Show St St. lar l Mary's Marys s Church I Notes Comments Sunday last July 13 12 12 saw an tin Increase In attendance I at the mas masses es due Aue no doubt to the beautiful a weather that entices people to come out out doors ot doore to I church besides tourists tourist on their way Joined the congregation Its It's of great grant I service ser to let such ouch know the times of I masses on Sundays Sunday To aid old In this ilia printed cards of our churchs church's services I I have been placed In motels motets In ht neighbor neighboring rIng r- r ing towns Present too were Scouts Scout from Camp Cloud lUm with their leader lender Miss Joan Richardson at aE the 10 o'clock mass I for them had been given I by Mr Ed who very ery kindly looked otter lifter them on this occasion More Catholic Scouts are expected I I to be In camp by next Sunday when If I numbers call for tor It It a priest may be sent I I from Salt Seit Lake City to celebrate mass mails for them as ns already has been done dons Among them will be Scouts from Park I City who Intend inland camping there for ten I days The site alto Is la Ideal for tor such ouch a purpose purpose purpose pur pur- pose amidst the trees beside betide the lake I In magnificent mountain scenery EvenIng EvenIng EvenIng Even- Even Ing time by Lake Is beauteous beyond compare compere campfires glow mO mos moA hum the grandeur Inspires one I Ito to quote I INow INow Now fades the glimmering landscape on the sight eight And all the air a solemn stillness holds 1 I Save where the beetle wheels wheel his hie droning flight And drowsy lull luU the dle 1 I i irant rant tant folds I 1 I 1 I IDoy Doy Boy Scouts on their way to Jamboree City poured Into Salt Balt Lake Laka City In fn shoals over last Saturday and Sunday morning Special arrangements at the Cathedral and neighboring churches were made by bya a 1 committee to have masses said for them by their accompanying chaplains before resuming their Journey by train to California A city of camps tempo has sprung up for tor the thousands of Scouts who will assemble there Daden Baden Power Power the English English Eng Eng- lish tali founder of the movement flay fifty years ago never foresaw perhaps the magnitude to which this ilia youth ass association la- la tion would one day arise He had served In the Boer War that terminated In I 1901 He lie had seen tribal life In South Africa From the tribes he adopted I Ideas and many terms now used In In Scouting and above all he learnt to I love out door life Ilfe camping In the w wide wide- de open spaces where whets man Is fa free tree In health and strength In Joy Jop through union of other campers tempera one big happy family I spirit Is III developed beneath the cano canopy of the blue heavens I Thursday July 16 la the well-known well I Festival of Our Lady of Mount Carmel to whom all wearers of the brown Scapulars have a s special spatial devotion Many parishes have special celebration celebrations on this I day especially among people of Italian descent They hold Our Lady of Mount I Carmel In the highest esteem The new convent of Carmelite Sisters Slaters in Salt Lake City distribute Scapulars on this day following church services at which Bis Ble Bishop I hop Hunt aunt will assist as ae our Lady Is s their special patroness for the Carmelite Carmel carmel- ite ire Order takes Its It's name from Mount Carmel In Palestine I It Is beyond doubt one of the most mast scenic spots In that country Visiting It some soma years ago I thought It heavenly The Carmelite Monastery tops the hill hili over looking the Mediterranean Sea Bea that washes Its It's sides elder on the Inland direction is the city Down Dawn beneath further on onIs onIs Is the town of Acre where In other days Napoleons Napoleon's troops threw shot and anti shell against Its walls which still bear the marks of destruction by cannon ball Dysentery and fever lever played hav havoc with I his army that fought Its It's way later to Egypt But Dut all came to nought at nt the naval navel battle of the Nile and Napoleons Napoleon's way to India faded Into a dream Mount Carmel Is la the first home of the humble Carmelite Order of religious men and women consecrated to Gods God's service which throughout the world has lea accomplished accomplished much more down through the centuries than mushroom mighty potentates potentates poten poise tates fates with armies at et their command for fora a 0 brief hour The cloisters of these communities communities com com- have produced more solid greatness than the swords of would-be would world rulers who have come and end gone and are era cursed and forgotten Nothing but ruin and destruction followed in n their wake Napoleon led over six hundred