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Show t w i TH&SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, THURSDAY MORNING, DECEMBER G vt'fljt gait fakegritran; state to the territory of a third; the not reach the British islands until A. D. 9o0. In the middle ages leprosy ravPersistent isolation "of aged Europe. cases joined to that immunity often brought about by epidemics, vastly lessened the danger after many years; trade - communication!,, posts,. but Prance maintained at one time and telephones. 15,000 public lazarettos. As planned, the active participants Leprosy-nopersists most widely in in ths eonferenes would include Aus- India, ciina and Japan, and the grand tria, Hungary", Italy, Poland, Checho- total of present-dalepora in the world Greece and Hu haa been, estimated to bo. nearly 1,500,-00slovakia, Jugo-Slavi' ' , mania, all of which embrace at least n Taken old America to of South the portions by "European empire, and which, to a greater or less immigrants, leprosy spread to Louisiana extenders affected by the problems Several bundled lepers are ths Austrian reparations section hope now treated there; thert are others ' ' thus to solve. ' along the Atlantis and Pacific coasts, and nota few in several of the northNITRE COCKTAILS, ern middle west states. like tuberculosis, leprosy . often lies The latest in" the way of delectable dormant for years in persons apparfor. 'the im- ently well. More developed cases may beverages in substitute mense variety of concoctions based be marked by a strange lionlike expresupon the late John Barleycorn it the sion of the face, and natives of the ' far east will Identify a leper ns ittowere nitre cocktail. sciintuitively long before he reveals I( appears that the nitre eoektail is ence the smallest symptoms of a malcenter ady. a discovery of that world-famei of culture, Boston, and that its devo-tee- s Appropriate to a scourge so ancient are among those who move .in the are the mysteries that still surround its y ' nature; its origin is unknown. The , highest stratum of society. of Dr. Jonathan Hutchinson that Information is given by William S. man became leprous by eating infected Driry, director of registration in the Massachusetts etate department ef drug raw. fish haa been generally .accepted. eontrol. He report! that the depart- The medium of infection .is unknown ment has noticed. "tremendous in- possibly being through nasal discharge crease" in the sale of sweet spirits of Infected bouses infect later occupants. Of incubation baa not been nitre, and inquiry developed the rather The period and a very long or a reladetermined, was the fact that drug being startling .used as a substitute for liquor "among tively short time may perhaps elapse between infection and the appearance tha higher classes." . L ' r of a symptom. . .Mr. occasion to takes deplore Driry .to never said be iaheritedL is Leprosy the spread of the addiction fd thin particular drug, calling .it extremely dan- If reared apart from its, infected parchild of a leper, physicians say, gerous. Among other things, he lets ent, the the unenlightened know that the drug will remain "clean," but the risk of contains alcohol, sodium nitrate and infection through contact is so great to observations, the sulphuric acid, adding that the latter that, according children of lepers become lepers them"is a solvent of metals." This final bit of information, we take selves. Like tuberculosis, leprosy is described it, is given for the benefit of that genss having periods of "recession," when bewhich ns is sometimes described try stomachs." the sufferer appears to be cured. But ing possessed of "cast-iro- n such leprous patients reraaito aB oety 'Consequently,' those Bavin g' those physifor an indefinite time, often for years, mind should .bear in ological attributes successor of tbo and then develop again all their former that the particular Bronx and, the Manhattan . of which symptoms. ; The effect of elimate upon leprosy rethey are devotees may at any time dis- mains disputed. Many physician assolve their stomachs, and then where sert that In temperate climates the danwould thev bet43' ger of infection ia alight. Strong hopes ef finding a cure for COMBATING LEPROSY. were aroused more than forty leprosy ' The United States public heilth ser- years ago when Hansen discovered the ' Expectation rose vice, moved to extraordinary efforts in leprosy bacillus. when Brinkerhoff and othagain Clegg, attempting to develop a means potent ers propagated independent cultures of in the- combating of leprosy by the posthe bacillus in 1909 aad later. A Japsibility of the importation of that dread anese promised much nine years ago for friun "globe fish" disease into America byv some of the a cure developed