OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKETIUBUSE, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 9, 1923. a!t fake gribtmh gjjc TwuwT'Bvury Mortal hy Pufeltsfcmt tkmmow Trihvtw ZIJHK.IU FliuJt: . IfeUttA ! Mcwth.. m Daily sad Sued, aea ear...,..... W.w Daily and Lftfct Kiawbra ia L. 91 Daily aa4 Boaday, par bmA. ! aaa ywrr Hew I Meekly Tntnm, 1M AntuMr u a aata to vry Hwpurtasit Rcadar ay StaHa. tba ia taltad fit 4a any city 9 tatephoataf certata bts lit iubuoa U a aaeaitwr ot tba Frew. Tba Aaaociated Fraaa ta aiciMiraly en'iOtd ta tba um tov yayradaetiaa atbM-wta-aila diipilclM twditfd ta It aa aot ia tbia paper, tad atao tba eradited tacal aawa publiabad baraia. Tba Tnbuaa la a ataaiber af tba AodK it off. rat iDlvratibi reawa Burnt af Cirrolitba. CliraUtioa win be mppOetf lag Tba Tribal by tba Audit Boreas af Urcalatleo. bide , thtcace. itta . (. Batkattb Bpaciai Ageac, aab aaaterp dwtfJBf agaat, World bldg , New Syudicat York; 'Triton bldg . Chlrago; Truat bldg . 8t. toaii; Bard b)dff. Detroit, Ma ; M. Kaoaaa ( blKb-- j Mryaat bblg Pacifle Oaaat A Ca , lac.. C. klorgenara Baa repraaaatatira, Kaanlaer bldg , rtara; liila laaoraace Wdg , Laa Aagaiao; battle Hecnrity bide T1 rufirif a bureaus of iaformatioa of Paris, Tribune are. 4 Km Lamartine. Kranee; 123 Pall UalC London. England; IKacallater dea liadea, Berlin, amr Hotel Home Italy, laiepboaa Waaatcb 660 Wbea yaa fail to get your inban, telephone the city circslatloa department Babafora aeat JO kxk a. m and s copy jott be mewaenger. Laka Balt In ot t City LuicreO at poatoffice Ultt7 It. Ura7. a matter aecood-claa- a Thursday, .August 9, 1923 THE, PRESIDENTIAL t BUCCES- - SION. The hands of fata hae placed Charles Evans Hughes, secretary of state, in direct linoin the presidential succession. But one life, that of President tooH3gs stands' Between Mr. Hughes and the office to which he aspired and for which he made the race agaiBst Woodrow Wilson in 1916. Prea- ident Garfield, in 1881, congress took belated note of the fact that through the death of a president and the - wetom to that office of -- - tae atico presideat,-thlatter petition became vacant, and that no provision had been made te meet the possible contingency of the death of the vice president who became presiFive years later the president. dential succession law, as it is called, wan enacted. That law provides that in the event of the death of the president snd the succession of the vice president, the next government official in line of succession shall be the secretary of state. After the secretary of state follow, in the order of succession, the secretary of the treasury, the secretary of war, attorney general, postmaster general, secretary pf the interior. The office of secretary of agriculture, secretary of commerce, and secretary ot labor did not exist in 18S6, so ihat the holders of these offieos are not in the list of possible presidents by succession. Whichever of the cabinet members docs succeed to the first office in the republic, must, if congress is not in session, summon it to meet within twenty days to provide- for a presidential election. No cabinet officer can so succeed ro the presidency, under the act of 18S6 unless he ia a natural-bor- n citizen of the United States. In sueh dilemma the choice would pass )o tlfe next eligible cabinet member. During the early days of the republic, in 1792, congress ruled that the temporary president of the senate and the speaker of the house should be next in succession to the vice president, tut nearly, century later the law was changed so that a presidents temporary successors would be those more fitted to carry , out his policies. The succession of Mr. Coolidge to the presidency leaves the office of .vice president vacant, and it cannot be filled until a general election for president and vie president is held. The vice president, by virtue of his office, . is presiding officer of the senate. Now and until there is another duly elected vice present, the president of the senate will .he chosen from among the membership of that body. The foregoing is printed in reply to several inquiries as to the situation created by the untimely death of President Harding. t ftrrthtr nssassination-of e. eeeTetary--t-tb-nauyraiu- - BUTTRESSING Article ARTICLE 10. 