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Show - THE SALT LAKE. TRIBUNE, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 31, 1922. ak Sfibunr faeH Every Moniii by UK Uk Trfboae Publisbiuf CwpW TERMS : OF BLBftCBIPTlON fa rtab. Idalw, Ntvada end Wjob!b .. moatfe , Daily ftnaday, . PaHf bad Bmtfay year fiitwbrr la U. 9 JJ tad ftifiday, yer Boath Dally 1.6b Uail-Wvkl- y yaar Tribaae, etty Impartmat Tba THbaaa la oa aala to arery Reader may awrtata fa tba Ualtad Itata agaata la day ally by telephoning Ibf Tba Trlbuoa la a member of tba I'm la aiclwairely Prm Tba Amaclated tltlad to tba uaa for rapabUcattoa of aU rreo-Itoor aot otbarartao to It credited dteptttcbea aU la tbta pbr. ' 101,4 " pabMihed berela. Tba Tribuna la a aiembec f tba Aadlt Bareaa f Ctralatioa. eocnili' Tb Trl-h- 'i elrcnlatloa 111 b iupi'llrd by th Aaalt Kama af llrroWtkm, Cetr bid.. l ' 'k 8. C. Beckwith Special Aeacf. era adeertialn, a feat. World bid., bw bid.. Boat Ulepateh Tribnaa bid., Chlcafo; It. Ural; ord bid. Detroit, Micks Mo. M. 0. Morgcown Basra bid., B"1-lae- r Co.. Ise., Pacific Coaat bid , Baa mnclaca; Title Jnan ranee bid., U Aaelee; Beeurlty bid.. Beeltla. The Trih-aa- e Farrlga bureau af inform He ofrraace: 5 are: ( Bae Lamarliae, Parla. Uadea. den Cater I Mall. Lsndoa. Enfland; pn Berlin, German; Bxcelalor Hotel. Boaie. 111. Talapbaa Waaatck 5M. Wbea yoo fall to et our Trlbuna telephone etrmlatlon tba eity department before 10 oclock a. a, and a copy will be aenCyow b meaaenaer. Battered at tba puatofflca at Jtalt Laka City aa aecouil ciaia matter. l4 At'1" ItUf. Tr, fit. ' repretH. Tuesday, 'October - one-fift- pre-wa- r se 31, 1922. LOOS TO THE CANDIDATES. imThe TribuneL recently urged the of legislaportance of careful scrutiny tive candidates. Within tho week a Salt Lake civic organization has made publie the .responses the remainder during July and August. The rate of exchange of Polish currency, which remained fairly stable during the first half of the year, lias during the sueceeding months declined even more rapidly than the paper money circulated has increased.' The exchange value of the Polish mark at the end of September represented about of par, while its internal buying power, as represented by internal prices, represented only nn insignificant part of the biiying power. As compared with January, 1921, the nmount of paper money in circulation at the end, of September had tnc reased eight-fold- , and the number of marks necessary to bBy a dollar in foreign exchange had increased nearly twelve fold. In other words, the internal value of Tolish currency is at present eon siderably above its foreign exchange value, thus tending to hinder imports from countries with more stable currency and to promote exports to such , countries. However, Poland imports a great deal from Germany, and since the. German mark has recently fallen even more rapidly than the Polish mark, it has become increasingly easy for Poland to buy in that market. That Polish industry and commerce continue to expand in the face is evidenced by the constant-increain the number of cars itt tlie constant shortage of loailejl-anears.to handle goods offered. There is increasing difficulty in handling coal, grain, potatoes and' sugar beets, owing to the scarci of cars This situation can foe remedied only when the 7500 cars recently bought from the United States war department nre received. to a questionnaire it sent to legislative candidates to eertaia their attitude on the proposed state income tax. It is gratifying to Bote that a majority of the nominees of the major political parties in Salt Lake county declare their opposition to the imposition of such a tat in Utah at this time. Their attitude in this respect justifies their aspiration to legislative office. Several candidates Jailed to answer and several others gave evasive or indifferent answers. There is still time for these to make their position known, or through the medium referred to RETARDATION A PROBLEM. -- otherwise. not now The candidate who doe know how he stands and how he will income tax, vote on the proposed should it come before the legislature, ought not to be elected. The people are entitled to know befogp election just whore every candidate stands on this question and should vote against every legislative candidate, regardless of his party affiliation, who does not declare himself. Let us for one eliminate c hance hy electing only those who possess sufficient information and sufficient character to declare before election what they propose to do afterward. LAST DAY TO REGISTER. Todhy, October 31, is the final day, .tinder the laws of Utali for the registration of individuals qualified to vote at the next general election, which will be held Tuesday, November c 7. No one whose name docs not appear on the