was extolled Later "matin" arpoison.' hordes of immigrants which have fTom cultures made from a derivation anrived and still are arriving here, the nodules or lumps that appear upon nounces that it has evolved a "valuthe bodies of many lepers, ike y able agent in the control of the dis- found adherents temporarily, fiut the ease." There is an intimation, appar- most numerous benefits, perhaps, have ently, well grounded, that this agent beea claimed during several years for be a cure. may-alsebaulmoogra4oib A 'condition of labor shortage due to Giving recent details of the Kalibi the war brought to this country, and experiments, De. McDonald says that he especially to New York, a large numinto the lepers muscles and also ber of immigrants, Including many ne- injects into th nodules "ethyl esters" of tho groes from the British and American fatty acids of the oil. The curative efWest Indies and from Cuba all islands fect ia due, he believes, to unidentified whose populations comprise a certain substances associated with one or more percentage of lepers. It is estimated of the fatty acids or to the acids. Dethat fhe immigration from Italy will struction of tissue is arrested, he rebe huge, especially from tha Italian ports, and lost 'muscular action is reislands, and thesa also irs said to be gained. centers of infection. Incidentally, the patients eajoythe , Four years ago, at a senate commitfresh air, nutritious food and cheerful tee hearing on a' bill to establish a nasurroundings thi have proved equally tional leprosarium, or refuge for lepers eutative ia leprosy and in tuberculosis. experts estimated that upward of a Of 163 lepers who underwent the new thousand lepers were then in the United treatment during the fifteen months up States; that less than one third of them to the end of last year, more than were being treated at state or municihave been discharged as apparpal asylums; that eighty lepers were at ently cured. X one of these has siaca larga in Chicago, fifty in Xew York, relapsed. and that the leper population waa in- system ef pruinbitjou of importation nd exportation of certain classes of 1hui Brarr Morning by T tkt Tribes rttbltshlsg Cwnnay. commodities, licensee, tariffs ami exTXRU8 or SL'WCRIPTHJN : cise; .the system of 'discrimination in mad Vjomlvt ii3 I "fTtsS, ld). tend! M priee as between external and internal mdT, M Btilf 10. DtilT u4 Bases?, so EImvMN t B. 8-nd OvMsj. par ( Dill Trltmsa. ;r 0 - oli. a Triton Csltr I ?r karat. ilia Triton to a nanbar ad ths Audit Burra f Clmlatlaa. laforaattw concerning The Trlb-I- . qae'e eircnlstlos will, to nppitd by to Audit f. Sanaa of Ctoaltdoa, Toauii tody.. Cbicsgo. TO B. O. Backwito Bpeclal Anacy, ol asst-- f i World lt.. Raw Turk: an adrertlitcf t Triton bid.. Chicago) Iipatch bid.. I t. Inal; Tord bid.. Da trait. Mirk j feiyas Sanaa City, Mo. W. S. Baranfrr C., bid., xaaiadr bid-- . t Pacific OMat mrraritatlr. Sal Pitadwat TIU laaorc bid., In Aw-- I bldf.. Brattle. PubHatod t ((. tot ts; Wsaatok 50. tolrpboa Wba yon fall t ot yoar TVibuss IS 'rlocl rka city HrcnlatJo dr part nr t baton at yo by saossongor. a. m. a ad copy will b lateral at tba poatoffic at Hilt Lake City Talaoboaa ' I ? seca4-eia- aiattar. a tele-graph- ;- : l. 1 a Ml to rp iapsrtaa dtp ItosOara Mar arrrlan Btatu. (Mia to an,' ally by Salaphaelng tot afflf. I Tk Triton t a Mtabet of ths Aasrtat4-Prm. Tbs Anar laird Praw la axdntlrrly , titled to toe Me far republics Uos at all ass aradltrd to it er oot tobarwla nd- i; dlapatotod sis Us total aswg Uad 1 (hi pa pair TIM y Austro-Hungaria- -- d the-tor- Thursday. December ' ' - i 9, 1920. HARDINGS PROGRAM. Harding has returned will not return to time arrives for until the Washington I bis inauguration. He will not be idle, however, as the days come and go. In addition to making up his mind as to I cabinet and other appointments, he will ' , I be kept busy studying the problems to be dealt with during his administra tion and conferring with the Bepubti-- ' can party chieftains who are to take the lead in securing such legislation as t seems best for the people of the Halted ; States. It is said that former Senator ; Sutherland of Utah is slated for a eabi-- f net position, a place on the supreme I bench or an ambassadorial appointment, I and that former Governor' Spry' 'wiir bd- come commissioner of the general land office. As both Utahns are known to I be in close, touch, with the presidentelect, it is jbelieved they will land tip-- I I top positions. Senator Harding has declared that no , members of his official family havo been selected, but Harry Daugherty and Chairman Hay ate believed to b cer--$ tain of plaees. There it h considerable amount of (peculation as to Who will I direct the foreign affairs of the eoun-- ! try