10 of the league of nations covenant .has. been provided, with a semblance of an enforcement act A treaty of mutual guarantees was finally drafted by the leagues tem- porary mixed disarmament committee. Instead of being a universal guarantee pact, in accordance with the spirit of the league, the members of the committee appear to have compromised the draft, which will mainly serve as a frame for play ia many private alliances. - Under Lord Robert Cecil 's original draft, aa attacked state would notify the council of tho league, which would meet to decide whet measures the other members of the league would take against the aggressor. Italy supported this draft in order to prevent the little entente from act But the French deing rapidly. manded private defensive alliances all alliances in Europe are defensive to become effective without the alow procedure ot going through the league council, and finally won out, - Under the treaty, Foland and tho little entente will be able da go .to the aid of France without any league complications. The general guarantee would also operate in rase of a German attack on France, for example. Aside from any defensive action, France and -- the little entente eeuld meet and dc aide If any other states should use .economic, military and naval measures against Germany, or all combined. In the case of states without private alliances, only the general guarantee arrangement would operate. The purpose of the new guarantees part ia to open tbs way to disarms uient, which has many barriera ahead. The. French and iBritiah, who are chiefly concerned, have actually reached an agreement on the draft, but there must be some special agreement reached to cover an ex tension of the Ruhr occupation. If the assembly of the league approves the treaty as completed, then it must be submitted to. the individual states for approtaL If a large number of league and nonleague states accept the treaty, then the council must draw up a plan for partial disarmament. This plan will chiefly be baaed on what each individual country considers it has gained in the way of seeurily. FIRM AS A ROCK. Unlike a great many foreign oun-tries- , the United States government is built upon secure foundations. Thu death of ,a president iIoim pot lest the give,1 rise to apprehension radicals attempt to seize the reins 'orators are of power. The soap-bomatter of in the wido latitude given haranguing4he people when the lat ter are noj bowed down with grief and are )noving about their busi ness as usual. But it would b a very 'foolish 1. Wr Wr who would obtrude himself upon the public by preaching discontent and advocating in the existing a radical change order o? things while the body of tho late president lies in state in the.ratunda-af-tiimaHoaaLcapil- Undo Sam is patient and long suffering, but there are some things he will not permit, and the wobbhes are well aware of the fact. ' j great' skill, for the aviator cannot ? see tho wind like the surfmaa can1 see th foamy crest which carries him along. Moreover, the birdmaa must often actually remain stationary with reference to the earth, or at least with reference to the wind crest. Once he slips off of the Supporting wind, he mutt glide back into it again, and endeavor to rise; and this results in loss of elevation, and shortens the time or duration of the flight. Another trouble it in The ability to handle or control the plane; the aviator may know just where he should be and what be should do; but with plane proMjled by gravity alone, be is at Hie mercy of many eirenmstanees. Again the soar er has" learned that a rertaia slope or bill configuration produces the best wind crest' tm which to ride; and he must endeavor to remain in proper proximity tn sueh a slope or crest line, or glide from one to another. This added experience and information with the glider haa.not only reduced it to rather narrow limits of activity, but it has at the same time increased its apparent usefulness. The glider plane may ultimately fill thf place of the observation balloon in many respects, taking" viewpoints impossible to obtain with a captive balloon. Moreover, tho glider can usually attain a greater height during Ihe daytime, and would be subject to- - Icta danger of being shot down in war time. Forecasting vForest Fires By Dr, W.' A. By Frederic 3. Haakin. WASHINGTON, D, C.. The forecasting of forest flrea is tbs moat recent step taken, by the United State weather bureau in its long series of service to the public. Beginning with forecasting storms to warn mariners at sea and farmers ok land, .the bureau has extended' its work sothat now it gives minute information on frost nod showers aa they are likely to affect crops. It ta forecasting wet and dry periods. It haa gone to sea and has forecast tho appearance of icebergs ia th steamship lanes and now has devised a method for tbs forecasting of forest fires. The fires which sweep through American forests annually take a toll of inHlksia of dollars of wealth and not infrequently of human life. Not only do they deprive th people of the growth of year. In timber, but by de-- J the hillsides they provoke nuding . oiMif! r.SiC2!Li!,itir ,urn tmk tr bul r year, the depart mom ot Agriculture haa meunc&ined foreet patrols to report forest fire at their Inception and to brln aid in suppressing them while they still are controllable. The weather bureau now oomea forward with an Important study on the foreoaectng of fires. . . Veedleae to- - nay. the ...weather bureau can not give any for eraot of criminal carelessness of campers and hunter and other who permit camp fire to spread into the forest or who fail to put out burning cigar and cigarette stubs, nor can it forecast the ignition of underbrush by sparks from What the bureau paaeSng locomotives. caa