hundred hun hun- e dred tired thousand men to Moscow where j hunger and the severe Russian winter I I decimated his grand army to remnants Returning In little bands that managed to survive general frost Frozen plains unlimited In n area which they had to cross and the terrible troops of Cossacks Cossacks Cos Cos- sacks Backs who attack them without mercy day and end night The re re crossing of the River where thousands perIshed perished per per- In Its It's Icy waters Is ts one of the saddest chapters In history Yet another dictator In our own days In his hla insane ambition to extend Germanys Germany's eastern boundary to the river rivet Volga repeated In glorys glory's name the same tragic stupidity stupid stupid- d ity sending three hundred thousand young men to their doom In the Beige sele of Stalingrad To further the ambitious schemes of an epileptic Fuhrer the theof thousands V of youth the elite silts of Germany Ger Oer I many died Bled a It hundred deaths In the Continued on Page rage Two Church St Ste Marys Mary's Notes Comment Continued from Page rage One snows snow of Russia In a ft most moet foolish cause caUle The Tho Sixth Army once two hundred thousand strong under General Von Paulo Paulos surrendered or at l least ut what was waa left lett of It for whole regIments regiment had perished through frost starvation and wound to the Russians In Stalingrad History repeats repent Itself teel amid sorrow and gloom Bloom and end the seekers of totalitarian conquest forget that a n poet In the Eighteenth Century hAd hud well written The boast bout of the pomp of power And all nil that beauty all that wealth eer gave Await Awalt alike the hour The paths tha of glory lead but to the grave I I Monday night July 20 at 8 o'clock In n Memorial building will be held our parochial White Whit Elephant Party to which all are Invited to come and pass peas pleasant moments together Refreshments Refresh Refresh- ments will be served as M usual by the ladles adles committee which will be notified In n good time by our chairman Mrs Mary an energetic director of this his monthly social which we would wish to see develop more and more Mr Clarence Hays and Mr William OKeefe will be present to assist proceedings of I the he night which should be a gala affair al- al f fair Prizes will be donated by generous givers as heretofore and hopes run high that hat this sole social event in St. St Marys Mary's parish parIah may from a small beginning grow I Into nto a big gathering of parishioners and friends ultimately bringing forth new IdeM ideas of ot attractive features as aa has happened hap hap- I ened elsewhere Opportunities to meet together are so rare that an event of this his kind needs more patronage all aU round Besides time Is approaching when I we must make ready for our fall bazaar In n November next and this meeting will afford a chance for discussion of I same Mme So many exiles from Park City in other ther states would welcome an invite invite- ton lon tion to contribute to our next grand bazaar so let us be up and doing II I IOn On Thursday night July 9 a meeting came nine to order In the rectory with the vIew lew to form an Historical Society Presiding residing was Professor of Salt Lake ake City present were Miss Mary Shields Mrs and Miss Colleen Weaver ir In her capacity as secretary Mr Fred Grose Mr Fraser Buck uck Mr Clarence Clarnce Clar- Clar nce ence Hays and Mr Bill Hanley Haney Pictures of the past were ex exhibited talks on I them hem followed disasters as r and particularly fires were gone over l lIts lIt's For P Pa Pork k It City was spared nothing In Int's Ints its it's c Jr no doubt lighting of homes homesy by y oil lamps amps left this city open to outbreaks outbreaks out out- r breaks ka of such Many leading lights l great reat personages of other days came in inor for or review and out of It all to furnish a tale of the past is by no means easy Its It's t's ts to unravel the silky skeins of a distant past warp and woof and from it t to weave a definite pattern in his his- I tory ory Mining to Park is like coals to Newcastle Newcastle Newcastle New New- I castle everything is tied up with it Ever since 1870 or thereabouts when metal was first discovered by soldiers prospecting under orders of General OConnor O'Connor of Fort Douglas then miners of all nationalities naturally flocked into in into into in- in to the hither unknown area A lonely prospector inspector coming down the glen kicks a chump of ot ore are protruding from the ground It is found rich in silver sliver content consent content con con- tent sent and presto I Ontario becomes the greatest silver sliver mine In the west Virginia City Is closing down to Its ghostliness so In come