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Show emoar WEEKLY The Democrat Will Save You Money on Your Legal Notices Call Was. . 9-5-- 4-9 VOL. 4 No. 5 SALT LAKE CITY, ijTAfl SATURDAY. FEBRUARY. 7, 1925. j ' - ' Improvements Important Factor In Reducing Cost. J PERFECTED. IMPROVEMENTS IMPORTANT FACTOR IN REDUCING COST During1 the past few, years there has been developing a rapidly grow ing demand for. applying the budget system to all matters of - public expenditure. ' Long after it was conceeded to be a ? flagrantly -wasteful, unbusinesslike way to do. our National Government went on in the old way with little .or.no attempt to correctly forecast expenditures. Then eventually, at the beginning of the Harding administration, a national budget system was put into operademand, stimtion; and a ntion-wid- e ulated by post-wconditions, has been made. for trimming of government expenses.. States, counties and cities .have been falling in line with, budget programs, tho the prolbem of cutting down expenses has proved a grievous one, and n? great amount of- success has been attained. Necessity for per- -, feeted budget laws and machinery, however, has been made increasingly clear; and it is in this connection that several important bills have been introduced into the present' legislature. ' : House Bill Number 24 deata with county budgets, and ' seems to be a satisfactory measure for the county unit. House Bill No. 35 provides budget improvements for cities of the .first and second class, .and Bill No.. 29 similarly deals with cities of the third class. There is another - one 1 -- ' gen-reral- ly - ar - : . . jiertaining'to school districts; hence ie seems that if the present measures are favorably considered, TUtah ? will be presented with a complete .sys-- e . Ai ofT) tTdgfidtfs.-6- "Button, button, who's got the button ? ' They know in Prague where buttons are to be found,:for.4here Is, a button museum In the?: Czechoslovak capital In which .'every .form' and type of - button,.: ever manufactured or wrought by .hand Is on exhibit. : The buttons , musqum ; Is one of 'the . most unique- Institutions of Its kind In the York world, according .to the New ' f. 7 JWorIi.' i The museum:, was founded by a button manufacturer named',, Henry Waldes. Within & few. years the Institution has so expanded that .It' fills, two floors of a large house in the suburb of Wrschowits. A study of the materials usid Is. in Jtself roost worth while..- - There are buttons of goldof sliver. Ivory', bronze . porcelain, of precious stones such as inrqnols, opal, carneol, etc.- Some but, tons date-- back 3,000 'years before Christ. The flashiest and showiest buttons are those of the Eighteenth cento enjoy tury,. when Europe ' seemed" " rare luxury. ' . .'V.;. : The most grewsome buttons are the rB. "Kelloggs career '.Is the Frank poison 'buttons,, containing a. , ' surmounted, 'story of the rise of an obscure but and tiny .phial of poison . ambitious Minnesota country lawyer by a sharp stud.-- In the days of politUnited States senator, then to the lo ical assassinations It was an easy thing court of St ' James . sis ambassador, for. a man 'attending a .high . society of function,' such as a ban,1 to approach, and now to the poet of secretary . ' ' state. . to a In his adversary, and, crowd, '; AIth.ough. Mr. Kellogg Is accountbrash by him in snch a'wajr that the ed a wealthy' man, he has no Interests button '.scratched his skin.. .Into this rent In :the akin the contents efthe outside his,' law practice. The for, tune which he has was accumulated, button would then flow with fatal conbis friends say,; in hit law practice, , ; sequences.' largely before he won the. title of trust husteri for the Roosevelt ad --V.; Ambaesadof Has Many : ministration. 'v. T Mr. Kellogg was born In. Potsdam, and High Privileges N. Y December 22, 1856, and when of being an ambassador Is nine ; years old ; went with task Ibe , father -- . -- - -- . - , . . -- . on Minn.. June 10. 1880. Warren Becomes U. S. Attorney General Charles Beecher Warren of Michigan is the attorney general in the Mr. cabinet of President Coolidge. Warren takes the place of Harlan F. Stone who has been appointed an associate justice of the Supreme court of the United States. Mr. Warren already has figured prominently In the affairs of the present administration. He was the Presidents choice for chairman of the resolutions committee at the Republican national convention at Cleveland last summer, and In that capacity drafted the party platform upon which the President based his campaign for ce ceipts. "That's strange 1" said the manager of the company. Why, when we we In had the longest Omaha played