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Show ——— er Me Didn’t Call It YONDER Puppy Love | , ‘Beaten Path: to Un: | ; Places and Things : Me : - Se WNU Service Our Giant Airship Barn N THH prairie near Belleviile, Tih, above the valley of the Mississip- Louis, pi river some miles east of St. This is Uncle Sam's is Scott field. army air base and air pilot school. unflere one is introdnced to what recquestionably must be the world’s hangar ord-breaking barn. This giant and 175 - {s $10 feet long, 160 feet wide steel-reinIts ponderous -* feet high. ced forced and concrete-counterbalan door, together with their electrically- (Copyright.) HERE more something pa- rather watchful of his and comings It was three words of many persons. years now since Arthur and the dogs had made their home alone together and they had been faithfully tended by a housekeeper who understood, Little Lady added gayety to one eold maswinter morning by presenting her fluffy collie five beautiful ter with There was much rejoicing and pups. in Lady was fed on the finest milk were. hopes great larder and. the for any emergency which might happen along unexpectedly: To this great céntral air base many for of Uncle Sam’s air pilots are sent training, it having gained the reputamost tion of being the hardest and heart-breaking air school in the world. The hangars, barracks, storeaouses, gas tanks, offices, officers’ houses and commissary cover a quarter of a sec- detected hunter, optimist and lover of God's great out-of-doors, answered the call af the West at-an early age, when hunting buffalo and fighting hostile In-. dians were part ef the day’s work. He died in 1922—a typfcal westerner, noted horseman and guide, unique in manner and speech, as_ favorably ‘known in the famous hotels of New York city as in the great Rocky mountains of the West. He reveled in the Yellowstone and laid out a horseback trail 157 miles tong which traversed the wilds of this great natural wonderland, and yet touched all the major points of interest. This trail connected other paths and trails which penetrated -regions inaccessible to vehicular traffic, making a total trail system of 700 miles, and is a great addition to the facilities for the public enjoyment of this great scenic domain. He traveled this trail scores of times. After his death the park authorities assured preservation of the memory sf this picturesque frontiersman by dedicating this trail ‘to his memory. Mr. Eaton was happiest perhaps when eastern city folk visited as she watched with this feeling that here was Not you the asked get Desired “Yes his. saw And a no.” “What do you mean?’ “He said he'd give me credit for having plenty ofberve, but not for any grocevies.”— Boston Transcript. : the This is trne not only in things at “No one can call this ‘puppy love, ear; they, dear?” she asked, “They might,” he retorted, kissing ter and joining heartily in her joyous mood. . 7 Why “Back By WILLIAM LLOYD an to Farm’ Economic DAVIS, Movement ‘DISPEL THAT RASH age of twenty-one. But Why suffer when skin troubles yield so easily to the healing touch of Resino the Crooks have their vanities, they like to be ealled ‘clever’ the mewspapers. to his: he begun Barely had politics, he climb when, owing to®eourt from panished and disgraced was and But In 1620 he returned, Paris. cardinal. became later years two foremost the was he on From thence 2 power in the state. tearing to He set to work at once fabric political flimsy France’s pieces By basis. and remodeling it on a new imprison- exeeution, banishment and es and privileg the down cut he ment nobles. growing strength of the great fortresses He demolished their mighty The and curtailed their feudal rights. was power thus snatched from them Next he assailed added to the crown. of the Huguenots, besieging the city Rochelle, their stronghold and rallying England sent provisions to the place. besieged, but Richelieu cut off the supply, forcing a surrender. By thus adding to the might of the crown and cutting away all forces that of Is Fallacy Municipal University of Akron. “Back to the farm” is a pretty sentiment but an economic fallacy &0 far as modern life is concerned. The back-to-the-farm movement would be all right if it meant more abundant life, such as a wealthy man might find in a suburban home, but it no ionger means that for we have ‘tn many farmers now. . One or two farm hands now do the work done by 15 not many years ago. That is because 95 per cent of the wheat, 60 per cent of the butter and 95 per cent of the hay are produced by machines To find the proper comforts for himself, his wife and organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist Drink Water If — Kidneys Bother affairs. of state for war and foreign political to live Largely the children, the J on the original genuine Goitp MEDAL. in 1614, and there he stayed. mother, and the interest of the queen made secretary by her influence ‘was of the present lowering of social and-moral standards, how much of the present increase of crime in our land can be traced to and accounted for by neglect of the Bible and by absence of religious teaching from our schools? : Research of modern scholars has not hurt the validity of the Bible. I say without hesitation that no fact or truth which Biblical scholarship has established confliets with, or tends to weaken, full belief in the deity of our Lord Jesus Christ, in the fact of his birth to the Blessed Virgin Reasors CAPSELES e vi correctinternal troubles, stimulat went as became his goal. Thither he general, clerical deputy for the states He won standpoint of education and culture, but morally and spiritually the loss. How. much of the present lawlessness, how much is still more serious. was her first proposal. gold MED4; offices furthered church, except as its attractions for his ambitions, held no Far away, in Paris, the boy bishop. and that court glittered the gay court, By REV. HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK, New York City. and-this Louis XIII grew to manhood Jumbago and uric acid conditions. brother’s army, but on his elder bishop of Lucon, in 1606, had become (Episcopal), New York. in Constant Changefulness Modern Times ~ ; minority the Richelieu had been educated fordeath. Neglect of the Bible has a great deal to do with unfortunate social conditions today. Ignorance of the Bible is an incalculable loss from the Evils 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy tor kidney, liver and ’ bladder disorders, rheumatism, appeared on the scene. teaching of him desire. Conduct and behavior, which are the test of This is also untrue. character, depend fundamentally upon heredity and congenial influences. Environment may modify for good or evil, but cannot alter inherent qualities; can destroy, but cannot create. of All Dealers. Liquid or Tablet, FOR OVER chance for betterthere seemed scant lazy, He was weak, dissolute, ment. or care for theught little stupid, with It was interests. his country’s best that Richelieu at this critical moment One fundamental error in our public By BISHOP MANNING lad’s 2 MEDICAL GOLDEN DISCOVERY and, during de Medici, and queen mother, Marie friends were 11 } the latter’s Italian a result, we eontrol.. practical unduly powerful, great nobles waxed of royal comi‘arrogant and rebellious sorts crept into mand; abuses of many built uprealm the state; the glorious to weaken by Henry IV threatened influences. foreign to prey fall and When Traced "DR. PIERCE’S and held by severely battered the way fer modern and had paved of his But in the height progress. His inmurdered. eareer he had been him, XI, suececded Louis son, fant the Pennsylvania. Saaial Conditions Ignorance of the Bible who -had been built up the nation thatlong elvil war, be given only to All education above the elementary school should Unfortunate and for a quarter century, | towards changing more than his share history of the world. the destiny and the quarrels Henry IV had quieted and Hugvenots, had between Catholics so occurs About the twelfth or thirteenth year a split those worth while. ” And the “hand-minded” toward “hand-mindedness or book-mindedness. his trend, instead of being boy should be put to work as.soon as he shows kept in school. the child for the The primary purpose of education is to prepare hip is secondary. The battle of life, to make him a worthy citizen; scholars training— two aims are moral training, to form character and intellectual training in straight thinking. this purfor Is the American public school system the best possible food prepared pose? I doubt it. It offers to all children the same mental knows to in the same way, and assumes, what every clear-thinking man be untrue, the mental equality of men. every that environment, Tt also assumes that character depends on and child comes into the world a piece of wax, as far as the moral sense mind are concerned, and can be molded as those who. have the care and Train mocds. for credi and of soldier of his hend all France in the hollow and who did Mary, in the reality of His resurrection from the grave or His ascension tonely man, her sympathy went out to him. Perhaps she did not know it, into heaven. but they-were in the same state -of emotions. He was just beginning to react to the world after losing a com‘panion