Virginians in n haste some In inthe the he teaching of the scriptures not even I returning home to take their cotta coots Marcus Daly later a a. a copper king In I Butte Montana espied so well the ore are of Ontario that Walkers Walker's Bank Bonk of those I days his financial backers sent Marcus to the other elysIan pot Jack-pot In Butte where he ho became very we wealthy After Arter his his I death a monument costing one hundred j and ten tn thousand dollars was erected I I I it t is alleged by the labor union To Toj II restore estore an on account of the early times times' from 1870 onwards the picture needs etchings of so many kinds that a great deal of assistance must come from painters if 11 any of these former times old diaries old books must taus be brought brought broughto to o light Information from records from pictures many of which were destroyed In n the big fire of 1898 Outsiders In other states may help out with what they hey possess in the way of ot old papers or documents of this period Extending to 1900 as from then on the history Is pretty retty well known and written up Such Suchs Is s the scheme laid before the Historical Society which must unearth a great great amount mount of knowledge on the movements movements' of f tho the various peoples who once formed part of this mining community Naturally into the picture must fit the he regular conditions of mining camps I In n those days with open saloon sociality brawls rawls and even lynching Shootings would take place as men brooded over threats to mining rights to their social social status tatus In a town where might would perhaps per supplant right on numerous numerous' occasions That amenities of life ha proved roved we have evidence in all the I clubs lubs that arose In Park City But It would seem that these took shape definitely de- de I finitely around the turn of tho the last lilt century What Is really of Interest Is 11 tho ho story atory of folks In the I thirty years If a 1 complete sociological study is to form a 1 vital part of the tale I j I lot ot of our city and that study Is 16 as essen essen- I I as Hamlet to the play More members mesa mem- bers bets are invited to be present at our I next nut meeting in St St. Marya Marys rectory on Wednesday July 22 23 at 8 o'clock prompt I i j j I Recently in The Tribune mention was made mudo of Oscar Wilde by someone Quick Quirk ly there followed the slur of what happened hap hap- to him I It Is la heard so 80 often i I walked with other souls In pain I I I I Within another ring And was wall wondering if the man had done doneA I A great or little thing When a voice behind me whispered low That fellows fellow's got to swing awing t j 1 I That verse verae 1 is III from Wildes Wilde's own ballad of ot reading tor for this genius of at a a aoe poet oe and playwright had tasted tilled of being behind the bars and for tor a great thing thIns i Dear Pear Lord lordi The Tho very nry prison walls I i Suddenly seem to reel And the tho sky above my head heal became Like a Basque casque of scorching steel lie He was a brilliant but eccentric sin stu dent dene of Oxford University read Greek 1 fluently and English Engl h literature which he ho embellished later on with wit and grandeur His plays playa are till null popi-lar popi Yet Vet the ev evil men do lives after them and by this is JIB hu often otten remembered hi his greatness burled U In that little hucksters huckster's IU where here they found him dead In rail pass His lils mother lady tady Wilde was a anoble anoble anoble noble character most mOlt highly beloved b by I I I I the the Irish people back In the famine I days of 1847 In Ireland when distress much helped by an enemy's enemy hand blighted the land Lady Wilde wrote for lor i iI the nation Journal of national nationals I aspirations aspire aspire- dons of a band of writers writer known as I Young under the nom nom-de- plume of ot Speranza She Sh contributed during many years articles that did much to Inspire her beloved country to torise torise I rise again from famine memories from despair and gloom to brighter days ao JO aoi I j often forecast In her lays laya for she ahe was a I 1 poetress of no mean standard She risked life lite happiness and fortune to and andI I j j her distressed country men and women I when only Imprisonment and persecution persecution I tion awaited those who joined the band bandI I of loving liberty writers In a most moat noble j cause that bore no reward but pain Fort For ForI I this greatness of the mother I have I I I always felt greatest sympathy for the fall of her ber very Intellectual but quixotic I son besides in his own words Because the man was waa owe of those Whom Christ came down to save lave I |