duly authorized registration lists will be permitted to cast a ballot on that day. Despite the fact that there have been several Other legalized days for the registration df qualified voters, conservative estimates place tho number, in Salt Lake county alone, of persons who are entitled to rote, but who have neglected to register, af from 0000 to 7000. The number in the state at large is, in all probability, correspondingly higher. It is to be regretted that such a condition of indifference to eivie obligations should prevail, in this, or any other State. Every individual over the age of SI years, Who is not specifically disqualified, is entitled to cast his or her ballot at the forthcoming election, this being the only time, the only place, where all individuals ere on a basis of absolute equality, because the ballot of the most obscure has precisely the same l Weight as the vote of the most it is one vote, no more, no less. Unless each individual whs is entitled to the franchise realizes that it is a binding obligation, a Sacred duty that he express,' through the medium of the ballot, the spirit and ideal of d govsoon loses its ernment of the people significance. Every citizen whose name was on the rolls last year shoufd satisfy himself that it is still there. This morning The Tribune prints the full list of registration ' places in Salt Lake County. Any voter who knows that his name is not recorded should see to it that it is; any voter Who is in doubt should make certain of his right to cast a ballot, either by calling in person or making definite and speeifie inquiry. The opportunity is at hand. Let no one fail in his duty to himself and his country. infiu-entla- POLANDS HUGE DEFICIT. Cable. advices to the department of that owing to the faiinre of tho Polish diet tq enact any new tax legislation, it is expected that' the deficit of tho government treasury for the current year will reach ot least 300,000,000,000 Polish marks. A largo part of the deficit is being covered by the issuance of paper money and the remainder by short-terinterest bearing notes. From January 1 to (September 30 tho amount ot paper money issued to cover government expenditures in other words, tho amount borrowed by the government from the state- - bank amounted . to 121,000,-000,00marks. Nearly half of this was issued daring September and most of commerce say -- 0 - Retardation is one of the most perplexing problems that school teachers and school authorities everywhere have to deal with. For many years efforts have been tnado to devise a means jt meeting the trouble, bu no royal road out has yet been found. The school people 'of Detroit have been conducting a systematic investigation for years and appear to have obtained some results that will afford a basis for the application of corThe number of rective measures. pupils who were not able to keep-u- p with , their classes in the Detroit schools in 1916 caused the authorities to start an inquiry. Backward students were studied and their abilities tested in various ways, and finally special edeeatioil classes wete developed and a differentiated course of study introduced, which, it is believed, is beginning to meet the different abilities within a grade. While these efforts have reduced the general Tetardation, a largo influx of foreigners into Detroit and of children of rural districts where education is inadequate, stended to increase the number who wore likely to fail in thoir race with other pupils. In spite of this, however, improvement is reported. The first survey made in 1916 showed that 8.06 pet eent of the pupils were retarded three years or more, but since that time there has been a steady decline in the percentage through the special work provided. The improvement is shown by tho age grade when the persurvey mado in centage was only 4.56, a, drop of 1.1 per cen,t in five yeartf The greatest retardation was found among tho negro and Armenian-Syriachildren. Asiatics are retarded a good deal, but their number is too small in Detroit to allow any conclusions to W drawn. Fourteen and per cent of the negroes ate retarded. Whijc children born in- - the United States show the least retardation, with tho Anglo Saxon and Teutonic groups fairly close. The Latin and Slavic groups were found to include relatively large numbers of retarded children. -- age-grad- e two-tenth- s HELIUM VS. HYDROGEN. The burning of the" hydrogen filled army dirigible 0 2 at San Antonio has aroused much discussion in avi. atlon circles as to the availability of the noninflammable gas, helium, and the advisability of its use in all the governments lighter thanir-craft- . At the present time there is about enough of this expensive helium gas to allow one ajrship to operate, and none of the dirigibles in commission are especially designed to