end she was realizing that the world is not completely lost because one romance has paled into nothingness. z Neither the man nor the woman was experiencing a. first love and thus it dawned on them very slowly that a Few problems are more soriotie: than the effect which the shifting second blooming was coming into their r All changefulness of modern life is having: upon us here in New York. Vives. Perhaps they both fought it, true to an ideal that had gone, Perthe winds that blow on earth blow through this town, and in a city where haps that was why it was nearly two so manyshifting winds blow the temptation to be weather-vanes is very | years after they had met. that Arthur strong. We give this attitude a fine name—open-mindedness.. Now, if finally asked Edna te marry him one night as they drove through the lovely | by open-mindedness we mean a gracious, tolerant, teachable spirit, never county in which they lived. A moon dogmatic, always ready to learn, that is a great virtue; but it is a corresilvered the pine trees and shimmered (sponding pity that open-mindedness should degenerate, as it so often on the river below them. “1 wonder ff that moon will always | does, into so futile a vice. shine so silvery for us, Edna,” said | I am not pleading that anyone accept my positive convictions about Arthur ina deep, seriousS-tone she had | tife’s abiding truth, its deep faiths, hopes and loves, but surely, no one learned to love more than anything | ean he go blind as not to find here, if he looks for them, some convictions else avout him, “Why not?’ she asked, her voice of his ow» te which his mind assents and for which he knows he ought us trembly as if she were eighteen . Credit the grocer it?’ University of blood, Plessis, Armand Jean du the man Duke de Richelieu, intellectual but in character formation. “It seeins almost, after we have passed through muny sorrows, as if | we never could be quite so optimistic again.” “Meybe not, but we understand better how to—to took at life in all its bles and ills. He became, in a sense, fullness, Arthur,” she said. “We have a sort of -official introducer of the lived a hit before this moment.” West to the East. ‘He loved to conit seems A > “Perhaps that's why duct a party of a hundred or more higher peek than any I have climbed “tenderfeet,” to whom his friendly hosyet. Gear, and it makes me a little pitality held a strong appeal, through afraid.” the strange mountain fastnesses anyAfter a long time Edna took her where between Canada and Mexico. head from his shoulder and. tanghed (©, 1927, Western Newspaper Union.} “What is ii?° he asked, accustomed, by this time, to most of her whimsical “So you BURR, effemination of our educational system. ranch in the Big Horn mountains of He made them healthier Wyoming. and happier by thrusting them into such startlingly unusual surroundings that they promptiy forgot their trou- Did W. and patriot, conspirator YRANT priest and and foe to conspiracies, cardinal, characteristics brief, are the chief. cardinal old should be entirely The schooling of all boys more than ten years schools is the him looking at his pets became, when she him again, a certain knowledge. Eaton Trail in Pittsburgh, the late HowEaton—pioneer, sportsman, C. in the hands of men.. | nenenememmmamammaall The Howard man bodies. back into costumes which have There will be no effort to force girls someness, There is 4 great deal become passe because of their cumber No encouragement to than in frankness. more harm in suggestiveness sty must, be judged by the conimmodesty will be tolerated, but immode riateness of the costume and sensus, conditions at the time, the approp DR. +) and greater oppressor, great statesman perof literature and generous patron These, in —gonally a literary failure. of wholesome By TERHUNE Richelieu time Form of Standardized Studies Not the Best Education for American Youth pies. ; Events frequently cast their shadso ows beforehand, and it was not found Emmerson Arthur before long himself showing two of Lady’s puppies at the county dog show. ~~ tion. Headquarters’ staff, faculty and and officers commissioned He did not like to put his pets into ‘students, enlisted men are all under the com- the tiny kennels In which they are mand of a high officer of the service. kept while they are being admired by the public and shown fo fanciers but he managed his business so that: he Harney Peak could spend a great deal of time dur=... peak is the highest point, ing those three days at the show. between the Atlantic ocean and “Fe’s a beautiful animal,’ a soft the Rocky mountains. It is located in one afternoon the very heart of the famons