deftly handle the paper money In a hank teller's cage. Yet the Instincts baseball satisfies the zest of racing to a goal ahead of the hall, the deep satisfaction of diverting a swiftly moving object to serve his own ends, the mere Impact of the speeding sphere against the instrument lie controls, bagging the spheroid as it flies afield, the suspense of ti.no men as they await the batter's fate cadi and all find their counterpart In day os old as animrds that walk on two feet nnd have enough gray matter atop their spinal columns to control nature's laws for their human purposes. The foot-racwas the most popular of the 24 Olympian events. Unmans hatted balls with the forearm swathed with bandages, and the Gilbert islanders wrap coconut shells with cord so they will rebound to a blow from the open palm ; Ilomer's princess of lhaeaeia Is represented In the Odyssey ns Jumping to catch a hall tossed by her maids of honor; and the Chinese had a game in which a suspended ball was kept hurtling to and fro from tlie players. Wrestling is much older than Greece, as indicated hv bouts pictured on tombs along the Nile. In Greece boxing fell into disfavor among the Spar tans for an unusual reason. The Greeks had developed sportsmanlike rules for the game, eliminating kicking, biting and ear lulling, and the bout closed when one boxer admitted his defeat. I.ycurgus held it Improper for any Spartan to ai know ledge deBoxing and feat, even In a game. wrestling have been popular sports In Japan for ages. Itunning, throwing, hitting and kicking are the fundamental muscular operations of America's characteristic sports has hall, football, tennis and golf. The peoples of antiquity man! fested all these instirnts in i ruder form. Luzmi tollmen, the Petvnei.ms and Sum ttra islanders and the had games played hv killing a hall. Greeks played it. and the Roman game, harp.ustum, derived its mime from the e which is evohnie .seize that carrying a ball vv is practised then. In old England football was even rougher Han most sports of those hatdv times. .Tames I thought it was Greek "I "moeter for latticing thin making aide Edwatd II frowned r E'ereof the upon it fo its interfi tvnee with arch erv and tiEo heiause of the oommo In those times R lion it aroused A was ph.vid in tin- (dy stints d iih Sixteenth edi'urv vvriier of t'e it a ''devil'll pis'ime nnd ilargid it u s with im i' ing 'nvy and mi brawling muiiher and homo lie Tennis Goes Far Back. s One must nNo go bn k to t'o On ' t f or for the gin and R" ns u-- - i Let's get away from it, folks. Now is the time to stay together, to help our neighbor and thereby I,ets boost for help ourselves. Intermountain Made Goods. MRS. EDMUND I,. SMITH, Milford, Utah the heights the Confederate artillery opens up and a storm of shot ami shell tears through the ranks of the men In blue. But they press on. From behind the stone wall there comes aj hail of bullets. The blue line reels back. But another one Is forming No less than seven times do the Northerners charge, and each time the charging line breaks and piles Its dead on the earlier lines of dead S.iKHI of them sacrificed In the resplendent, dramatic, fruitless murdered courage of the war in fchioh American fought American. Then Burnside gives up the effort. Up from many places on that death strewn open field there rises a moan Ing cry which swells Into a diapason of agony Wnter Water! For God's It rises above the sake, water! sound of the bullets which still whistle overhead and above the rumbling of the big guns which are not yet stilled Back of tlie stone wall a young hoy Richard Kirkland of Kershaw's brl lie gade, seeks out his commander asks permission to carrv water to the Kershaw Buffering men out yonder. tries to dissuade him. It Is sure death to venture out where the bullets are still (lying thick nnd fast from every I direction. But the hoy persists can't stand this. he says, this being that wave of begging, pleading sound that beats against his ears. So the general tells him he can