use it. Several of the ships ordered and ia course of construction will be filled with the nott explosive lifting power, with special devices to bring down-thship without the necessity of valving out the precious element. Three helium dirigibles of approximately the same size as the are now being built for the army, and -- two other smaller helium ships will be made to take the places of hydrogen-filledirigibles now in com e C-- 2 - mission. The navy is using helium at present in the for experiments to obtain data as to pressure and stress under yarious conditions as an additional check on the design of the large dirigible ZR-1- , which is expeeted to be completed next June, and which is be ing built along tho lines of the most successful German ships, which had a record of thousands of miles of safe was not designed traveling.- - The ZR-especially for inflation with helium gas, but nivy officials say that this large ship, with a gas' capacity of 2,115,000 cubic feet, probably will be inflated wjth helium when - commissioned, though its range will be lira-jby this procedure. The ZR-3- , which is being built for the navy by Germany in part payment of the reparations elalms owed to this government, has been designed for the use ofihydrogen, and German engineers insist that the advantages of this gas C-- 7 1 d than compensate for of the lesser lift more thedisad-v&ntsge- ami s great' expense of helium. The navy- - has an appropriation of 400,000 for the production and research work on helium, which has been pooled with n like amount appropriated for the army. - Ths United State bureau of mines is eooperating with the army and navy. The helium aupgly is limited, and it is estimated cannot 'last more than twenty-fivyears. At the present cost of production, it woifld be prohibitive to commercial machines, and it has been urged that thia precious gas, on 'which America has a monopoly, should bo stored for nse In case of war, and not employed in peace time. , 'The use of helium presents many more difficulties than are at first apobserver, parent to tho This light, inert gas, which was first discovered fifty-fou- r years ago in the tun, is still in tho stage of expert mental production, and, only one airhas flown with ship of. size, the helium inflation. Tho government plant at Fort Worth, Texas, for. helium production has thif month begun lsloating this gas, after being idle since December 1 of last C-- Its capacity for extracting the year. hundredths of 1 per cent of helium from natural gasrand turning it into 95 per rent pure' helium has yet to be determined. It is estimated, however, that the plaut, if operated at capacity, will yield 7,200,000 eubic feet of helium per year. The plant was operated at full capacity for only twenty days during the eight months of 1921 while It Was producing. At the present time 2,000,000 cubic feet of helium are in existence and in of the American governpossession ment, but not all of this is of sufficient purity to be used in airships. If a ship of the type of the demolished were held aloft with helium nd had to rise to heights of 10,000 feet, as in crossing the Rockies, it would be possible to fill the ship only full of helium on the ground in order to prevent a helium loss of 30 per rent of the full capacity of tho bag each time the ghip ascended to that height. This means that the ship would have less than 70 per eent of its lifting power, and this loss would be compensated for by carrying less fuel and consequently having a shorter cruising radius. As helium has only 90 per cent the lifting power of hydrogen,, volume for volume, the gas bag must be made about a tenth larger. Devices are planned for new airships that will compress the helium instead of. allowing it to escape into the air when ascending. The practice in handling hydrogen-fille- d ships is to waste the comparatively cheap gas when the bags are deflated or when the hydrogen becomes too greatly diluted with air. Helium, because of its scarcity and expense, must be used over and over. After use, it can be compressed ami stored in cylinders, and impure gas must be repurified by processes similar to that in its extraction from natural gas., Purifying units would have to bo used at every airship funding field and home station. Several portable repurification plants have been constructed by the army, with tho cooperation of the bureau of mines. ninety-fiv- C-- , seven-tenth- s THE' EYE AND COLORS. The mechanism colors has by which the eye puzzled scientists a Dr. JanestIIowell great deal, but Clark of Johns HopkiDS university presented to the Optical Society of America at Washington her theory as to how the eye transfers the sensation of light to tho brain. According to this theory, vision is assumed to be produced by the emission of electrons or tiny