Black “voice said at his elbow when Count, one of the pups, had won hills of South Dakota. . .a blue ribbon in his class. This “king” mountain of the eastern Arthur turned to confront a most half of these United States shoulders attractive woman, He, grasped his up above a mass of lesser heights cap awkwardly. “Yes—he’s a lovely which surround it and raises its barcollie.” ren, rocky. crest to an elevation of 7,There followed much dog talk. Miss 216 feet, or almost a mile and one-half Vail, too, was a lover of dogs and this above the level of the tides of the sea was the third time she had shown in a greeting to the stars in God’s her pets. Her home was in the oppoheaven. site end of the county and she and The sides of this old sentinel of the Arthur Emmerson had never met nor north Middle West are studded with heard of each other. This was not growths of timber and made up of strange even with their common inrough, jagged ridges and peaks, giganterest because Arthur, as a married tie and freakish-looking rocks, which man up till three years ago, had never the rains and the snows and the winds gone out of the little town circle of and the sun of centuries of time have his wife’s friends; Miss Vail, recoveroded and fashioned into rare, odd ering from an unhappy love affair, and strange shapes. One large era is had retired froin society entirely. pointed and pinnacled in such a specArthur walked with her- to see her tacular and grotesque manner that it - dogs, and before they parted each had has been dubbed “The Needles.” given the other a card and promised to The lover of the rare in nature finds exchange visits when either motored in the broad vista of landscape which in the direction of the other. spreads out in all dtrections from its “And if you ever have another litter summit like a map—peaks of lower alof puppies that has a collie half as titude, pretty park-like places in ferfine as this Gount, do let me. hive tfle valleys, deep-sided canyons, rolhim.” said Edna Vail when she left. licking streams, little glass-like lakes. A few letters were exchanged bepicturesque towns, varied mining optween the two who had met at the erations, the hog-back rim of the hills. dog show and, in the interest of their prosperous farming communities, hobbies, they met again. The almost -which stretch off into North Dakota, instant recognition of a loneliness in Wyoming and Nebraska, wonderfully the man’s eyes that Edna Vail had fmpressive. * ORN ard on their PAYSON It ts estimated thet @ colds losea & Company-) (© by Dodd, Mead and whether a knee shows material help in building clean, strong minds, our boys and girls. or not is regarded as-of little consequence by planned for -her offspring. one,” dogs—every show “They're dissaid the big owner to the rather Lad was no reconcerted Collie, Lad, lation to the pups but he wendered about with a lerdly air that morning as if he were proud to be In the house with so good-looking a litter @f pup- stored stocks of “air” materials—ready demand but take we demeanor of the wearer. pment of interest in clean wholeWe are going ahead-with the develo not girls because we are convinced that some sports among our boys and of build clean, strong bodies but are only are such things good to help noses in his lap and looked up into his eyes, meant nore to him than the pair (there is one pair at either end) The and require six minutes to open. is “catwalk” in this barn for airships man about 150 feet above the floor—a ng a swaying on it somewhat resembli spider ina web. of Here one also sees many sorts and dirigible aircraft — aeroplanes, as well as seml-rigid dirigible airships, in supplies and repair parts therefor Nearby is a abundance and variety. are in which group of warehouses much to think of, too much — ALBERT ity. and surplus energy to devote to immoral cs is that it tends to inerease The finest, thing which is said of athleti our young people, gives them a betamong ds standar moral and y moralit of the advanlife and a better appreciation ter and cleaner outlook on wholesome minds as well as clean, tage and desirability of having clean, goings. . The.sympathy they extended when they laid their longy aristocratic tracks are said to weigh 750 tons per . was of love lL thetic about the amount upon that Arthur Emmerson bestowed One couldn't help feeling his dogs. in that there was so much to give, this big, splendid man, that it should have been lavished upon human beings as well as upon dumb animals. feft| His oldest collie, Lad, never him, whether be drove or slept or Little Lady was worked at his desk. a stay-at-home but slie was affectionWhen Arthur’s wife ate and constant. hed