do la give an astonishingly accurate forecast of the fires which will be started by lightning, a prolific source of this type of destruction. The bureau - has Just completed a speeist survey- irr ooopenrttmr with the forest service of the department of agriculture, which shows that lightning was the cause of nearly half of Area In the territory th foreet studied. To be able to forecast so a large proportion of fires, and thereby be prepared to fight them, would A be no short step in fire control. h . Vcc-Ji)'- of Further impoverishment the masses of the German people attends tho fall of the paper mark to a point of practically no value what- ever as a medium of exchange. Incidentally, the socialists of the country are renewing their demand that the Cuno government arrive at any with the sort of understanding French and Belgians which will at least signalize the beginning of a climb out of the German economic abyss. "The financial '"cataclysm Tn Her many is the result of the attempt of tho big interests, abetted by the government, to so involve the affairs of Germany that tho - reparations issue- - would - go by the-- beard through tho ruination of the country. Tho plan worked for a time, but eventually it got beyond the power of the conspirators to control matters. Now the masses o the Germans are paying for the stupendous mischief of their rulers and they are paying with customary German docility; only the socialists and communists talk of reprisals. The primary cause of Germanys present financial plight is not the treaty of Versailles; it is not the Ruhr occupation. It lies in the at tempt of the industrialists and the government to so muss up German finances that the bill of the allies for war damages rotild not be collected. Certain Germans have profited the. ones concerned in the processes'of wringing from the small fry Germans the last of their savings, and the repudiation of all internal debts. The millions are paying for the trickery of the few thousands. And the Germans, for generations schooled to accept whatever their masters order for them, sink deeper and deeper into the slough and blame the peace of Versailles aa the author of their ills! - Ertn SMOKE How to tho Lin. 1st too qaif fall wheri' thoy may. , HEALTH. ' Th Brittoh ministry of kesltb has issued a committee report oil the abatement of smoke, which differs from most reports In that it puts most of thf blame on the domestic chimney. In one place K says the domestic chimney is responsible for at least W per' cent of the smoke and that 9 per cent of the Coal thus burned ectcabes unburned ss soot, la other places it makes such statements ns: "The evince idiows clearly that a large percentage of the smoke In the atmosphere of towns comes from the chimneys of dwelling houses." The difference in statements on this point mean nothing more than that the proportion of the total smoke due from dwellings varies to pollution greatly sa between a residential piece like, say, Cambridge and in Industrial city, sav like Pittsburg. The committee goes further and the bulk of the smoke from dwellings to the burning of what they call raw ooah The old fashioned goal burning kitnhem range with a back boiler is declared to be inefficient, wasteful of fuel and labor, and pro To Improve the duettve of caused by smMting private dwelling chimneys, the committee recommends, among other methods, and to most places above aU other methods, heating and cooking with Of course, the Installations for burnIt ing gas must be properly built. recommends that the lewd be changed and to require that clubs, hotels, even dwellings tn, new building districts be required to install gas or some other smokeless method ot healing and cooking. An Interesting part of the report relates to the observations of a subcommittee that visited the great Industrial West districts. It reported those districts incomparably less smoky than the great industrial districts of England. The explanation given by the engineer in charge of 400 boilers in the Krupp plant at Essen was that he paid no attention to smoke ss such, but that th way to get the maximum waa efficiency out of coal he Inbought Gerthe to burn it smokelessly. man dwellings in the great Industrial districts heating and cooking Is done either with sai jor with coke or Briquettes. They were round to be almost smokeless. The committee goes strongly on harmfulness of record ss to th moke. It says: Smoke has a serious effect on the general health. Staclose relatistical evidence shows death.rste amt the tion betwaen-th- sis hardly It atmospheric conditions. necessary to enlarge upon the great Importance of simltghr to the general health or upon the deleterious nature of any factor which diminishes that sunlight. "The health of urban communities is most Injuriously affected by the loes of sunlight due to cost smoke. It has been estimated that, broadly speaking. is expe20 per cent more sunlight In the country than in va rienced smoky town COAL AND -- men actually engaged in farming. 