particles of negative electricity 'from a singlesubstance occurring in both rods and cones. When one colored light falls on. rods and cones, electrons re emitted with an average velocity of the of the exciting light. The layer of, negatively charged electrons and the positively charged cone or rod will form Upe plate of a condenser, similar to the ordinary electric, condenser used in a radio wet. When this eondefiser discharges, a high frecurrent will pass quency, alternating along the nerve to the brain, which will- - be different aqd speeifie for each wavelength of exciting light. Since each cone is connected directly with the brain through one nerve fiber, and eeveral rods are connected through oue fiber, the characteristic frequencies reach the brain J unchanged only in the case of cones, so that the cones alone are responsible for color vision. At the same meeting, Professor F. K. Richtmyer of Cornell university told thO society about his experiments in connection with Invisible light rays that may attract insects to .flowers. Certain insects, he said, can detect ultraviolet light that cannot be seen by man, and some blossoms, in Addition to their ordinary brilliant hues, vary in the kind of short light rays which . they emit. Dr.' Richtmyer thought it passible that these invisible rays may guide Inscetsto the flewers. in their search for honey. It seems that giving signals in rays. shorter than the violet that can be seen by deepest human eye brings the flowers the pollen that is jjoeessary in- producing seed. Experiments show that flowers apparently differ in their reflection of ultramuch as in their visible violet colora - - light-sensiti- wave-lengt- pollen-bearin- -- THE DISTURBING ELEMENT. Maloney, Jr. "What's an "amicable settlement, Fa? Maloney, Sr A town wliere there's no Olrish. Ol suppose, sonny. Life. THERE FIRST-- . , GETTING "But, my dear girl, you shouldn't say things like that about yourself." "Xih. I ten everything . . .I'm so afraid of being found out " Life. n Tinkering With the Constitution A Line o Type or Two Hew to the line, let the quips fall where they may. . By Frederic J. Haskln Washington, d. c Oct. :s. rinkcr-in- g with tire Constitution wilt be a subject muetj discussed when congress gets back on the job after the elections. Several changes In 'the organio law of the nation wdl be proposed, and at least one of these wilt be directed to the puijiose of making It easier to effect constitutional amendments. In short, not only Is there a manifest disposition to do some tinkering with the venerable document, but there Is Insistence .that the tinkering should be made teas difficult of accomplishment. The latter proposal is a decided departure from tlie ideas of the forefathers who framed the Constitution and In doing so made clear their 'judgment yrat It should be safeguarded in every alteraway against hasty or tions They undertook to see that' no amendmeut could be effected that bad not been. ecrutlrled carefully and that did l.ol have baejt of K an overwhelming sentiment of thev people of the country, and that they made a good job of It is attested by the fact that since the Constitution was adopted in 17V it has been amended only nineteen times and ten of these amendmenta-embodie- d the bill of rights which had been virtually agreed upon at the time the Constitution' was drafted and were adopted in 4 17UI."' Ths eleventh amendment, providing that a state cannot be sued by a citizen of another state, or by. citizens or ubjects of any foreign country, and the twelfth, providing for the naming of candidates for president and vice president, separately, followed within a tew years the one In 17i and the other in lilOi. Then there was a lapse of sixty-on- e years without a single change In the Constitution, witfc the three growing out of the civil war coming in 1S65, 1S6S and - ADORATION. Oh, let me worship down the year. A smile Is all I ask To freeze my foolish foundless fears Into-Benda mask. Oh, let me worship down the years, My complex aU confused; You n.eed nog kiss away my tears; I kive to feel abused! Sylvia Lyon. DOES A COLLEGE EDUCATION PAYt Dear R. 11 L: Let the millionaires who still spell cat with a k and two t's sneer at a college education ail they will! Does it pay? O ths do, she do! A captain of industry and a malefactor of great wealth came out to the Midway to Haunt tlpur gold In the face of Boms' simple rnlmled. poverty stricken student wile pale face, a hectic cough, and horn rimmed goggles and" blackjack him out of his two tickets to the greatest football game ever pulled oR eaM of the great divide. Heaven led "em to me. They tried all the tricks of hign finance, they sneered end they bluffed, but they finally came across with Just exactly one hundred big, fat iron boys. II oo lay, hoo loo, hoo root