died, it seemed as-if the dogs knew he was grieving and were even and mechanism -operating controlled By RUBY DOUGLAS a By T. T. MAXEY Supervisor, Washington. By STEPHEN B. KRAMER, School the athletic boys and girls MMORALITY is not found, among The boy and girl who among the bespectacled bookworms. participate in the games have active interest in athletics and energy, to have CoLps Cost MONEY| THE WORLD’S GREAT EVENTS to Increase in Morality Athletic Interests Lead Standards al Mor and ~ threatened to rival or weaken it, Rich- himelieu was really strengthening self. For he, and not the puppet, Louis XIU, was actual ruler of France. Having disposed of foes at home, Richelieu next moved to check the power of the’ Hapsburgs in Austria and Spain, aiding the German and Swedish Protestants in the Thirty Years’ war, with a cheerful disregard to the fact that he had just tried to wreck - Protestantism in France. It was also by his contrivance that Portugal, in 1640, separated from Spain. Meantime, Louis XII] feared and hated Richelieu and would gladly have Take a Tablespoonful Back of Salts if Pains or Bladder irritated ee ec a is Flush your kidneys by drinking— quart of water each day, also take salts occasionally, says a noted thority, who tells us that too 1 rich food forms~acids which almos paralyze the kidneys in their effor' to expel it from the blood. They come sluggish and weaken; then yo’ may suffer with a dull misery in t kidney region, sharp pains in # back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated, when the weather rheumatic twinges. is bad you h The urine — cloudy, full of sediment, the chan often get sore and irritated, ob you to seek relief two or three t during the night. To help neutralize acids; to help : these irri cleanse the kidne, flush off the body’s urinous waste four ounces of Jad Salts from pharmacy here, Take a tablesp ful in a glass of water before b fast for a few days, and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous-s is made from the acid of grapes lemon juice, combined with lithia, has been used and stimulate for years to help sluggish kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the 8; rid the earth of him had he been able to govern France without the car- so they no longer irritate, thus relieving bladder weakness. — Jad Salts is inexpensive; dinal’s aid. But he could without Richelieu, and it cent ant, while leading an injure and makes a delightful effer not get on was pleas- idle, dissipated blow. The nobles again. and ditional checks on them. Two more drink. ; experience a man making resolutions quality he turns out. the has poorer ‘The exclusive Luden men* again neble- lithia-water The life, to know another was making his kingdom the greatest in all Europe. -The nobles whose privileges the eardinal had curtailed, the soldiery and gallants whose duels he had forbidden on pain of death, the court and the king, all detested Richelieu. The queen mother, who had launched’ him in his career, turned against him. He | wrecked -her political power at one conspired to overthrow or assassinate him: -He cut off the conspirators’ heads. The clergy and parliament murmured at his tyranny. He put ad- | neem g thol blend cools and soothes—brings quick relief to irritated air passages. COUGHItho LUDEN’s Sze men, Cing Mars and De Thou, plotted his downfall, and there ean be little doubt King Louis was privy to their plot. Richelieu had the two executed, and the king dared not defend them. With iron hand, relentlessly, arrogantly, yet ever wisel¥, this strange man swayed the destinies of France, making her powerful at home and terrible abroad, crushing out feudalism, building up a centralized royal power, eonducting an incredibly brilliant foreign policy. He was an ardent patron of arts and culture and was author of some of the most poorly written poems and dramas of his day. Yet of these wretched literary. efforts he is said. to have been prouder than of hig wondrous statecraft. Im December, 1642; he died, having placed France on a pinnacle of great: ness that was the envy of the world His puppet and dupe, Louis XIII, de prived of the man who-had so long been his master and who had mede his reign famous, died a few months later _ et )R_INDIGE Bi e ra : gat yoyr leavinga son—Louis XIV-—-whose fu. ture greatness was largely due go the achievements of that relentless genius, vardinal Richelieu, the man who wag schocls and other advantages. a man must go where he can earn money} with which to purehase them. That means he must. go where the ma shines are, to the industrial centers of the nation. greater than the king. W. N. U., Salt Lake City |