'A now constituted, it consists of the stats tweaty-st- k national union, two EPIGRAM OF PAIN AND JOY. Bount and dearth by God are given: Bold and craven at His chiding, Prone upon this meteor shriven. Biss ia death for Heavens biding. Time and strength must bear tbs .. rusting- - Soon will com a page of smarting; There will die tba greediest lusting . . . Yon must corns to day of parting. Seif disdain, and bear your burden Live as men who love tbo living! Pain is worth tbs Heavenly guerdon: simple giving. Joy is but the ' , CRARY LITE. unions, several hundreds of county umona, and about twentyt houaand local unions. Th fundamental unit of th organisation is tho local anion. Q. What is th life of galvanised water pipe conducting soft water underground ? J. M. M. , A. The' department of agriculture says that, while the life of wrought pip is affected by many factors, of which th corrosive quality of th water ia but on, th Ufa of small is usually taken galvanised steel pipethirty-five at from fifteen to year, galvanized genuine wrought iron ma) last five years longer. Q. .Can a molecule and an atom be tba same? tl. H. A- - A molecule is the smallest portion of an element or oo si pound which retain Identity In character with the substance tu mass. Ths molecule may be, aa in th case of mercury, identical with the atom, but usually consists of a union of twe or more atoms . OUR CHILDREN By Jmeelo FatzL ' LEARNING TO READ. "You wont have any troubla, teaefa I aald Kit mother ing him to read. taught turn the alphabet proud.y. and ha can ape II out iota of words tor hautaetf." "Not really r aald the teacher in 'I fnef. "Why. of cottraa. Arent you glad to he aaved the trouble?" "Well, you havent saved me any trouble I I'm wondering whether or not yon have made rne tome. You see, we dont teach the children to read by way of the alphabet." "Well, 1 cant help It If you don't teach properly! I know that chttcbeit ought to know thjeir alphabet, ao I taught mine. Even If you dont teach It he knows It, anJPOther inarched ?ff indignantly wondering what the school are coming to when children arent even taught the letters beThey arent taught the letters cause they don't need them to learn to read. And mothers can help children learn to read if , they want to and ao give the children real plea-euam aeeiataitce, too. When the Utile chap sits down on the Door and reads the newspaper to vnu he' ia boginning to read, although he holds tho paper upoido down or sideways and chants syllables that resemble no form of human " speech but hta otw. Then is the time to give him Mother Goose book or the form of that you like beat and teach him to . say the rhymes bv saying them over and over to him while he gases solemnly at tho pknurr- - Soon, aa you read, along, he will begin supplying the last wbrd.of the line. "Fiddle. Moon Fun. flpoon." He does thle with much emphasis and many chuckles. Ha is Trading, although he doesnt know a single letter. You read day by day and ha listens and watches a h$ please. You never Insist on anytnmg. When ho wants to be read to you read to him. When he wants to listen you recite to him. When he wishes to cheat or fill ia pauses )n the story he does so Now he surprises and delights you by picking up his Mother Goose or his Stevenson and reading to you from the right plaoe, with the book rUhtside up, the verso under the pic- Tbs bus is going north from Windermere East, according to the Italicized averment, of the contributor , whose name is signed hereto. Q. What ia the hottest temperaYou know Belly Fish, Sonchn? ture over obaerved in tb world? Yeh! What about Bally? T. M. O B. ' Bhss engaged. 'S a go this time. A. The weather bureau ay that ring: at Greenland ranch, in Death valley, guess; because shes got hertunea-haemerald-cdl mond. Oh. its California, a temperature of 134 den easy three carets big! grees waa observed by the weather J "Huh! Pretty big!" bureau on July 10. 1913. This is the but, then, you know. Sal- hirbsst temperature ever observed uncaa ah and a gtrL big pretty lys der proper conditions of exposure with carry It oft alnghL" the us of standard thermometer. Maybe she can. . . . Say, listen a here: lemme tell you Somethin! - There Q. Does a woman hold any world a thing to this Plutonic love aint L K. in athletics? record not a thing! Its got to he the on old stu. A. Sybil Bauer, an thing or the other straight out!" Northwestern at university, swam "Yes, youve said it! You've said dent sec440 yards backstroke in 24 , it!" onds, thereby breaking the world recJOSEPH GILLESPIE. ord for sueh. an event. r; 2r LACKS, TO US, THE FIRST-- . GLANCE PUNCH, A3, , Sir! Sister Belle, shopping with the car, was to pick me np at 6 15, and My Favorite" $&mtei did so at 6:16. Irritated, I said. "You've kept me Waiting an hour like I fool"' Editorially, she answered. By ibvin a. cob! "No, I've simply kept you waiting an hour." JETHRO KELL. .INDICATED POLICY. A SEEKER AFTER INFORMATION. Mr.