And besides DU see the game anyhow because a janitor is going to let me and my girl sit on his roof for two dollars. ' SOCRATES IL a . self-ma- ' Line Nothing Doing in the Fishdesire to .take Some people insist that measuring, class by doss, ths lowest order of human Intelligence is found among Key West sponge fishermen. Others hold that the grodp-plac- e at the foot of properly belongs to a pertain order of As proof of the theatrical producers). value of their contention they point to the story of the theatrical manager who, oa being told that a play brought him by a certain dramatist was based upon one of Oharles Dickenss novels, said: "Well, you get hold of tills fellow Dickens and bring him around to lunch tomorrow and we ll get his ideas and fix up , contract Without any In the some connection there frequently is cited a- remark by Wilton Lacksye, who once expressed a desire, which .BIT mid tie feared would never be gratified, to play the part of Jean VaJjean in stage adaptation of Hugo' "Le Mlser-sbleA friend spoke op: Isn't there a manager in town who can produce It?" There isn't a manager In town who (Copyright. can even pronounce It, said Lackayb. e. aU murders are "motivated,' as the efpsychologists barbarously say, but the not ficacy of a given motive is relative, more Is and dangerous absolute, nothing than to see In motive more than the possibility of guilt. A wrong or grievance that would lead one person To kill, to another might not suggest even the , thought, ef killing. As for the letters and "diaries that form Such a curious feature of this' case, they ore at least In deoent language, and they can be Judged severely only because the writers were not free to love each other and were too old for the pouring out of slush, mush and gush in ouch quantities or any quantity. Lastly, - there is no lncltement'to evil, but much warning against It, in the publicity given to the details of this case as they slowly develop. This Is a fact Ignored by the eritlcs of the publicity. part the In merit of controversy over the respective the theatrical managers and the Key tv est 1 for herewith submit, sponge . fishers, which what it may be worth, an incident In the office happened a few month ago of a prominent producing manager, whose name is a household word In every actor's home. To him there eosae an experienced new playwright bearing the script of he hod Just finished, piece whichwant read to me. should it yoq. "I dont said the manager. "Just tell roe now, what It's like., said the playwright, it's a Well, historical drama in five act. I call It The Dauphin.do you call It that? . For why "Bccauselt's basedoothe MStory of the Lost DauphlnT" J don't want It. said the manager "It wouldn't go. The pubemphatically. lic wouldn't never stand for a play about a fish. , 1922,' by the McXaught Inc.) Syn-dicat- e, this article of mens wear, waft3 In 1W4 by a Swiss muni, It was not until forty-nin- e but facturer, years thereafter that the French adopted any sort of a head cbvering. we know made ia Paris wa the Old' Treason Q. What House? C. J. Dear R. H. L.: .What's a s. e. to the A. A short distance north of the vilwhich following antiquated expression lage of HaVerstrsw, N. Y- and near West floats around our office every time you Is the "Old Treason Havertsraw, put on a dress you havent worn for the House. which wa owned in the Revolast two weeks, "Say, where you gonna II. Smith. It Thomas lutionary days by L. R. sing?" . Oh fevvuns sake help. was the meeting place of Benedict An1760 when no! d and Andre in they Uncle Lloyd George says that George surrender of West Point. Whitefield and John Wesley are going to take America by the hand and lead her Q. How many cases has thc United through ths golden portals of the League States railroad labor board had before of Nations. You examine those golden D. S. It? portals of the League, again, Uncle 1S70. A. According to the latest reftort, durIf there is any gold In them you Forty-thre- e years passed and two Lloyd. years since ing the. two and one-ha- lf bet ft was borrowed from Uncle amendments were declared in effect In can. it wss created the railroad labor board 1S13 the sixteenth, known as the Income Bom. has disposed of 241T questions brought tax amendment, and the seventeenth, before it -- by railway worker and railAnswers to Questions. "TWAS THE NAKED TRUTH. whioh provided for the election of I'nlted Of these, 7727 have way managements. " Dear Rshell: Before it's too late, W Mtates senators by direct vote of the been disputes formally docketed, heard (Any reader can get the answer to any and peoide of the eeveral states. Seven years hasten to ask you to settle a grammatihave and included three gendecided, by writing The Tribune Inforlater the amendments were made ef- cal point In dispute. Speaking