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Show UTAH DEMOCRAT. action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint, Had Practical Mind which has been filed with the clerk One of several fortresses formerly of said court and of which a copy owned by Lord Castletown's ancestors is hereto annexed and herewith seris Morett castle, now a ruin, but at ved upon you, anj will take judgone time a place of immense strength. ment against you for the sum of Two Dr. Frederick R. Green, Concerning this his lordship tells a Hundred Ten Dollars ($210.00) with grim story in ills book, Ego. The interest at the rate of 8 per cent per Health. Editor of castle was besieged by tlie Irisli. and annum since the 12th day of Novemthe owner was unluckily cimtured In with 1924, together plaintiffs 1924, Wntirn Newspaper Union.) a sortie. He was brought up by his ber, . costs disbursements and herein. outside the walls and a parley captors BRIGHTS DISEASE demanded. Ills wife came on the batStewart, Alexander & Budge, anand the enemy herald Plaintiffs' Attorney. ago. tlements, NEARLY one hundred years nounced that unless the fortress was Dated November 14th, 1924. Richard doctor, within an hour her hussurrendered O. P. Deseret Bank Addressll09 a medical a wrote for Bright, paper band would be banged. Give me time cerIn lie described which Journal, to think it over, the In'dy. Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. "America Wants the Peace of Good Will and of the Golden Rule POINTS ON KEEPING WELL By PRESIDENT COOLIDGE, Address in Washington. UK OPE does not want our benevolence. It does want our help and we are ready to give it. America wants the peace of good will and of the Golden Itulef not the peace of force imposed by those who have power. It wants peace as the normal, the right, the assured estate in a world from which a wiser generation shall have forever E A TIMELY RAIN Once upon a time there was n long spell of dry weather. What made It all the more wonderful Is the fact that this astonishing event took place In Britain. Strange, but none the 'ess true! After several weeks of Incessant sunshine there was a refreshing show er of rain. "This rain will do a lot of good PatricK, remarked Mr. Blank to hla Irish gardener. It will that, sir," returned Pat. shure, an hour of it now will do more good In five minutes than a month of it would do in a week at any other time. FOLLOWED BY WOLF Tourist The stork would seem to be the only animal thut ever visits this community. Native Wrong, stranger, It's frequently followed by the wolf when It makes Its calls. fNother One for the Speeders If you want to Ba numbered with the dead. Then always try To pass the car ahead. outlawed aggressive war. I do not think that our country needs to assume any attitude of apology. I have every respect for the governmental and social institutions of other peoples, but I have little sympathy with our fellow citizens who profess to see in them something better adapted to their own needs than those which we have developed ourselves, and who are vaguely apologetic of the fact that they are Americans. Neither have I any sympathy with those who are unwilling or unable to look beyond themselves with an equally vague and ujmeaniDg assertion of their Americanism. I reserve my approval for those who while thoroughly American, yet do not. propose to live unto themselves alone, who are neither oblivious to duty or to charity, but who cherish as individuals and as citizens the Golden Rule of action among our own people. We might have taken the attitude that we had completed our obligation to Europe the day the armistice was signed. But. the object of America in the war was greater than military victory. It was the maintenance of human institutions, of orderly government and preservation of civilization itself in Europe. It is through such practical, workaday procedures that our country has sought to be helpful in a world filled with troubles. It may be admitted that our people have given little confidence to fine professions and pious phrases. They have placed small faith in plans to insure peace by the threat of using force. They want peace and will do their full part to assure peace. But they will sacrifice no part of their absolute control over their own destinies. They will assent to no international trusteeship to share their future relations to the rest of the world. Now, Here Is the Real Native American Way of Slinging Language By ANNE OHARE McCORMICK, in New York Times. that the Northwest has suffered enough hard knocks to prostrate any country that is not the Northwest. The optimist is he who contends that what are called A pessimist in these large lands is a man who says bad times out here would be good times anywhere else in the world. Getting a Marriage License A young ludy applicant for a marriage license looked so youthful that the county clerk felt compelled to Inquire Into her age. How old are you? he asked. "Eighteen." leather young, aren't yon, to be applying for a marriage license?" I gezzo. Thats what they always say. This Is my third time." Live for Nothing Don't I know every one of the tricks of your trade?" said the angry boarder to Ills landlady. Do yon think I have lived In boarding houses fifteen years for nothing? Well, she replied, I shouldnt be at all surprised. THOROUGHLY DONE The trouble with you Easterners, expostulates a twinkling Dakota habit of qualification. editor, is that you have imported the You cultivate a niggardly precision in the use of language. Out here we throw