as secretary of state.. When the man to fill this highly Important office has been selected and hi name j nounced the people of the country will I he able to judge the intention' of the t new administration as to- - joining the league of nations, with reservations, pr to form a new association. i attempting ) Senator Harding hss been Conferring . with Eepublictns of all poafibl shades of opinion as regards safeguarding the j future peace of the world. These cou-ferenees will continue for tome time, end it is quite possible the presides I elect may be able to roconeilo ths op-- I posing views and formulate a program i upon which all Bepubtieaas eaa unite. In due course of time we shall know a hat to- expect. While we wait our at-- i tention will be fixed upon congress, j which can do moek good between now I and the fourth of March if the aena-- ! tori and representatives get down to I hard work. . J President-elec-t to Marion, Ohio, and ..J A. J. w. n-- t-- - IMPORTANT i ! , ; ; I I CONFERENCE. The proposed trade, commercial and financial conference of certain of the central "states of Europe has aroused hope in both political and business fir-- i clcs that it may bring at least some degree of order out of tHe.. present al-- s most chaotic cenditione as far aa ia-- ; terstato relatipne are concerned. It is th American already known si plan," in compliment to its author, Colonel Clarence B. Smith of the Unit-- I ed State army, the unofficial American delegate on the Austrian section ef the reparations commission. "After more than a years study aad first-haninvestigation ef the problems of these countries, Colonel Smith said, the plan was drawn, after much thought and with full realization of the fact that it must be freed from d i I i..that, baring . 5 , -- A - o creasing. The publie health service has withia PILGRIM SOUVENIR COIN. late years Increased its efforts to identify and exclude the leprous immigrant, to detect and isolata the lepora already kero, to improve the treatment of the disease and to establish national leprosaria. One early step toward tbO object was the taking ever recently of the Louisiana atate leprosa rium at Carrvilie. In the matter of a a Improved remedy, tayi the Yew York Evening Post, in an exhaustive ajtiele on the subject, Surgeon General Hugh E. Cummings sun Ja.telyr--.aw- c but' wKtftut detail; tho encouraging resalts obtained from the remedy referred to. "Thus," Gen oral Camming' bulletin auueuncee, "one of th worlds mopt dreaded maladies, regarded as a hnpelesn aad incurable scourge of humanity since earliest hietory, would appear to havo beea conquered by officer of the public health aerviee." The remedy is explained as a sew preparation ef chaulmoegra oil, a leprosy "cure" much discussed during the last few years, which his it source in th seed of n specie of plum tree indigenous to India. At the request of the service, I E. Dean, president of th University of Hawaii, devised th preparation, and, under the guidance of Dr. J. T. McDonald, forty eight leper were treated with the new remedy at the investigation station in KaTihi, Hawaii J1 wore "paroled" in October, 1919, tinco remained apparently and hav free from tho disease. Probabilitie of success were strengthened through the fact that "the decision a to apparent cure was made ia each case, not by officials of the public health service, but by a special parol board." Of profound ontiquity, th affliction of "th unfleaa" is described 'la Egyptian records deting from 4900 B. C; ia aa Indian elassie of 1400 B.C., and ,1a a Japanese chronicle of 1250 B. C. .But the lepers of th Bible are to bdT iieluded aufforers supposed from all disfiguring skin disease. Taken from Egypt into Greece during the foartb eeatury 8. C. aad earned no the malads du) Itaiy about 50 B. r aauvanir new coin, issued by the government ia commemoration of th Pilgrim centenary, is at tractiag no little attention sunong numismatists and persons generally who re interested in coins on other accounts than to acquire them or ty spend them. The Pilgrim issue is designed by Cyrus Daltin, the famous Utah sculptor, who comes in for high praise from authorities .because of the excellence of hisidirtsriag Retails, Thor is in this case", as there has beep la all cases, tome faultfinding. It appears that somebody has discovered that the talk ef tho Mayflower are not precisely right, or, at least, the critio thinks they area t. Oa this point complaint is made ia a recent number of the Numismatist by Horae L. "Wheeler of the Boston public library that tha Mayflower is not correctly rigged. Mr. Wheeler objects te "tb triangular sail above her bowsprit. She flourished la a much too early era to hav a jib. There is no probability that n seagoing vessel of Stuart times had any but square headeailt. These wore bent to yards depending from the bowsprit or to a topmast rising from it; and they continued in net into the nineteenth eentury. Th modal of n seventeenth eeatury ship is tho Philadelphia Commercial museum ihowe both eprit and aa8,and a good probaida picture of the Mayflower herself HalnaH's,, which hangs in Pilgrim hall at Plymouth." Around its tipper circumference th obvlra of th Pilgrim coin if inscribed United State of America"; around th lower circumference, "Pilgrim Half Dollar." Behind the motto, "In God Wo Truat," i recorded oa two lines. "Pilgrim Tercentenary Celebration" earn above the Mayflower, and below appear tho dates "H20-1920.