ran in the history of the city! Im sorry! replied the manager of the theater. Sorry about what?" Sorry the audience abandoned the chase P Unlucky Magpie The superstition that magpies are nlucky Is based on the belief that not bey are the only birds which did Noah. with ark the o Into Hello9 Girl Listening In On The World As to American sense of humor, situation looks very much like a free observe the kinds of cars some peo- for all. Columbia Record. Record-Chronicl- e. ple put locks on. Denton Any way you figure it, the radical Republicans face a cold winter they to keep cool with It is comforting to know that the will eitheror have stay out in the cold with tal eclipse of the sun will be fol- Coolidge Follette. La ded shortly by that of the sixty-fhtt- h Congress. New York The American navy capitol ships Her-1-Tribu- ratio established are up to the Disarmament American the by A Western politician was informed Naval Senate ApproThe Treaty. at he was the father of triplets, priation Committee declares in the j demanded a recount. New York report which concures with a similar nerican. report adopted by the House Committee. There are 87,642 dumb in America, but that doesnt include the dumb who The Kansas Supreme Court has Editors. Associated can talk. ruled that the Klu Klux Klan is in the State illegally and that they We dont know just what it is we must be licensed to operate of leave ide the world free for, but the the State. 5-5- -3 Mr. Warren has had two diplomatic posts since the Harding administration came Into power In 1921. He was first appointed by the late Presi- dent Harding as ambassador to Japan, and after serving for about two years tendered his resignation. Mr. Warren and John Barton Payne, a Democrat, were selected as special commissioners to negotiate agreements with Mexico. Their efforts brought about an understanding which made possible the resumption of diplomatic relations between the United States and Mexico. Mr. Warren then was selected as ambassador to Mexico. lie agreed to serve only for a limited period nnd resigned last fall. Whats the Matter With Kansas Now? Whats the matter with Kansas? $1,-688,5- 93; . . where he worked on the farm and studied by night. lie was admitted to the bar In 1877 and began to practice Immediately. His friends prevailed upon him to file for the Republican nomination for United States senator in 1916, which he did, winning the nomination and subsequently the election. He was a In 1922, but was defeated by Dr. Henrik Shlpstead, candidate for lie was named by President Coolidge as United States ambassador to Great Britain October 26, 1923, .succeeding Col. George Harvey. Mr. Kellogg was married to Clara M. Cook, daughter of George Clinton Cook of Rochester, Tlt-BU- s. Telephone operators In Japan are called raoshl moshl girls, the term being the Japanese equivalent for hello. These operators are required to wear a uniform costume consisting of a sort of skirt called a hakama, which Is worn over a working kimono of coarse white cloth. The sleeves of the.kimono are not as full as those ot an ordinary kimono and are tied with a cord just below the elbow to prevent them from Interfering with the movements of the operators hands. The hakama has a sash tied in front. This attire is completed by a pair of white cloth foot covers and straw sandals. They wear no stockings, which is a custom peculiar to all Japanese women, except those who adopt foreign styles. . It cost Utah county 5319,322.55 to operate its county government during 1924, according to the annual report of ' Clifford L. Wright, county auditor, just presented to the county commission. The expenses were $10,216.03 within the budget set by the commission at the fore 'begtarilflijflif 19 think as rapidly as you write! . . . Who has revealed to you what I was Salt Lake. Awards totaling How many thefts does meditating? have been made during In my soul? make hand your the seven years operation pf the no to show that Is evidence There workmens compensation law In Utah, writ ere ancient shorthand the of speed according to figures for the period was at all comparable with that of our ended June 30, 1924, prepared by the own They wrote upon waxed state Industrial commission. Compen- tabletsday. and no specimen of their art sation was granted in 77,170 cases. appears to have been preserved. For there was no shorthand In Salt Lake. Utah declined to rati- centuries world. the It was not revived until fy the child labor amendment to the 1588, when Dr. Timothy Bright, a constitution of the United States, the Yorkshire parson, published a book. legislature in both houses rejecting Characterie ; an Arte of Sborte. tbs proposed amendment. It