it about as generously as dollars, when we have 'em. Thats the reason your reporters dont get us right. They dont appreciate that when we have hard times we dont really enjoy em unless theyre the most desperate times that ever were. Thats the real native American way of slinging language. Whats a man who plows up four sections for wheat and cant see a field smaller than a hundred acres to do with piddling adjectives of an English market gardener ? un-Ameri- Our Critical Faculties Laying Aside Foreign Swaddling Clothes By FRANK K. REHN, in Art News (New York). Our critical faculties are laying aside their foreign swaddling clothes and functioning for themselves. Along with this has come a change in the picture-buyin- g public. It is a public today, and not as a few years ago a small group of sometimes rather timid and conventionally minded collectors. Now Mr. and Mrs. Average Citizen arc taking an interest, and a buying interest, in art. modern art has been a big factor in this change. It has shocked people into convictions shaken others out of ruts and largely attitude, as dissipated the humble though art was a tiling apart from life and not a matter of emotion, perception and reaction like all the rest of existence. Modem art, so called for very little of it is modem, and a great deal of it is not art lias been a very real nightmare from which a few gleams of a new beauty will remain with us when all the bombast and buncombe are forgotten. So-call- ed Mother Bobble, Is the towel youre holding before the fire dry yet? Bobbie I think its done, mother, 'cause its all brown. Saint or Cynic The critic Is misunderstood. His fate Is often sad. You like him when your show Is good But not when It la bad. Knockers First Flapper Now that Alands en- gaged, she doesn't speak to the rest of us. Second Flapper No, her head Is so swelled that I understand theyre going to throw puffed rice at her wedding. The Progressive Grocer. It Depended To what department of literature lues the checkbook belong?" Your grandfather's is your fathers biography fiances fiction. history, and your Then Why Hesitate? Air. Youngblood Miss Gloria. If I should kiss you would you call for your father? Alias Gloria Yes, but hes .not at borne. Getting it Straight I don't know if youve heard what Ive heard When All States Examine and License Drivers of Motor Vehicles By R. B. STOECKEL, Connecticut Commissioner. The time is not far distant when, for the protection of careful mo- torists and pedestrians, all states will license the drivers of motor vehicles violation upon examination as to the fitness and will revoke licenses upon of any of the rules by which it is held. It is admitted common sense that the greatest variable factor in the whole problem of safe operation of motor vehicles is the ego, the personality, the individualism of the operator. A standard to measure this can, of course, never be exactly set. But at least tests of mentality and of proper driving experience can and should be efficiently applied before an operator is licensed, and those tests kept applicable through his whole driving period. The license system provides the necessary machinery to accomplish this. Under it can be had examination of all operators before license is issued, and discipline and education of all operators while licensed. During the course of an examination all that class of persons who are by nature, disease, or habit unfitted to operate motor vehicles will be finally eliminated. I don't know what youve heard, but If youve heard what Ive heard youve heard, you heard wrong. Americans Have Made Inroads on the Art Collections of Europe . Entitled to Carpet By KARL FREUND, Neyr York Art Expert. Maid I rented that room to a fellow while you was out, maam, ties a cinema actor. Landlady Yes, maam, very. Well, put an extra bit of carpet on the floor In front of his mirror. Good-lookin- g? Of Another Kind Convict What are you doing here I Reporter Only taking a few note Convict Well, youd better 1m cate ful; thats what I'm la here fort History is repeating itself. In he Eighteenth century the British were regarded on the continent as savages in art, but they became very wealthy as a nation and they acquired many of the finest treasures of art in the continental countries, and the collectors of those countries later had to go to England to buy back the choice works. Now the Americans, who had long been regarded as savages, have made such inroads on the art collections of Europe that Europeans must come here to repurchase some of their lost treasures. The Germans were over here last year buying pictures, and Oi French. Italians and English have taken many tapestries bade. Middle Ages Heroine . (. tain symptoms which lie had found were associated with definite changes In the kidneys. Since 18117, this condition has been known us Bright's disease. Bright found that, la all cases of tills disease, both the kidneys werfe affected. They were small and hard, the part of the kidney which does the work of excreting the urine from the blood was much smaller than it should be and the kidney was largely made up of tough scar tissue, showing that the kidneys had for years been subject to prolonged Irritation. Along with this change In the kidneys are changes in other organs. The arteries become hard and thick; the heart, which has to force the d blood through these stiff and tubes, has become enlarged, especially the left side, which pumps the blrod throughout the body. This produces a high blood pressure.. The symptoms caused by this condition are