- Ryan had a pleee from Berlin iTie Washington correspondent of on Saturday about the elimination of Immediately following the historic of th gambler. Rosenthal, to royalty; eo, he told "of how the Prin- murder tho New York Journal of Commerce cess Cecil, riding in a crowded com- New York, the , papers were full of to the effect that member of stories has gone over public statements partment. "perspired freely in her the uniformed police force had cleared close quartern. in front of the Hotel street the hsPresident was made by And Coolidge during additionally entertainin order that the assassins ture. dewith his democratic ing simple, the past two years, and draws therefrom Ot course, he does not recognise the scription of how American and Brit- might pot their victim without inish tourises, with no damned snobbeay terruption. He remembers words individually. the conclusion that tho new A night or two after the killing, a the story and the picture and the about them, let tier perspire, and fall n chief-- executive stands ready to vary tired muj-w- as dinging in southern California shows while they bribed the guards for com- awning post opposite the Metropole, identify it. that sponsor the followiug program: street, when a patrolforts and conveniences. . . , Ws'll in Forty-thir- d Still he is reading. The next thing lightning was responsible for 4363 flrea 1. A further revision of the tax out of a total of 10.627, or learn her, ns Mr. Ryan Intimated, to man came hy and ordered him to to do is to help him identify a word Pr move be crown caused a oil in smoker and the story, an action word Is best; The camper princess! laws, with a lowering of surtaxes cent. Very well, said the weary on after that a name word. 2339 fires oc 21 I per cent and other and a lighter draft upon individuals ossifer: Well, Id but locomotive e "Very thickly. That is the way the beat teachers fires. Including THATS GOOD! GO ON! Like --ta ask you at civil quesn first fW the remainder.'. s tench - children to Trad. - The - words e !th. moderate jncamci ppork firee, wltot-to-ft- r' Last Word,),- - ; -(Harding-demandedthe "WeH, and then the letters oome after the LOCAL STORMS NOT SO SERIOUS. med2. The end of government Thats good1 Go on! . . . policeman story is memorised. There Is no trouThe Angel's flaming sword "Who you fellers flxln to shoot ble With this data in hand, the weather about learning the alphabet. Jt in legitimate buscess and dling Struck, and the weary soul, released. now?" to the study of the bureou comes proceeded all In good time, because after f these who meteorological clrcumetanres the discouragement Winged a swift way to Heaven's perunder tho children have mastered the words tain 1923, the McXaught the teacher helps them wtth the come running to the government which these lightning fires were (Copyright. by Celestial wardens awaited Its apstarted. The study shows that the Syndicate. Inc.) sounds so that they may interpret for aid. proach Then they small, local. storms are not so danNo challenge at the gates, but wel- DIED FOR THE EVENING PAPERS. new words for themselves. 3. Avoidance of entanglement in gerous s the more Intense and find themselves master of tbe alphaarms outstretched. coming The disturbances. A widely dispersed reporter from a nenr-b- y city had bet. And kindly greeting-"YoEuropean political affairs, bnt a local storm ma start a few fires, but, Please remember that learning to been assigned to cover the funeral of fought the fight; you kept the a great full assumption of responsibility in the surrounding country being free but crochet y old man who, read Is a tremendous undertaking and faithi in. it other had' strains the childs mind and eves died posamong world affairs to get the other na- from storm, relief may be brought inthings,' Thats good! Pass on" F. G. B. sessed of a flourishing morning news- and strength to their limits If you The storm of general scope and tions back to work. of on wide stretch The undertake a it at all, be sure you know arrival his affects paper. reporter, tensity THAT STUFF In town, went to the city editor of what you are ubout or youH do dam4. Tho maintenance of the pres- country and so many fires are started STERILIZINQ MILK. . DOESNT WORK! to is how and asked Was this he better to let the teacher some It he must paper neglected through W. B. writes: ent foreign policy with respect to that of Sir : Mamma last Christmas aked break into the funeral. The city edi- age. do it. forces and these lack How long is it necessary to boil Daddy what he wanted Mexico and Russia. tor (she already replied: spread and cuuae the great, damagmilk in order to make It safe, espehad bought his slippersl; and he said Dont know and don't care. The (Copyright, 1923( by th Beil Syndiing conflagrations so cosily in life cially from tuberculosis? 5. A firm stand on the anthrahe wanted to make The Line. He old man had no iionsideration for fne cate, Inc.) and I get full informaproperty. 