was Swifts and Ssersts Writing by . slaughered in the upper house and 'lilts system was simply s col- the lower house declined to ratify it lection of arbitrary signs for a large number of common words. There was by a vote of 43 to 8. no attempt to provide a shorthand Salt Lake. Mrs. Minnette M. says the Manchester Guaralphabet, Woodruff, wife of Dr. E. D. Wood- dian. ruff, former president of' the Salt Lake chamber of commerce, died at Rhyme on Ring ' the family residence, 95 East First While some old customs are dying North street. out, others are being revived. Among Cedar City. The $80,000 garage the latter is that of engraving mottoes being erected in Cedar City by the and proverbs .on lovers rings. Rings Union Pacific Railroad to house ex- thus engraved were formerly called pensive motor equipment for tourist posy rings, and some 'Of the inscriptrips in the southern scenic won- tions were very quaint. For instance, how would the followders is nearly completed. The railroad plans to use forty powerful cars ing appeal to the modern miss: lova la flxt, I will not rang. for tourist travel into the attrac- - XMylike my cholca too wall to chanrs. tions of southern Utah beginning at Among- the many other mottoes the end of the railroad line. which adorned the rings of oldtime were: Salt Lake. If the state auditors lovers In I do rejoice. thee, office is to function properly and This and themy choice, forever. are thine giver make the audits required by law, Of all the rest love thee best I an increased appropriation is necesI joy God for me appointed thee. sary, John E. Holden, state auditor, in thee, Joy thou in me, and Provisays in an open letter to members dence divine hath made thee mine. of the joint appropriations committee of the legislature. A legislative Thoae Fool Queation appropriation of $46,400 is asked for The bright red motorcar skidded in the letter. The biennial budget across the road, shot through violently submitted to the governor allows the a landed on its side In a and hedge ofgce $38,600. The driver roughly plowed field. the wreck and out of crawled Moab. Orange Olsen, supervisor painfully stood at the It, looking picture of of the La Sal national forest, has regloom. ceived authorization from the secrelooked After a while, a passer-btary of agriculture to issue grazing through a the hole in hedge. permits for 19,500 head of horses and Hello he exclaimed cheerfully. cattle, 28,000 head of sheep ' for the Had an accident? summer period, 16,900 head of ewes The motorist bit back the angry for lambing and 200 head of swine words that rose to his lips. for the ensuing season on the forOh, no, he replied, not at all. The est. This is a decrease of 900 head fact Is Ive Just got a new car, so I in the number of cattle, as compared brought the old one out to bury It. with last year. Have you a pick or spade you could lend me? I don't seem to make much Salt Lake Taxes cpllected for 1924 headway digging by machinery. by the county treasurer total acording to figures made public by his office. A balance of Felt Hat Popular is uncollected. Most of this felt hats are the most popAmerican will be collected during the year, it of headgear for men of the is said. The treasurer has a force of ular type during the rainy sen son collectors in the field now to collect Philippines on. now Is that delinquent personal property taxes. to Blame These collectors are authorized to Thoughtleaane So very few people mean to he unlevy on and sell property for the taxes immediately if the tax is not kind that It makes yon wonder why there should be all the unkindaess In paid upon demand. the world. J. E. Buckrose. Provo. . Theatrical "Run box-offi- well-know- : Japaneae im-tio- er of this state. . - DOLLARS INTEREST YEARLY dull FIXED EXPENDITURES ASSURES tools and noises Imperceptible to ordi HIGH TAXES nary ears. Trained hearing has saved us thousands of dollars, says a writer In the official publication of a firm of With fifteen per cent of the Nabrass manufacturers of Waterbury. tional income being piled into the Conn. Some time ago It was discovered bottomless pit of taxation, thinking that there were many employees of people are beginning to wonder when the company, both men and women, whose sense of hearing was so acute ahalt is going to be called. The tax problem in the State of that In spite of the deafening roar of machinery, they could hear noises, or Utah is one to which serious atten-hop- e the absence of noises, that the ordi n of reducing taxes that is nary person would never notice. In must be given. Not with any every case it was discovered that this unusual gift was not Inherited, but acpossible but with the purpose