of Isadora question wage cases end the national agreeJ. Haakin, Di- eral Duncan, my sister said, "I havent seen mation Bureau, Frederic fective which gave the country prohibiment case. her in anything." I contend that it should rector, Washington, D. C. This offer aption and woman suffrage. The bureau be, Tve seen her In nothing. ' Which plies strictly to Information. FOUR CAREFULLY CONSIDERED. GJEMJNA (HL , cannot give advice on legal, medical and Is correct. Unde Dick? The last four of the amendments apfinancial matteYs. It does not attempt to pear jto have passed the test contemplated AND SALT The FasolstI ts said W be marching In settle domestic troubles, par to undertake y the forefathers. research on hny subject Certainly they were Italy and converging upon Rome. The exhaustive and debated pro and con for years and were Spaghetti briefly. Is falling back as the Fascist Write, your question plainly considered wlih care and deliberation, and advances, and the Macaroni Is mobilising Glvs full name and sddree and Inclose By BERT MOSEB It would seem that they must have been In the south. return postage. let us send food two cents tn stamps for to Quick, . the sent an demanded by direct Inquirer.) overwhelming public and troops. We dont know anything Alt replies are sentiment. Indeed, It was the difficulty about it, but that needn't stop us. it Books teach much, but bumps teach with whioh these constitutional changes never has. Q. Where Is the old Libby prison? more. were brought about when it was evident G. W. U A. The that a majority of the people wanted them . Chicago Historical society ' .AND PERHAPS NOT1 taste Is what makes the kiss not that led to the proposal that amendments (Ad in the Columbia College Spokesman, says that when the Libby prison was torn theTheftoise. be made easier. down from within the present Coliseum Dubuque, la.j were Senator Owen of Oklahoma Is the building, many of the bricks yhlch were An ability to conceal Ignorance Is the in the bona fide walls of the prison sponsor for this idea end has Introduced . DUBUQUE highest token of wisdom. beand conIn resolutions on the subject several taken by t)ie wrecking company BANK NATIONAL came the foundation for a Uvery stable. gresses. One of these resolutions Is now have to stretch , point to take Dubuque. Iowa. The contents of the museum and some a They pending before the senate committee oil minimum of safebass drummer into the Musicians' We a offer you conof the bricks, However, are In the Gunthe Judiciary. It provides that the union. and and efficiency security ty ther collection located in the building of stitution may.be amended "In the folin service. , the Chicago Historical society at 632 lowing manner and In no other way": When a man has more brain than he for you. Is bank .the this Perhaps "An amendment or amendments or the North Dearborn street FITZ. knows what to do with, he usually invents of a convention constitutional calling may something of great value and lets some. be proposed: Q. What Is ths oldest love letter In body take it away from him. AND SERVE HIM JOLLY RIGHT. , By a majority vote of the members P. H. existence? R. H. L.: When a man, after lighting of each house of congress. A cuneiform Inscription made upon man Klssln' wife He a Hecks says: some for "By either house should the other house his clgaret and puffing away tablet some 2000 years B. C. is with whiskers Is a good deal like hair a twice reject the proposal, and a failure moments, turn and savs You don't mind theclay oldest love letter extant. It was in the butter. for three months to act favorably shall if I antoke, do you?" may we suggest the found In the ruins of Babylon and says following comeback: "No, and I don't In part: "I writ this to Inquire after constitute a rejection. R. E. G. "Congress shall propose an amendment care If you burn." thv health. Let me know how tt goes or amendment or the calling of a conwith the). 1 am not settled In BabyR. H. L. stitutional convention when requested by lon, but I am In great anxiety because a majority of the state legislatures. ConSend news when I have not seen thee. gress or either house may submit comthou wHt com, that I may rejoice at it Arokhsamma of month Come TESTS in peting measures." the MEMORY This differ radically from the original Mayest thou, for my forever." live provision of the Constitution under which sake, 1. Who discovered Florida and by congress, can , propose amendments only when of the members of both whom was it settled and when did It Doe coke smoke when burning? houses shdll deem It necessary, and can become a port of the United States? R.Q.N..M. In 1512. Settled by the call a constitutional convention only on Ponce de Leon A. It does not 'smoke. Spaniards In- - 1565. Ceded to the United the application of the legislatures