r.ot sudden and marked, blit come on so slowly ns to be hardly noticeuhle. The peculiar thing about them is that they apparently have nothing to do with the kidneys. A popular belief, largely due to patent medicine udvertisefiients. Is that pain in the hack is an early symptom of Bright's disease. This is not true. Most people who think that they have Bright's disease, have no kidney disease at all. Many people who do not suspect it, have It, or are In the early stages of It. Even an advanced case may he entirely unconscious of it and may possess great mental and physical ability. It Is this very insidiousness thut makes Bright's disease such a danger to middle age. llow does this dfcseuse show itself? In a generul feeling of poor health. The pntient Is tired, sleeps poorly, has frequent headaches und digestive disturbances. The tongue Is coated. The patient lias to get up, sometimes several times a night to empty the bladder. The amount of urine is Increased and there is constant thirst. Attacks of bronchitis are common and the patient suffers from breathlessness, especially after walking briskly or climbing stairs. There is often trouble with the eyes. The skin is dry and - the perspiration scanty. Somet lines the ankles will swell or the skin under eyes will puff up. These symptoms, especially In men and women of middle age, are danger signals and sliouhl call for an immediate and careful physical examination. Don't wait for them tif become worse. Kind out now wliut the trouble Is and how far it has gone. nur-rowe- GETTING THE RIGHT KIND OF FOOQ been written about MUCH has of a properly balanced for both children and adults. of milk, fresh fruits and the diet The-nee- vegeA cer- tables lias been often urged. tain amount of meat is known to be IIow can the average necessary. housewife know whether she Is feeding her family In the proper proportion? She can't stop to weigh or to calculate the exact number of calories In each. She needs some general practical working rule by which to check up her food purchases and to estimate the relative amount of each kind of food she is giving her family. ' Volumes have been written by doctors, chemists, dietitians and food experts, but .the real need Is something that will make It possible for the busy mother to answer tha question, What shall we have for dinner today? and to be sure that her answer will give her family the food It needs and In proper quantities and proportions. In a recent book on Food Prod ucts, Prof. Henry C. Sherman, the n authority on foods, lias tried to answer this question, not in tenns of food values and calories, hut In the very practical terms of dollars and cents. Nor Is he simply theorizing, as he says that the plan has been followed In his own household with marked success. The advantage Is that it is suited to any family, of any number and of any Income. IIow much money do you pay out each week 'for food? It may be five or ten or twenty or fifty dollars. No matter. Divide this amount Into five for Spend one-fift- h equal parts. for fruits and vegetables, one-fift- h for milk, meat, fish and eggs, one-fift- h one-fift- h for breads and cereals, and one-fift- h for sugars, fats (such as butter, salad oils, etc.) and' miscellaneous groceries. Such a diet would probably be not only more healthful but also more economical than the average. It would provide less meat and more fruits and vegetables. If this seems too much trouble, two simple rules can be followed. These are, spend at least as much for milk as you do for meats of all kinds, and as much for fruits . and fresh vegetables as you do for either. Check up your bills next month and see how youre running. Try this plan qnd see how It works requested One hour, said the Irish. One hour will do, replied tlie lady. At the appointed time both sides returned, the lady on the battlements, the prisoner with a coni round his neck and surrounded by his guard. I have deshe said. I can cided, always get another husband, but never another Morett. You can hang your prisoner. Which they promptly did. Legal Notices SHERIFFS SALE In the District Court In and for the County of Salt Lake, State of Utah, McCornick & Co., Bankers, as Trustee for the benefit of the holders of bonds secured by mortgage or trust deed executed by Utah Zinc Company, dated September 1, 1920, Plaintiff, against Utah Zinc Company, a Utah .corporation, Defendant, to be sold at Sheriff's Sale at the west front door of the County Court House In the City and County of Salt Lake, State of Utah, on the 29th day of December A. D., 1924 at twelve oclock noon of said day, all the right, title, claim and interest of said Defendant .of, in and to the following described Real Estate All that parcel of land situate in Salt Lake County, State of Utah and particularly desto-wi- t: cribed as follows: Commencing at a point 2 rods South and 2 rods West from the Southwest corner of Lot 2, Block 10, Ten Acre Plat A, Big Field Survey and running thence North on the center of street 21.6 rods, thence East 22.72 rods, thence North 6.6 rods thence East 24.48 rods thence South 2S.2 rods to the center of street thence West 47.2 rods to place of beginning; together with all improvements thereon and all water rights appertaining thereto. Subject, however, to a right of way in favor of Mill Creek Power company. Also all of that parcel of land situate in Salt Lake County, State of Utah, and particularly described as follows: Commencing at a point 24.2 rods East from the Northwest corner of Lot 3, Block 10, Ten Acre Plat A, Big Field