- last-name- - drawn them together in common council and with the disin.-teroited advice of th representatives of Great Britain, Frknce and America, who will attend only ia' ah advisory i character, some of the distrust that naturally grew. out of th political eon-- 9 dition which lurrouadod th birth of - thee mow etate may bo dispelled and ; they will realize th necessity, arid from all political question, of freer trade and Commerce if their economie life is to becom stabilized." Colonel Smith 'a plan mot asanimous ipproval by th Austrian commission, tof the conference 4 and preparation ve begun. It probably will be hold ia Bratislava (Pressburgh), a city about from Vienna, ia Czechoj forty mile slovakia, and will follow broadly ths line of the Brussels conference The states represented, except Amer-- ? Franc aad Groat Britain, will hav present one repreoontatlv of th i mlnfstrte of finance, ' commerce, Industrie, tradtransportntion, and bank- mg. Austria and Hungary will bo in-- j vited to send similar representation. Tho three flret named power will be represented only by their delegate oa the reparations commission, and. then . i solely in an advisory capacity. As formulated, the program suggest i ' among th questions to b eonsidered: Improvement of financial relatione, especially the transfer of money, liberty of using deposits, dealing ia securities I hd bsnking; possibility of expediting the JraneSc ef merchandise from on isle to another nr in bond through un - i t one A half-dolla- . sprit-topma- 1 " Immortalizing Laiiet. ; By Frederic J. H 9. BJlJO. Memory Tests. Can You AnswerThese? A Lina o Type or Two H Haakia. to th lint, 1st ths qttiPd fall ; wbsra they may. , x "WASHINGTON. The D, C., Do. national apftol ia soon to havo a now ty a. LT. otatuo added to ita collection of ImmorMr. 'Kipling haa obtained aa Injunctals. Tbla otatuo wilt bo unlllto tw-thia medicine eloo in the eapttol in What it. will tion and, damages because hi to used a stanza of company eonaiat of three heads cut out of tho top boost ita pills. While we do not think of one block of marble, leaving the lower much of the verses, w are glad th pubthst th Dttlis things part of the block for a pedestal. It is lic ia areminded poet dashes off are aa much prifarther unusual because tbiee throe heads which vate property a a bottle of pills or a are women. Thera is sow only one washing , machine. , , statue in the capltol to tho memory of Th Inspired Compositor. woman, aad that la tho marble flguro of (From the Wisconsin Btste Journal.) Frances Willard, given by the state ol An honorary membership' for states llllnoio-t- o Statuary hall In ISO.10 a me- too small to assume full fights was proTbo sew (tft to tho capltol posed today by the league's commission morial to 8uaan B. Anthony, Lucretla on new admissions. Mott and Elisabeth Cady Stanton, three women who first sponsored tho then for- -, Animals In a new Noak'o ark are made lorn cause of women rtgUta. Tho idea the scale designed by a Eon-do- n ef Immortalizing these women in marble correctly towho studies the beasts In the artist was really conceived tong ago, when It ark for a was planned te display busts ef them at zoo. Would you buy such an tho worlds fair. Adelaide1 Johnson, tho child? Neither would wa ' Ansculptor, modeled busts of Susan thony and Elisabeth Stanton from life, Th Amendment le Accepted. . but Xhe time for a memorial seemed not Blr: Socrates and Epictetus may not quite rtpo then, with the feminists' alms havo learned Greek at SI, but, sir, that, unachieved. Now, when . the work to because they were, respecwhich the pioneers gave- - their Uvea to I opine,ofwaa and Epictecourse, Socrai tively completed, a memorial has greater signi- tus, because not they were Greeks. I ficance, and Miss Johnson haa resumed am encouraged correction offer to this work on tbo combination statue on a of your syllogism by th acquaintance of larger scale than was first planned. American several and authors public men Th national woman' party to raising who, even at the age of SI, would not work$50,000 