of quired. It didnt come to them suddenly or seeing to it that there shall be no ineasily, but only after years of experi- crease. ence and familiarity with their work, The bonded indebtedness of our surrounded by the same machines, is $39,892,855.00, made up as state that their hearing would develop this follows. delicate keenness that gave them the County, $5,386,050; School power to notice the smallest sound Districts, $11,399,950; Cities and amid other noises. A curious thing Towns, $13,536,855; State, $9,660,000. was found, that the ability Is more The bonded indebtedness is 6 of common where factory nolsea are deaf- the state's assessed valuation and ening. It la the overpowering noise Itself that makes these trained ears so $83.32 per capita. The interest paid out on this indelicate that they can hear what would be Inaudible to others, observes debtedness is near $2,000,000 annual-l- y. the Literary Digest. The income from taxes last year was Seen Power $18,182,062, distributed Us folMagical lows: General Fund, $1,149,953; U. of in Shorthand Writing U. and U. A. C $447,185; DistHct The ancients appear to have regarded their shorthand writers as pos and High Schools, $9,062,448; Cities seated of a faculty closely akin to and Towns, $3,699,917 ; Counties, Roads, $2,097,591; Bounty, magic. Ausonlus, a poet of the Fourth century, addressing a shorthand wri- $36,375. ter, says: Your hand, of which the This fact is then celar that to pay movement is hardly perceptible, files over the waxy surface ; ' and thcug'i the Interest on our indebtedness, remy tongue runs over long phrases, you deem our bonds, maitain present edcontinue the fix my Ideas on your tablets long be- ucational standards; Provo. As a result of the continued argument between the Utah Automobile association and the Auto club of Utah, a sentiment has arisen in the southern section of the state for a state wide automobile organization to be headed by F. D. B. Gay n auto pathfindof Provo, . TAX REDUCTION A PHANTOM UTAH PAYS TWO MILLION Brass workers hear tempers, . : . Your show- Is the worst we have ever had here, said the manager of a theater In a western town as he handed the manager of the touring comrepany his share of the Trained Ears Detect Faults in Machinery . - - resentatlve possesses some remarkable privileges, and ranks Immediately after the royal princes of the country In Habit of Silence Inbred which lie Is It might almost In the old days OJlbway children be said that residing. an ambassador, like the were taught to be seen and not heard, king, can do no wrong, for he stands for to be heard might have meant above the law of the country in which death. When the scream of the hoot he is officiating. owl or other strange noises came from The courts have no power over him the woods, they snuggled closer, but or his servants, and even a criminal, kept all the quieter, for the noise If he were known to be residing on which they heard was liable to be the an embassy, could not be arrested signal of a prowling enemy, and to without the permission of the ambashave cried would have been to have sador. revealed the hiding place of the family Another interesting fact about an or tribe. ambassador la that the rronnd on Thus through ' the thousands of which his residence stands belongs to years that the Indians lived In con the country from which he comes. stant danger of attack, the habit of We all grumble nowadays about the silence was bred In the blood. Eren now the OJlbway youngster will take amount of taxation we have to pay. ambassador again a severe Jolt without a sound, and This Is where the do not have to scores. Ambassadors eren come up smiling. pay a single penny In taxes. London Utah Pays two Million Dollars Interest Yearly thirty-nint- h - ed ' News Notes From All Part of UTAH Tax Reduction a Phantom ; From Farm Boy to Secretary of State v ' so-call- $1.50 A YEAR Farmington. Selection of a jury annual for the trial of Robert McCoy for Addressing dinner of the Ohio Society of New the murder of A. Roy Heath, Salt Nicholas E. Lake business York, Representative man, on December 5, Longworth, Republican leader In the has been completed and the taking house, predicted that the next conevidence of begun. The case is begress, with Republicans havjng a clear cut majority In bth houses, would be ing tried in Judge James N. Kimballs (pne of the roost efficient legislative division of the Second district court. He also declared : bodies In; history Ogden. Six residents of Ogden himself :ln favor of barring from Re-- 1 councils the followers valley had a narrow escape while publican party . of Senator I.aFoUette In the recent driving down Ogden canyon in an