of States and organized as a territory In of the several states. The ConHyacinths, Tulips, Narcissi, Q, Is there any limit to the Value of stitution stipulates that amendments so 1522, R. E. G. Peonies, Phlox, etc., must b Who was "Fournier the American? prizes tn tennis tournaments? executive proposed shall become effective only when He2. was planted before the ground A. At a meeting of the a murderous creole who had ratified by the legislatures of States Lawn freezes. lived In New Orleans and- took part In committee of the United of the several states, or by conof the reign of Tennis association held last December, ventions In thereof, as the many of the bloody deeds all was that adopted asking He led a resolution French revolution. one or the other mode of ratification terror Freezing weather inay come In the prison murders hi September, 17S2, clubs affiliated with the association limit may be proceed by congress. inany day. Don't delay. Do it both sin' offered, value of the prlzee score a of massacred prisoners given Senator Owen would etiangd the method and now. vitation and open tournaments ths value him to convey from Orleans to Paris. of ratification by providing that amend to be limited to 3. What did Pope Onlixtua III do to of the first prize wa ments, after being proposed after one - For. your selection the very of the ways set forth In his resolution, Halleys' comet in 1436? He exorcised 130 and the second to 225. cream of the Holland crop. haU ibe voted upon, not by the state and excommunicated It. size of Is the customary coop 4. Iho was Xantlppe? The wife of Q. What legislatures, but directly by the people Socrates V. A. chickens? and for Greek sage, philosopher (a of the several states. A majority of the CATALOG FKEE A. The department of agriculture says votes so east In a majority of the con- teacher), whose peevish scolding and temper have become pro- that the standard size for market gressional districts, together with a ma- quarrelsome are 2x3x1 foot, which hold nine jority of all the votes cast throughout verbial. for the chickens, 5. What are five svnonyms hene, or fifteen the country, shall ratify. hold fourteen Harshness, acridity, and 214x4x1 foot, which acerbity? twenty-tw- o courts. word, or hens and bitterness. tartness, acidity Senator La FPHette of Wisconsin is unchickens. In the latter a partition should derstood to favor the Owen proposal, but be used. , he has one of his own In which he Is even CURRENT COMMENT more deeply Interested. He Is one of Q. How long have hot been worn by the members of congress who are jealous men? G. N. difficult to state just When of the rights and prerogatives of that A. It I LEGITIMATE NEWS. hats wore first worn and there is no recbody, and he Is especially aroused over York New the Times.) (From what he regards as an invasion of the In a near column a reader of the Times ord as to where or when the first hat 4 ALT LAKI CITY UTAH powers of the legislative branch of the expresses whait he kindly calls regret that was mad. The first modem hat, as He does on government by the Judiciary. Thursday a part of the not believe that'the courts should be able murder have been printed on to nullify an act of congress by declaring the firstease should page of the paper he like best It to be unconstitutional. and "under a heading large enough to InAccordingly, he will urge an amendment that this wae to the .Constitution which wlU provide dicate ofthe paper's opinion Importance and interest. Borne (1) that no Judge of an Inferior federal nes have had the same court shall set aside a law of coiwres other readera.probably or harsher ones, and judgments. on tho ground that it Is unoonst It u tional, feeling, as offices of them, alIn newspaper and (J) that if the supreme court of the' ways will differ as to the out amount of space I'nlted States shall assume to declare and prominence that should be any law of congress unconstitutional, or newspapers to news of this eort.given by by Judicial Interpretation hajl assert a There be those who contend that such public policy at variance with the statu- news should be excluded wholly. With tory declaration of congress, which alone them it is not necessary to argue, ao under our system of goveshment Is emare they wrong, and not much powered to determine public policies, the obviously be said to people who proudly decone-ethe law, nul- need Jnav, by that clare they "never read murder lify the actidn of the eourt. .Such folk. If sincere, would The La Follette amendment, which Is (lories." also refrain from reading a large part said to have the backing of the Ameri- of the world's best literature the admitcan Federation of Labor, Is generalty regreatest- poems, plays and novels garded as even more radical than the one tedly produced. Many of these works, fathered