to pay for the materials, find learning the English language cc lamanship and transportation of the stone. bor of May X subscribe supererogation. The material ia an eight-to- n block of as heretofore, yeur most obedient, Italian marble cboeen by th sculptor at mjself A photograph Met from her humble servant, Seravema. NORMAN INC8TATNE. studio at Carrara, Italy, shows the statu In process of completion. The three heads stand out above the huge base of the j Th rioting of tho audience or optlence slab. They are arranged In a triangle. lef vremling match reassimss us that Ahe longest worm baa Us turnall factax one way. . Th sculptor has promised that yh ing. work will bo finished and sent to Washington tn 'time for tho opening of tho We, For On. women's party convention, February L5. Sir: An enterprising Scotch firm ad A that day Is the 101st anniversary of vertises itself a "Golf Club Maker to Buaan Anthony's birthday, the women on, tha late King EdwarCYIU are anxious te 'unvdll the atatuo In Its .may curious be t know tn what particplace In tbo rotunda of tbo capltol then. ular Elyslan link hi majeety swings RED TAP.-- . ghostly braasle. " ' BALLTBCNION. Much rod tap ia necessary tn capltol The affaire, even te make a present. Bill Bryan" declaration for tha single library committee In the senate is in oparge of matters of art in tb building, standard of morality reminds C. D, F. and Senator Brandegea of Connecticut, of th w. k. jingle: chairman of this committee, haa long been known a a fiery opponent pf sufBut when otd age came creeping on, With all Its aches and qualms. frage for women. During the erlaig in the Connecticut legislature this 'summer, King Solomon wrote th Proverbs. saw And King David wrote the Psalms. that th however, he suffrage amendment was Inevitable, tf not by Con nectlcut, - then by some other state. He - Tha KtekieM Pto,r r- therefore- earn out with letter urging ; s, Sir: I'eee to by the papers that the th amendment, ratify Cqnnectlcut SnU since then Senator Brandegea ha so anticipating th advent of Christin na- mas, hav begun seising the stock of far become reconciled to tional affairs that ho agreed to us his mincemeat held by grocers. This Inforinfluence to have hi comm)tte report mation affects ms only vaguely; a a. owto circumstances over which I had favorably on the matter of placing the ing memorial in the retunda at tb next no control my crop pf mincemeat this session of congress. With this- support, year was a flat failure. W. 8. M. there la small chanc of eongreo refusAh, yes. Th ceok Informed ua yestering th gift. Tb rotunda where th otutuo ia to day that the stock of mincemeat which be placed to th great hall below th ah had compiled Would not keep w tin-odome of th capltol. Tho hall contain the addition of a pint of brandy. eight largo paintings showing important We explained to her that If we had a pint scenes In th history of America. Above of brandy, we should put It to a better them runs the celebrated frieze which use than preserving mincemeat. wae begun by Brumidl, th Italian artist, and which for years has lacked only a 'T Delliua The painting, few feet of completion. (Horace, Odes, Ltb. 'll., 3.) done In gray, black and white, to simuf, late 'seems to be a' aeries of Aequara memento rebus in arduis Indians, settler and soldiers following Serrare mentsrn; one another areund the walls, or occato becom other the way sionally facing TranqgU remember, facing adversity ' part, of a picture tn our earlv history, " Brumidl had planned the entire frieze, Keep you your spirit, and in. prosperity I "pom all elation overgarish but ho died, end since bta time do artist foredoomed by fat to perleh. , Deltas, has been found Who coutd keep to th spirit and technique of th Brumidl work. Whether still is th by suspended Scaffolding jour term of life drags on in sorrow frleie where an artist recently tried out some in Or grassy nook you forget to- -, his skill. morrow , . The rotunda la unfurnished, except for a few chair for the uae of Spending vour holiday at leisure Falernian with near statues your pleasure; th Wooing guards, and a wall. This collection of statues now consists of Lafayette, Grant. Hamilton Wheie the tall pine tree court with Ua and Baker In nmrole; Jefferson in bronze spreading boughs of Washington from Sllver leafed poplar and a cool abadow and a plaeter-as-t the famous statue by Houdon. There to throws, Wher down ita croeked bod th river also a bust of Washington in bronze, and a great head of Lincoln rising out Writhes, brawling on its way, of a marble tlock, by Outxon Bor glum. Hither your nard and wins, hither your AN UNBEKNOWN GREAT MAN. bring, Next to tho maeslve Lincoln head, tbo Short roses lived and lovely, beautiful child or statue labeled "Baker" attract th moat , Spring, attention because few people can Place Wntl youth and fortune grant you him In history- - His clothes are of a cut power. revowhich suggests the time after th While yet the Sister' threads endure. e lution, and becausa he to reproduced instead of herolo, ha looks short and Farewell your mansion, woodland, and Even down In the offices ef chunky. green the superintendent of the capltol It re- Lappedterraced by the turgid Tiber's cool golden quired sofne wracking of brains and sheen, to consultation of encyclopedias drag Farewell to hoarded heap of treasure. forth the facta that Colonel B. D. Baker Jolly your heir, and keen for pleasure. was a noted warrior In tha Mexican war, a senator from Oregon and finally died Regx! your forebears; rich, and high your leading a desperate charge early In tue station. civil war at Ball a Idiuff. it not, or, poorest of the nation. After ail. Baker was a man of distinc- Matters Bom time your turn will come to dle tion, but placed by Washington, Jeffer . of Dl and deatlny Victim son and Lincoln th visitor to unusually Probably AH Ilf to herded Into that Anal turn. puaaled aa to hi Importance. tome people will be equally unfamiliar Alt lots ar shaken, drawn from the ta- -' with tho women who are to be added to tal urn, To th the occupants of the rotunda. will Boon or Into your passport fat women who have been fighting for send. ge they are household name. Busan end. Exile eternal at th Journey B. Anthony, tw particular, haa alway W. C. F. been a name to conjure with In feminist ns 'If k.. pre-hib- ut baa-relle- t blue-coat- ed .) ! Mipm MijM mi 1 mmm -- Answers to Questions. (Any reader oan get the answer to any question bF writing th Tribune Information Bureau, Frederic J. Haefiln. director. This offer applies otrictly to Information. The bureau cannot give advice -on legal, medical and flnanoiat matters.trou-It does not attempt to settle domestic bles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on any subject. ..Writ your question plainly and briefly. Gtv full nano stamp and address, and inclose for return postage. Ail repUes r aent direct to th inquirer.) porcelain. It to also used for wall tile, being mixed with varving amount of quartz, feldspar and ball clay. r. r white? EL'Dw H of snow results The whiteness from th fact that the onew crystals are so minute that each cell of the retina of the eye receive a general Impression produced by different wave lengths reflected from Innumerable tiny facets. W A -- -, Q. . Did" the Thirty Tyrants rule over all Greece, or over tho city of Athens only? A- - M. P. A. These men, appointed ruler of the oity of Athena by thetr Bpartan conquerors, at the close of tho Peloponnesian war In 404 B. C.. were Athenians, but were among the few who favored an oligarchy rather than a democracy, Q. What was the real name of Bertha M. Clay? I. M. R A. - Bertha M. Ctoy 'waa the pseudonym of Charlotte Braeme. Q- - A. "Why is snow Q. What Is barite or barium used for and what to Its value? A. W. B. A. Barium In a cltemloat element bemetals whose longing to the group-o- f oxides are the alkaline earths. It to yellowish white, somewhat malleable at high temperature, burning easily when. heated, in the air, The commercial mta-oral are barite and wltherite. Barite to a sulphate or barium, also called heavy-spa- r, , from its high specific JUST TOO LATE." gravity. When finely ground, it to .used as an ingredient tn certain paints, espeMrs. Kinks (severely) Henry, there Is In white quoFor of cially an account In the paper about a businesn place paints. tations on price, look tn technical papers man leaving hi wire and running off with th and Mining a pretty typist. such Engineering . Journal. M. Kink Js there? ' f Mrs. Kinks Yes, there Is, and lt"a the Q. How can I get a government loan third account of 'the kind I've seen this on a farming proposition? Subscriber. A. Make application to the farm loan Mr. Kinks All thl really doesn't In, board, Washington, D. C., which will fur- terest me. my dear. nish lull information of the method a te - Mr, Kink It dof roe. Henry, yew hav a pretty typist In your office. bp foliowod. Mr. Klnko No, me haven't. My part0 - Q. ner eloped with her last week. London What causes a ground swell? P. C. Telegraph. A. A ground swell occur frequently along a coast where the water la shallow A RECORD HARVEST. tor a long distance from th hind. It to Crop failures?" asked the due to deep water disturbances from Tea, Tv seen a few in my day. in heavy winds. The swell or roller breaks 1854 the corn crop was almost nothing. when It reaches the shallow water and We cooked some for dinner, and - my forma a senes ef breakers, amoe thing father ate fourteen acres com of at one down again before peaching