2. can Where aald he had grown old trying, and cite coal problem, favoring federal didnt he go and die for the eveBy study of a given territory in Calon this mrbjeot? advised me to start early. Whats my ning papers?" Everybody's Magazine. HOW DID HE KNOW? has found tion RflFLY. supervision to prevent interruption ifornia the weather bureau CUBLHT. than certain regions are -more likely Pas- chance? l'v Bolling Is not necessary. Magistrate You are charged with . . ACCURATE .DIAGNOSIS, of.lha.caal supply..., to te visited - Py tho- - sortsafe" Of" heat hcttfg drunk." ha ve' you anything to la TANTALUSr teurization reasonably 6. AmeriStockbroker Yes, , I'm feeling a hit sav? Tho maintenance of an ret forest fires and the intensity until the milk simmer at the edge below par. with the sea- of the vessel and steam rise from Culprit I've never been drunk In can merchant marine on a scale of these storms varies ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS. Doctor Say, 99. sons. chart , have been made, my Ufe, sir, and never intend to be, center. This Is safe. Let It come 98 for it commensurate with the standing of which Graphic Worse than Stockbroker that reveal where Ihe danger is the always makes me feel so bad a boil Without definitely boiling. (Any reader cam get the answer to snd London With to in tho nwnri n g. Pall Mail Gazette the United States as a world power, greatest and at what season is quite safe. any That Tribune by question writing The, In forest the hand, thla information (London). 2. Information Write W the United States J. Bureau, Frederic but by direct government operation aeryice of the federal government ot of agriculture tor tile farmHaekln, Director, Washington B. C, onTy as "the" last resort. the atate can concentrate ihilk. on Thla offer applies strictly to informabulletin ers sterilizing at these sectors during the 7. tion. An economical administration patrols seasons The Bureau cannot give adand, being thus previce on legal, medical and Ilnanciui ICE JVIASEAOE O. K. , of the government, with a reduction proper matters. pared, greatly minimise the destrucIt does not attempt to setof A after friend mine, J. C. writes tion In the annual budget. tle domestic nor to underThe bureau and the foreet service shav ing, rubs his face with a piece of take exhaustivetroubles, research on any sub8. 'A policy of bountiful relief to have prepared a map of California, Write ltWill your ject. me question plainly and tell what pood you please disabled veterans, but not includ- which ha marked uion It what are Give full name and address briefly. an ice massage does after shaving and and designated as lightning fire zones. inclbse In cents two ing a bonus for the soldier. face? stamps for Inwhether it harms the They show the zones where the return postage. All replies are sent 9. Tho continuation in force of a cidence REPLY. of forest fires set by lightning to direct the inquirer.) An ice massage is fine for the is 16 per rent and over. 10 per cent protective tariff. Nothing better except exover. 5 per cent and over and Q. Whv do go beck to live '10. Opposition to panaceas as a and those relatively free of this menace. posure to snow. Exposure to rain is on the slopes ofpeople slumbering volcanoes? means of solving the farm problem, The study haa demarcated the full not quite so good P. K U. extent of these zones, setting north, A. Many reasons might be given. rejection of price fixing schemes for south east and west limits to them. WONT RELIEVE PAIN. Among them, that people will return agricultural products) and fie adop- The bureau can not control the lightT. E K writes: What Is adalin to their homes that the land belongs within these bounds, ning and keep it for tion of a policy to lelp the to them that they are persuaded that hut it does say- that long and careful given Will it deaden internal pain from enthe same thing will not happen again. farmers to help themselves. observation shows that froir some larged prostate gland But the principal reason ls probably natural raurea, lightning does occur REPLY. because In the regions that have been more often in these territories and one of the newer sleep producis It persistently repopulated, the lava is does set fires. It has even charted ing medicines. . of a kind that dialntegrate and deCOMMUNICATION the fire sections by townships, showwould not be very effective in composes rapidly, making the land It are in fire which those there ing very fertile. fires set hy lightning in a season, ten relieving pain. a a WOULD HONOR HARDING. fifteen fires and over fifteen fires, malarIa. How Is the Goddess of Liberty carry Q anopheles Editor Tribune In consideration of fires. L P. writes Pleas give me lighted J. B M. the fad that our late and beloved DOES NOT ALWAYS HELP. th L A. Tivo hundred and sixty floodof the mosquitoes that are president, Vnrren G Hardin, nan RAIN of transferring the malarial light projectors are turned on the the pnly president to visit av of our lightning usually Is accompanied capable nata statue to afford iHumlnation by night. parks in the state of Utah, and that by rain and the dampness has germ. he made a visit to the Zion National ural tendency to check the spread