go neks up six canteens Kirkland filled with water. He springs over the stone wall and crouching low runs to the nearest sufferer. Kneeling beside the wounded "enemy. lie lifts up his head and the parched lips of the dying man feel for a moment the cooling ' draught. Then he passes on to the next and the next and tlie next When his supply of water Is exhausted he goes back for a fresh supply nnd for an hour and a half he pursues his errand of mercy. And in all that time not a bullet touches him! teat performed OK R.THE I. Iloh'on during tlie These Brands Are Intermountain Made and Deserve Your Support WANTED; Carda Iniut on Pure Virgin Wool Made the If term ' ha- l"lt tw r it - a my .1 d- - a a- n i '" I m-- t t 1. p p- ":i '' ' id I n . in W. N. U.P O. Bog 1546, Salt Lake City. West MILLS ON OUR 2 DAY VACATION' a. Vour Druggist For Aak APEX-K-HAH- LOTION D AN INTF.KMOI NTAIN PKODVCT Come to GOLD GRAINS THE WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL Makes Cream Taste Better Western Made For Western Trade Salt Lake City Ask Your Grocer All Expense OF on This 2 Rate ERS 2P-- All VICO OIL For r MOTOR NE WHOUSE vV HERE IS OPPORTUNITY Brand New Electric Refrigerators REDUCTION AT 'tier im ' or a cod n I'e EASY TERMS AMBASSADOR HOTEL ' freak of luck his latirnh n e in ' n r a snort disiitie of the tie was disioxen Cg' ig iff the cutter, lie ordered its irev to a: m u t.u k the nearest p.i i.ot po id if drove the latirnh under a f steam straight at the Vtci'ii'e on Under a storm o tire tm pii'-- ( until he strrnk the log boom u ,t were wet and slimv fis c.ift slid over them eii'ilv I.v this r me the lauruti had hei n imt n'tiio'i t" eees hut is was mar or oiigli ter lie eonll swmg Cushing's purpose o torped" boom urn1' r the Vborr T In ri "rid r.ng ! rid set off the charge ves ,s crew to look out for to sprang into the rivir m m ureh r Jost a step from tha busmfbs center. Quiet and Homdike. Popular priced meals. I i f -- Kates SI. 50 and ap. &-m Commercial lar ns lip t imi'gli t rl ! a d I II to the I' k n (I pos- w 'c- ( i !"''! I (.-- , t pt r v f ' i n I til - o fi ( - v r ' ' ' ' U r - . Ie ' rr n ' Service Garage In Connect ton. w ' ' ' r I ' 111 ' II li ' ' 145 So. 5th JOE II. PEPPER, Manager East Phone Was. 3965 Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Lakes Only Family Hotel Delving Into the Past that the ancirnt city of Kish, in Mesopotamia, had some cot tact with the advanced civili-zaf'- n of I.dia almost 5,000 years ago is obtained in the form of Real-hat ing hieroglyph rs of Indian yje found buried in Kish. o, ' i ' ' ' If ( r are of r. n w ' 'd I 'll II ( tin d. 'll r e' i,"! a Aar 'S I, 'I Me - ' "" I1 't( V Il"l 'll s Rates r t'li'i' Mill'd a i i$10 non $6) (One room arrommodattont Including and special entertainmeals, garuge, ment fus describ'd below: I1 1. root Hoorn with bath One night 1. Full eourse dinner Other-win- t r.vj 0N -- 'n ai'll '. DAY bottling up' (VrveruB the old collier Mer Frt niht rimae In the channel of Santiago bar Zoos Treasure I. Breakfast and lunch It was hor one school history snvs The London zoo has one of the Second day 4. Car storage one of the bravest deeds evei dime In a South worlds rareta birds One nigh The war nnd will never ho forgotten American hoatzin, which has two 8. Two theatre ticket Firht day on claws its same history says nothing about how wings. sharp 8. Two theatre tickets l.leut William Barker Cushing blew Second day CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS up the Confederate warship Alhe Good Werk daje Week end Holiday marie In the Roanoke river In IStlt El fobic ai. Products Cokpoiution When poHHhlc write for advance resCushing, a native of Wisconsin and ervations nnd mcnilon All Expense' 1046 So. Mam Salt Lake City e a page In the national house of retire plan. Card will lx mailed you. request card when rt gisterinjp. sentatlves. was appointed to Annapolis Western Made for Western Maid nr the age of nineteen hut resigned at Cheaper than staving at home the