Presidential campaign a step already automobile when a boulder, practitaken by senate Republicans. He says cally the size of an automobile, near they are no longer Republicans. "These men, he declared, can- the mouth of the canyon, rolled down not and "ought njt to be classed as the mountainside and partially wreckRepublicans In tMnext congress. They ed the car. .left the Republican party dellberate--: Salt Lake. A. E. Beveridge, asJy, and did everything possible toward sistant manager of the state insurIta undoing. Shall we take them to our bosom ance fund, who was charged with and keep them in.' the Inner chambers writing business for the Continental , of our party councils? To do so. In Casualty company during his employuiy opinion, would be to deliberately Ignore the mandate;.if the last election, ment by the state agency, tendered by which the Republican party was commissioned to carry cut a definite legis- his resignation to the state industrial lative program and to adhere to certain fundamental governmental principles. commission. It was accepted by the commission, effective April 1, 1925. No action has been taken in reference " to Charles Caine, manager of the fund. thfc Curiotitie Found in V ' Prague Button Museum . , Longworth Would Oust LaFollette Men i BEING SYSTEM BUDGET TRUTH ABOUT UTAH She has the Greatest Scenic Wonders in the World. Such ructions as they are having in the Sunflower State! Chancellor E. II. Llndley of the University of Kansas, at Lawrence, Kans., (portrait herewith) was removed from office by Gov. Jonathan M. Davis and the board of administration following a controversy which arose when the chancellor susfour university , students pended charged with drinking. W. L. Burdick, vice' chancellor of the university, was ordered to take charge after Llndley refused to relinquish his post at the request of the governor. Defying this order. Doctor Llndley sought legal aid, and a temporary Injunction was granted In District court at Lawrence to restrain the governor and the board from Interfering with Doctor Llndley in his duties. ' " Then a little later Governor Darla went out of office, a few hours after his arrest on a charge of accepting a $L250 bribe for a pardon. The new gov-ernor, B. S. Paulas, promptly reinstated Llndley. - - Char-wetsr- I I - y 1 $7,373,-603.2- $51,-456.- 8, 70 s ary money to operate the state' government that any vision of tax reduction is a phantom. This much should be done, a flaming sword should be placed at the doorway of the treasury vaults of the state to smite the hand of Waste and Extravagance that seeks to touch one dollar theirin. Jack Tar 99 A waterproof canvas Impregnated with tar Is called s tarpaulin. By ex- storm hat trnilon tlie worn hjr sailors In former times was called 8 tarpniilln also. Usually these hats were made of oiled or tarred cloth. As time went on tho sailors themselves were called tarpaulins. The word was ao used by Dickens and many other writers. This was later shortened Into Finally "Jack" was added and a sailor was called a Jack Tar. Tlie popular belief that a sailor Is called a tar because of his use of tar to seal tlie seams of tha ship seems to be disproved hy the earlier use of tarpaulin as applied to sailors. Pathfinder Magazine. wide-brimm- ed tr. Reaourceful Mr. Beanpole Mr. Beanpole was somewhat sensi- tive about past failures, It being his Job to look after the plants and goldfish when Mrs. Beanpole went away. So this time he picked out a rear bathroom, put the fish In the tub, turned on a gentle stream and range? the plants under the eaves to catch the water merely overflow. Surplus stairs and unhack down the trickled Into the yard. door kitchen der the Such were the arrangements greeting Mrs. Beanpole upon her return. There was a moderate amount of damage to plaster and linoleums, but the goldfish and the plants were never more flourishing. Modem Life Perhaps modern life too much absorbs and fatigues the spirit. Insisting that every man; even he of humble circumstances, shall learn and do too many things; so that he has neither the leisure nor the will to test Ideals, and, sounding them, to stir his Imagination till It transforms them Into something more precious and Important than the guise In which they first appeared. Modern men are proud of their activity, but the too active life spurns the contemplative, atrophies the Imagination, habituates the spirit toa heeding only concrete things. Gugli-elm- Ferrero. Enjoying Ordinary Thing It Is certainly a very Important lesson to learn how to enjoy ordinary things, and to be able to relish your being, without the transport of some passion, or the gratification of some appetite. Steele. |