shore tf the meal Life. t extent. flat to of . . , old-tim- ,. - great j ATTRACTIVE. How mbny different sound has th (From December (Film Fun.) letter "a? B. 8. so anxious to become a re you Why A. A haa approximately nine sound consul? values, as In lame, man, father, water, Most of them I see on tha screen alwant, ask, village, data (last a). ways are sitting beside a tabla on which .. there are decanter and siqhons, What to meant by tweedledum and are constantly being seltxep Q. visited by and tweedled? T. W. maidens. A. This Is' ad old expression, employed to denote the fact that there to no appreHE GOT EVERYTHING. ciable difference between two unimporA customer sitting In the first chair tant points. Much ado about nothing conIn a barber shop In Indianapolis ficotty veys much tbo same idea, tha other day had ordered all th trimof courae. Included a which, mings, Q. What to kaolin? E. A. stage after tho haircut. So when Bcotty A. Thto to a soft clay of variable but got hta taper lighted and had tho sing usually low, plasticity, burning to a pur under way, a little kid just outside the whit color, and to- of a high refractoridoor was heard to exclaim: Look, ness. Th chief use of kaolin to for th mamma! They are haunting em on that manufacture of whit earthenware and fellow with a candle- - Exchange. Q. WANTED SALESMAN life-siz- . ' v TO SILL ' - nutti-a- circle. Busan B. was brought UP by a Quaker father to the belief that both men and women should ba economlotUly Independent. She began to teach school at It teachwhether from than on, and years, ing or leoturlng and campaigning for suffrage, she was a working woman to her death at Sf year. Tha meet interesting Incident In her life to prohablv how attempt to vote in the presidential election of 1171 aa a test Bh w of the Fourteenth amendment. arrested on Tliankiglvlng day, and th case was tried th next Juno in a little i to.f New; coqnty, ' 'TheAjyh judge, who from his mannerisms haa come down in history as a .most lady-lik- e judge," lined himself up with and tradition. lie decreed convention that the sentence of the oeurt is that you pay a a fin of $100 and th oost to which the prisonof th prosecution, er returned, May It please your honor, 1 shall never pay a dol'ar of your unjust cut . Yea CAES, TRUCKS, TSlCTOES. Sir: Speaking of ear, of court you know why they've been keeping em covM. 8. ered. Unrestricted, Utah ind Idaho. j Jack McDaniel, having relinquished his poet at a cylinder press to accept the of Tituseditorship of the ville, Fla., salutes th world la part aa follow: "It shall b mf purpose, and "will use every honorable effort to strengthen tne aatrtngency of organised labor. Not by etrepant methods nor will I attempt to bread TrinelpJeemf thotriieeF Mr; BEVERIDGE MOTOR CO. ,. a union movement with sophisticated' Th philosophy of outhentle unionism shall be, as haa alwava beets my on and onlv - expression qf thought' by word or eth-L- .... ,,lThe.Hoii8e .That. Ool. Service, Built. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Va'- Btep a Little Careful, Gents. th Watertown. 8. D., Public Opinion.) penalty, Notice! I have lost $125 worth ol difTh judge believed her. and. ae on nod wishing to incar- ferent' things cut of my hack shed and biographer aa, cerate her to all eternity, he added yard and beside 40 ducks, and from will be a shot gently: 'Madam, th court wtU not order now on svery night there gun get, loaded with" no on shot. Bo yen committed until th tin to paid.' ", careful about b a little better walking PINtTER ON PRINCIPLE.' around tn my back yard. C. C Wein Mu Anthony neve eonsidered marberg. riage. Mho aald half In jest that ahe rould not consent that fhq man she from "th Chicago' WoA missionary loved, possessed of the rights of citizenman's club lectured tn Ottawa on belter ship and eligible to th office Of presiEnglish and less slang, ,and the local dent, should unit his destinies in mar-ri- paper headed Its "Bum Jabber with a political alat and pariah, oa Binged on Beezer story by Jane With Trick a woman eras by th laws of th country. Lingo." F.ilzabeth Stanton waa as ardent an exponent of woman s equality with man Will Or. Hammend econd Thle? a waa Busan B., but ah did nE wait Bir: I hereby nominate FYed Thrill- ah for th law to come around bofot would marry. She did, how avgr back In kill. of Commercial Point. Ohio, ae dra140 Inaiet on th weed obey being left matis critio to tb academy, R. H. M. out of tb marrlago ceremony. I obstinately refused to Bh writes- I. who ztlll waltz with eom obey one with whom I supposed I was grace," write entering Into an equal relationship., atepped out tozt evePaddy, Th word "obstinately ah uses, nod ning with a sweet young thing of th became her fiance opposed the omission, newer