of REPIaY Q. How many tohe of coal dorn It park a short time before his death, fire. However, thla works two awavt From subfamilies of the great anophheliee there should be a moxement lightning frequently strikes dry eles family. take to make one horsepower? I. started by the people of this Rood stump, which will burn In the rain, O. H. Mate to have the name of the Zion but wilt not spread among the damp A. Steam engineers estimate that it CONTAGION OF CONSUMPTION. National park changed to the Harding litter on the ground. The dry slump takes ten tons of black coal turned H. K. P. writes: National park, and 1 beilexe vour pa or tmag continues to smoulder for a Into steam to make one horsepower. I. Is tuberculosis contagious? per ould have a gTeat deal of in- day or two until tho undergrowth dries a, 2. Can one contract it by living in fluence In eettin this under way and out and then begins to sivread The Q. Why was the name of the house wtth a patient that in hrinffinR it before the people Youra charts show that the fire is the same Indian th Moqui on agency or patient changed to th It, A F ANDERSON. by waiting very truly. more quickly after Igni- hag discovered if he is in bed? Hopi Indian agency? iR. G. J. Balt lke, August 8. tion thsn tho one caused by lightning. A. The Hopi Indians used the word REPLY. Only five fire set by lightning are as a term of scorn for their "moqui 1. Yes. AMEN. discovered within half an hour after enemies. It means dead ones. Hopi 2. Adults are In some danger. ChilTutank-amemanrest his bodv thev are set. while thirty-si- x means of peace. These In"people in considerable danger. dren Midst the relics strange and gaudy! made fires are discovered within fifdid not approve of being called dians a Centuries hpx'ond our ken teen to thirty minutes after they are Of opprobrium amd own term their by FATTENING. ICE CREAM, RICE, e His roxaLwortf ruled earth and men. started. Of the only fire, the oommlswioner of Indian affair was What profits It to break hit slum- four bum over twenty-fou- r hours beM. M. write Kindly telle me if a Instrumental in having the name bers? while of the lightning person could reduce on ice cream, satchanged. Men haxe died in countless numbers, fore discovery, burn that long befires, thirty-thre- e ing nothing else. IWt their bodies in the dust found. This shows the are fore they Is rice fattening? How long is th boundary line Q And their handiwork to rust Could a person reduce on a diet or between Canada ration precisely inverted. and the United Through the Peary ages The Investigation has been expendrice and milk? J. L. T. States' REPLY. southern Appalachian ed Into the 3898 is miles. A. Its But the soul the glowing spark length Ice mountains vwtlh similar results that One can reduce on an exclusive a , Le&xes us groping in the dark. is, th discovery that lightning sets a cream diet or a diet of rice and milk, And few. if any. ere return is What the Farmers union? Q greatly limit the A. P. L. provided he will To tell us that the sparks still burn. high percentage of forest fires. The forest service experts,, agree quantity token. AVrrtrM we hax'a It otherwise? O. "National Union The furnishes that advance reports of only a lew However, both ice cream and rice th Should frail man, before he die. following definition: The Farmers' houra of oncoming storm likely to and milk are fattening foods. Turn he kevn to Heavens portals Educational and Cooperative Union of will foresters enable produce lightning And reveal to living mortals America is a nonpolitical, nonseotar-ta- n A GOOD SALES TALI$. and patrols to mobilize in the regions The glory of fhe Eord? organisation, composed entirely of known to be the most frequent obA salesman who was determined Foolish, foolish speculation jects Inof attack byof lightning. On the to sell a bill of goods to a shrewd the storm, they old Yorkshire merchant had talked in advance Lead us not into spot will be prepared more quickly to deMummies lips are temptation. hardest, most eloquent and persealed forever; are started and, his which tect the blazes Sexrets will not from them sever. suasive way for nearly an hur. FiTruth shines brightest in the living. extinguish them before they spread nally the merchant seemed to be And the art of simple In many of th. great national convinced that th line Waa just what giving. felt forest there are broad stretches of he wanted, and the traveler Free from greed that doth Heaven puts within our call enthrall, wilderness where the foot of man is amply repaid for his etetra effort. But mart bureau Ihe weather added, Yorkehire set. These. seldom reflectively: the Today and every day. There's ma lad Jock Ah'd talk D. M. DRAPER. says, must be protected hy the ashim to hear what ye have to say. June 8. 