by Senator Owen. As the eas& everotieally all ef aupreme merit, deal with now is, the only checks upon the power thhvjgissions that culminate In murder, of congress are the presidential veto and or aDJeast In killing. The vast dome In what amounts to a veto by the courts. A the xdeteotive story." too, through veto by the president may be overridden of xniany variously eminent perof congress, but which Vote bv a sons wanderxwlth delight, and a they wWrn the supreme court has said that a almost all deal with think of the public, insistent law is unconstitutional, congress can do with murder. edification, aniNfo condemn them fow nothing except undertake to bring about that reason, whether aeurd or not, cer for class at reasonsn amendment to the constitution to contalnly would be useless able form to the Judicial decision. is cost met by Of course, . there are imvrked differ- Senator L Follette would make it posbetween a news paperst orv of a Chalmers Six bdfcause its first cost sible to override a decision of the court ences of the great, literary anv one and murder by a mere majority vote not even as That Is partly the fault of is more moderate much of a vote aa is now required to pass masterpieces. truth, as distinguished from Imagination, a bill over the preaident's disapproval. to a the fact that and rule its class and its mainteThat such a proposal will be opposed Shake-Hoar-partly owing or a Sophocles cannot easily bitterly . goes without saying, but It Is be adder! to a newspaper1 is remarkably low. nance reportorlaJ not to be gainsaid that there Is an ap- staff. But the material in the newspaper preciable sentiment In the country favorand In the literary majgferpIeceTs Its grace and beauty make able to some sort of a check upon the story tho same, and In the one ease no more power of the courts. Is that material "sor-d.dIn to those The movement In this direction dates than or the other appeal appreciate "disgusting or "demoralizing. back several years back to the time That no newwaper should and no debetter are more when there was much agnation over the cent things. w specialty of does mnke newspaper referendum and the recall, and the late ' go far afield for them, and glad to demonstrate at any Theodore nooaevett came conspicuously murder stories, j ust rejoice In the presentation of horrifying to the front as an advocate of the recall or a now car bevond is. obnoxious Chalmers details, Six question. good Colonel Roosevelt of judicial decisions. however, there is a murder argued that there should be a way o reg- Occasionally, of of the qiutllty the peobecause Chalmer Six Price w istering the will of the people ir the which, the mystery which veils the courts rendered decisions which were ple Involved, Tewrind Cor. 1185 RoadBttr, Unusual-nes- e or the the ol murderer, Identity ccmurwry to the wishes of a majority of Tourint Cmr, 1IJ4S of Coup, S1S9S surrounding the the people. trkmf. s k Dona, Jbvmm tor ft fc itU become of real and keen In Senator a FoUefte Is perhaps going tereat to not at all morbid or only a step farther when he holds that depraved, intrtligent, resders-o- f newspapers. Car-Cothe will of the people ns reflected In an of the Times, the In the ., judgment act of congress shall be supreme, even case has of the murder many as against the opinion of the highest rbaraeterlslics that make a murder esse ' Corner Bodal Hall Avenue and Second Hast court of the land that It Is unconlegitimately important, worth a good deal stitutional.Phone 2187 Waoatch of newspaper space, and of prominent position, now and then, among PURPLE ASTERS. the other happenings of thp day. One of the victims was a clecgvman, the other It isn't klotie ' tho asters In my garden a notable worker In hi congregation. Their deaths, after more than a month It Is the butterflies gleaming e crown of kings and quee.ns! of such investlgaitiorv as the county authorities and a host of reporters could It isn't alone purple. give them, remain the center of guesses , And blue on the edge of purple Unverified, of predictions unfulfilled. It is what the sun does. That nothing has been accomplished as jot toward ehicldatton of the mye-- 1 And the air moving elwu-lyThe petals moving and the winga tery except mistakes may be due to I In Biy queer little garden!' the too common error of baaing suspicion I ( on the existence of mqtlve. 0 course, I llnda ConkUng In Delineator. , mat Your funeral." -, SAP 1 ' . i PLAUT bulbs non two-thir- two-thir- , ' three-fourt- three-fourt- pur-poe- PORTER,-WALTO- N LafolleTte after the CO. Hall-Mil- ls :ct ss g . Chalmers Six Meets Insistent Demand - two-thir- The high demand motoring squarely much in than the who We the 1 f whole-affai- I-- the marked the than time tlisl r, Taylor Motor HaH-Mi- CJho Lik-otli- ; CHALMERS . JS - SIX, |