school to learn th latest. This th Scottish minister who morning Im a todd.e wreck." but beca-Jwaa to perform th ctremony objected It finally gat In. but he strenuously. it la in Marian, avenged himself bv praying long and i From th Marion, HI., paper) an and hour preaching fervently nearly Judge H T. J"ook ef Herrin zpok tq on the obligation of th dutiful wife. of twelve or fourteen peoa crowd large Lucretla Mott, the third reformer of th triangle, wea a little Quakereaa vi- ple her Baturday night of manner, vacious always simply Oh, Sorry! A dressed. shoulonly the head ders of the women In th memorial are te (From th London Time ) b supplied, th Quaker cap of Lucretla DeipltO th hurry and bust! of th Mott le th only bit ef significant dress present age, (boo who baric other peonoticeable about th statu. ple's ahln can surety find Unto to utter Mr. Mott was noted In bar day for her an expression of regret. Burly man In famous discourse diagonal gray, with gold chetn. at lecture, especially her on woman In which she pleaded for a circus, 1.45, please note. Victim. women to be a. knowledges as a moral, " Hha deIn India last year. 30,173 parsons died rewponslbl being especially cried the prwperlv Isw, which ga' all t from snako hit, and 31 41 snake were a woman s possseslen te her husband killed. If flier ar more snakes than from th dsv of her marriage, to do with people In India th problem of population h nleasoU, take rare of liro'f .(From al - -- THK LIMIT) u half-doae- Ox-fo- rd tPiem the Richmond Tlis-tepatrhI cannot the old aunts. The new are are N, u. W ara r!ori until ihahlp pipes cept. The highest per cent te required in Massachusetts with 3.7 ; Rhode island has the lowest requirement, 2.5 per cent. 4. BV what test to the value of jnllk standardized? By the "Babcock test, invented by Dr. 8. M. Babcock of the Wisconsin agricultural experiment station. The first description of the test nas published In July, ?890. 5. What it the Babcock test for milk and cream? A test which discovers their content. It to based on the fact that fat atr-nwill" dissolve ai.'thuric all nonfatty constituents of milk and thus enable the fat te separate on stand-MILk ANSWER. ing. Th per cent of fat determined' the or cream. 1. Of what substances Is milk com , value of tb milk 4k What to the average fat content of posed? Water, fat, casein, albumin, milk cream? e Thirty-fivper cent to usual. sugar and ash. . The fat content may run from S3, with 3. What per resit of cow's milk to wathin cream, to 55 per cent in rich cream to milk, th raw ter? The per cent of water varies from 7: For what substances 83 tp 90 per cent The milk from a nor- material? and Cream, butter, ' cheese mal cow will not, aa a rule, contain Condensed milk. y ob-. more than 88 per cent of water nor less The 8. What is whey? ttaa 84 per cent. tained in the manufacture ef cheese-9- . ir. What to the standard adopted by the How Is fnilk adulterated? By waUnited Btatea government for fat in tering, skimming, or both. milk? 3.35 per cent of fat In milk. In 1. Which has th higher npedflo gravmost states tha legal standard to S "per ity, milk or cream? Milk. DEFINITIONS, t. What Is tho difference between an atheist and an agnostic? A : S. What to an Iconoclast? J." What ia an eclectic? 4. What to togoraaehy? 6. What to a pantheist? t. "What to tue plural of phenomenon? 7 What to hedonism? 8. What to the converse of egoism? 9. For wbat book Is Darwin noted? 10. To what law do tho discoveries of Mendel give light? 111 , To the Members Salt Lake Commercial Club About 200 of you heard tb address made by RaU R. Wool-leof the tl. S. Geological Survey at the AVeddesday lunch-- ' eon on the subject ' IRRIGATION AND WATER POWER POSSIBILITIES OF THE INTERMOUNTAIN REGION ' Those heard the address realize the importance of what . Mr. Woolley said apd what the results will b when the problem of maximum utilization of our water resources ,'has been solved. Not only the arid htates, but the entire nation, will share in the attending prosperity. RECLAMATION OF THE DESERT WASTES means agricultural wealth, more industries and rapid inpopulation. All development and business activities will be stimulated.' Your business will profit. iSU?d digest of Mr. Woolley's talk will in the December number of The New West Magazine.appear Those who heard him will want a copy and those who. were not there will find it well worth reading. You can yibtain copies for yourself and your friends by filling out the coupon- y ' , -' New Weet Msgaz'ne, Inc Date e Walker Bank Untieing, Balt Lake City, Utah, copis of magazine containing Woolley article, for which I Inclose $ at !fl cant a copy. I also lacloa $2 00 for subscription lo iha tnagaslnt for Total $. Th 01 Rary.......".. Jlt Nm AOdras . |