1923. signment of weather observer. Into go over these forest wddumc&es expert ob- Will e coom this evenin' an , NOT SO DENSE. server must be sent to watch the your talk again" to the assented traveler the The gladly record meteorological and skies think that children are not as . on which weather fore- proposition, and at the apiinted observing as they should be," said the phenomena himnelf again for th hour presented is based. casting the to teacher. inspector son. and ' I Again' The direction of winds has much to intern lew with father hadnt noticed It," replied the selling do with th spread of forest fires and he went over the forceful feather. points of his line. Never had he put Well Ml prove It to you." and, Ihe weather bureau says that by havIn Home Archlteeturels Just as Desirable argument or properly located observation posts. forth a more persuasiveWhen turning to the class, the inspector ing he had It ran give advance Information of the a finer sellingoldtalk. as Charm in Personality. said his man to turned the finished, Soiheone give me a number " change and velocity of these. WTDft EXPERIENCE IN OITR and said most cn enthusiastically cooperathat is It "Thirty-seven.- " through expected said a little boy HOME BUILDING AND HOME you hear that, Jock. Well, tion of the Weather bureau, the forest now,Lo thats eagerly to sell the wav I want FINANCING CAN BE OF CONThe Inspector wrote 78 on the service and the offtciala of the state SIDERABLE VALUE TO YOU Everybodys gw da on the roed. board and nothing was said. where the great foreet stand, a int- our Magazine. worked want If out he whereby you your home to reflect- your personality and "Will someone else give me a " ern will soon embrace the latest ideas In convenience by advantages the thunderbolts of Jove will be-be . A RELIEF1 WHT , COMB IN AND CONSULT U9 "Fifty-two,- " said another lad. cheated of the forests ss prev The Florida beach and blue sea The inspector wrote down 25 on the cause advance news of the i lightning looked Inviting to Ihe tourist from board, and eroded at the temrher.He will warn theAshton-fonkins the north, but before venturing out called for another number, and young to swim he thought to make sure. UNREASONABLE Jack called out QUESTION. A3 Madntnmt "Youre certain there are no alliga(k, in now eeif you can "Seventy-aeveExhibiting intense irritation, the tors here?" he inquired of the guide. MoiVey for Hdtne Building at Public Opinion (Lon-dot- erhool change that flounced Into Jihe home teacher that replied 2. "Nosvuh," functionary, Loweat Kata ' ot Patrick Prevailing England), Hogan. fr. broadly. "Ala no 'gators e about that son of yours. she grinning "li hyah." RATHER PUZZUNO. He was very Imperticomplained. Reassured, the tourist started out. Judas You say that you are Inno- nent to me today. 1 asked him why As the water about his chest cent. How do you explain the fact we seldom hear sounds in our dreams he called back:lapped (Established 1865) that you were found near the acene and he replied rudely that he didnt "What makes yVm so sure there a hoot. pf the robberv with the stolen proparen't any alligators?' give w Th fsther studied ponderous.lv erty in vour "Dry's got too much sense," belSALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Thats whats puzzlin me, Well. he replied at length. "What lowed the guide. I)e sharks done too. jar tooor. Baalon Transcript. of that? Who docs? skeered dem all away." Exchange. Uxchauxa. ' man-mad- THE DOCILE GERMANS." Au. A Line o Type or How to Keep Weil ' X re ut ' ff "Y-e-- s; smoke-situatio- n ' - ar 3- -3 - r -- phalian-RhlnepRu- - to-a- -- 1 fifteen-sixteenth- s. -- seif-relia- . man-ma- TUT-AN- RIDINO THE WIND. The development of the n propeller-Iqs- s and engineless airplane in France and England has, in addition to producing some phenomenal records of flight both in duration and distance, revealed the meteorological conditions rather definitely on which the principle of . th?. gliiler depends. Even among aviators and meteorologists there has been an idea as to just what weather conditions were most desirable; and among laymen the idea was still as to what constitutes soaring conditions. That the flyer had to develop a sort of bird sense uaa generally accepted, giving to the, practice of soaring a supernatural classification. The fact of the matter is that the only requirement is a rising column of air, that is, a vertical wind,; and tho ability to ride this shaft er current of wind. The feat becomes almost precisely the same as wave riding by the surfmen of the tropical islands. This is because it has been found that the win t that the glider rides easiest is usually one thrown aloft hv a ridge of land. To produce the greatest tendency to rise In the wind, the day must be warm, and the valley thus .producing large amounts of warm air; then there must be a strong barometric gradient tending to throw the - horizontal winds against the ylope and carry them far up the slope and over the crest. Tht two influences produce th creep of a wind wav on which the gider rides most readily. Needless to ay, the requires more-vagu- e horl-ront- fet man-mad- -- GRAIN BAGS POTATO BAGS SACKING TWINE 1 We Will Save You Money. - num-ber- SeeUsFirst. (So. - n: BAILEY & SONS COMPANY, f ir -- handf-Priaon- I ' f |