outbreak of thP Civil war to volunAlir&ys ask your dealer for HOTEL teer In the navy. Cushing repeat Intermountain Made Brooms himself until he edl.v distinguished By Name Mis' was made a lieutenant In istvj E S'l'ton C. W. West - Black Blue Ribbon Asxf Gen'l Mgr. the! Gnl Atkr most brilliant exploit occurred on Beauty Salt lake City, Utah Gold Crown night of October 27, isiil. when lie d.d what Admiral Enrragut character Ized as the most dauntless naval deed over performed hv any young officer! of the American navy YOUR Iron (dad Alhe The Cotifedeiate marie had successfully beaten off an We have in this vicinity attack by I'edoral gunboats and rhenj retired up the Roanoke river where 3 she lay. a constant threat to the Led WORLD'S LEADING MAKE oral blockade. A circle of heavv logs boomed well out from her side till Iiathtr than reship to Sail Lake City been placed aroirul the vessel as a we will sell them protection against torpedois ih 'trov the Cushing volunteered to RIG cm mv ship and knowing the door WHITE 1I0X 1305, SALT LAKE a'p n iture of the en'erprise to his brother officers ns In o'l on with a small crew in a steam li.i'ih t it me towing an armed cutter th-- 'tir h eoaier Mountain Sheep Unique The mountain sheep is the only ivild animal having circling horns. war ! ! tho celling Free Front Carbon -- the without rour trouble, mtstakeo ond delojo foa had in Wrlto rrpreienting roatern (octorieo. ir-i- te - ef, it si crus not t li'iv c o' g Scotland lull in nor: rn I u parentlv it was fii't p' r ' N nt r being one of the to the ihy si'il g ogt iohv of I'.v the t'eie'h i oln'r.e-- h '"-"- J' golf h'ld alt 'led mp t'e land th 't it rhrea'. " i w ar l.crv, and it v as vv g" f r h r width was l.iti r r. grade man's game h id me t pi vv ginning', t'ontnry to in moke Salt Lake City Spanish-America- t halt ing tlie hiil i a me into m m Blankets UTAH WOOLEN ORIGINAL ( Avtnti to kII Chrtat-m- ai 1931 through rour loral for 1931 being made naw. Nimti printer. iUna Sind In rour noma fur detaila which will in the Intermountain t of per week will be paid for the best article on Why job should nse Intermountain made Goods Similar to above. Send your story in prose or verse to Intermountain Products Column .1. O. Box 1515, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this column you will flfl receive check for .. vtJoxlU HA ?WtUU fleet by sinking ' votee Gen. In words, for inspection, If you want the best, For what you invest, Buy local products of A-- l selection. Your money stays home, Just trust fate for the rest. l.leut. hv Derisive Nickname Winfield Scott was nicknamed Old Fuss and Feathers because of his strict military discipline and hia fondness for personal display. Heres a reflection Cushing Sinks Albemarle JU tic ter. la, I'.eir uil'l' r fr01" 5. ATSON T"V ;rcentfaii. , W Kirkland of Kershaws Brigade Shown vction, passable river toward the inviting emerald sward on the other side. And, consumed by his desire, h starved to death anud the plenty of his own pasture. Many of the dwellers in our Intermountain region are almost as foolish as that donkey. Surrounded by the best to be had both in a market for goods and in a place to buy, they strain their eye afar in search of something bet- rOW LEAKINO -- 0F Far off fields are green, sighed the donkey, gazing across the im- Ty ca pTT lly Jtnten HEItE f THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY Sally Scz Forgotten "U ' UTAH Lifes Loom Everlasting We fit op, but the loom of life never stops but the pattern vvhkh was weaving when the sun wen: down is weaving wh(n it romrs tomorrow. up Henry Ward Beecher. Scribblers Onlv seventy books a year were pubh.hrd in the reign of Louis XIV in Fiance. Today 11,000 come oflf the press annually. The only difference is, the seventy are still read. Have we merdy traded quality for quanti'y 7 Coal more than Itay 3 fiOO.tiO1) hnrepovvtr of Us waterway5, of whi'h more than 2,700,000 has been o tamed in its northern provincse. Italys has hor-ipoui- r h-- AMiite m |