Survey, and running thence East 16.6 rods to the West line of Rio Grande Western Railroad land thence South 6 East along said West line of railroad land 43.9 rods, thence West 21.2 rods, thence North 43.3 roads to the place of beginning and contained within the limits of the Southwest quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section 1, T. 2 South, R. 1 ToWest, Salt Lake Meridian. gether with all buildings and improvements thereon and all rights of way used In connection therewith or appurtenant thereto and particularly the right of way abutting the above described land on the West and thence over the right of way 1 rod wide extending from the Northwest corner of the above described tract of land West to what is known as Second West Street; hlso all water rights used In connection therewith or appurtenant thereto and particularly of one share of water right In what is known as the Bench Ditch Also all of the capital stock of the Tecoma Leasing Company, a Utah corporation. The foregoing schedule and particular description Is made without in any wise limiting the generality of the foregoing general (Nov. 22 Dec. 20.) SUMMONS In the Third Judicial (Nov. 15 Dec. 13) SUMMONS In the Third Judicial District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Nathan S. Herman, Plaintiff. Bessie Herman, Defendant. .THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. This action is brought to diolvc the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing between the plaintiff and the defendant. Stewart, Alexander & Budge, Attorneys for Plaintiff P. O. Address 1109 Deseret Bank Bldg., Salt Lake City, l.'tah. (Nov. 15 Dec. 13) P HATS what it has cost to carry out a great telephone construction program in Utah since 1920. New switchboard has been tOZZ installed, pole lines have been built, new cable has been run overhead and underground to keep pace with telephone demands. Prosperous yean and lean yean alike call for money and yet more money to expand the telephone plant and keep service up to Bell System standards. januauy These have been costly years because materials were , higher than ever before in history. But service demands wont wait. We must buy and build now because service is demanded now. n. Purchase price payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this 4 th day of December, 1924. There are no estimates for the future of Utah which indicate airy diminution in this vast expenditure for tele- BENJAMIN R. HARRIES, Sheriff of Salt Lake County, State of Utah phone equipment. By F. M. MATHEWS, Deputy Sheriff. Dey, Hoppaugh & Mark, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Date of first publication December 6th, 1924. Last December 27 1924. " P. O. Address 703 Utah Savings and Trust Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. yZYJL well-know- - Attorney for Plaintiff Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. R. M. Norton, Plaintiff. Nellie Norton, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. Said action is brought to sever the SUMMONS bonds of matrimony between plainIn the Third Judicial District Court tiff and defendant on the grounds of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. of desertion. Gwen Roller, Plaintiff, vs. Arnold Vere L. McCarthy, E. Roller, Defendant. Attorney for Plaintiff. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE P. O. Address 1008 Kearns Bldg., SA1I) DEFENDANT: Salt Lake City, Utah. You are hereby summoned to ap(Nov. 22 Dec. 20.) pear within twenty days after the SUMMONS service of this summons upon you. In the Third Judicial District Court If served within the county in which of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. this action is brought; otherwise, Sotirios Kallias, Plaintiff. within thirty days after service, ami defend the above entitled action; and Sophia S. Kallias, Defendant. TllE STATE OF UTAH TO THE in case of your failure so to do; judgment will be rendered against you SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to appear according to the demand of the comwithin twenty days after the service plaint, wiiich has been filed with the of this summons upon you, If served Clerk of said Court. This action is brought to dissolve within the county in which this acthe tion is brought; otherwise, within marriage contract now and herethirty days after service, and defend tofore existing between the parties the above entitled action; and in case plaintiff and defendant herein. of your failure so to do, judgment W. C. BRAFFET. will be rendered against you accordAttorney for Plaintiff P. O. Address 417 Commercial ing to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed .with the Clerk Block, Salt Lake City, Utah. of said Court. (Nov. 8 Last Dec. 6) 5-- des-scriptio- District Said action is brought to obtain a judgment against you dissolving the marriage contract heretofore and now existing between the plaintiff and the defendant. D. B. HEMPSTEAD, , Bell System SUMMONS City Court of Salt Lake City. John Burt, Jr., George A. Goff, and Grant Morgan, Plaintiffs; vs. Louis Thompson and J. W. Doyle, Defend- MmM ants THE STATU OF UTAH TO SAID DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to appear within ten (10) days after the service of this summons upon you, it served within the county In which Is brought; otherwise this within twenty (20) days after such service, and defend the above en- titled action; and in case of your failure to do so, the plaintiffs in this Wl AN The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Company mFmmsmi |