OCR Text |
Show l'JJl EAST SALT LAKE TIMES, FRIDAY. JANUARY 18, lowing kit mil disobadiruca campaign and tka allunco wilk tka Moclcns League. Aa to tko pictures, which aro largely Tka wor'.d-famo- u 1 aj Makal ia a magnificent v (Mahal) mauaoleum, probably tka moil beautiful monument of Mohammedan ait. Ii rises from a marble platl.irni on tka bank of tha Jumna, at Agra. It waa erected (1629-49- ) n by the Emperor in honor of bli favorite wife, aaid to be the moat woman ef ber beautiful It ia time. decorated with mooaice of WITH THE HIGH SCHOOL CLASSICS Pl! L 5kak-Jeka- atonea . . "I g&lumet By MARGARET EOYD Economy BAKING . . the King Will bind thee by euch vowa aa ia a ahame, A man aheuld not ba bound by, ot tha magn-ficenti- aemi-precio- 'uWaunl 0. and ia the next time you bake give it just one honest and fair trial One test in your own kitchen will prove to you that there is a big difference between Calumet and any other brand that for uniform and wholesome baking it has no equal. which No man can keep." aaid to have rent over dear $50,000,000. Pomp A to tko native princea. Idylls of the King. In view of the terr a statement that no man could keep the half dozen vowa that Arthur required of hit knights, It la intereating to conalder Ben Ju min Franklin's experiment in perfection. Franklin telle ua that when he waa a young man he "conceiv'd the bold and arduoua project of urrlvlng at moral perfect inn." lie Hated thirteen nil that at that time occurr'd virtue to me ua ticcesKury or dcKiruble.'' Tha thirteen were: temperance, alienee, order, resolution. frugality. Induatry, sincerity. Justice, moderation, cleunll-ness- , tranquillity, chastity und humil- ity a longer list than Arthur reiuired of his knight nud a more dilllcult. Franklin felt he could nut hope for success In hi project unless lie rouM make each of these virtue a linlni. He knew he could not form so mnoy a week hubita at once, so he at a time to each viitac. Tlo? first week he tried to make habit; the second week silence; mid so on through tl.e list, Wlo-- lie hn.l finished Ills thirteen weeks, lie storied In again with temperance, thus going through hi course four time a year. In time he felt It np'.i'SMiry to go through the course but once a year. Inter hut once In aeveml years, ami finally not at all. lie made himself a little book of thirteen pages, allotting one pa go to each virtue. He ruled each page with a column for eueli day of tli' week and g line for each virtue of the list. Each night he reviewed lii life of the day, and marked a black spot In hi book for each offense of the day, Franklin says he acquired the virtues In an Imperfect state, having had especial trouble with order and humility. He, however, attributes all Id suceess In life to the measure of virtue he did acquire through this experiment, together with the blessing of POWDER as 6y Test ' j I J Eat wlmt you like, hut don't eat too Facing Risks. Young Nurse I'm on a casejnsl nmcli of It. now. A rm her troublesome puiiciit. Slier ill all ailvuliecil Mute (if xeniliiy. DEMAND ASPIRIN BAYER Iler Old Frii ml Sdlililj ? Mcrcv! I slmiilil iliink yiniil lie iil'ruid of ciilcu-in- Take Tablet Without Fear if You See the Safety "Bayer Cross." il I'rniii her. Tin- Collaborators Give Opinions on Own Play liisciplc of I'.nssiiol nml Molli-rcii m tior anil tlicnlngiiin ir:i inn - Franklin planned to embody hla own experience In a sort of textbook of life, to be called "The Art of Virtue," a book that "would have shown the means and manner of obtaining virtue, which would have distinguished It from the mere exhortation to be good, that does not Instruct and Indicate the means"; but private and public business kept hlin so busy he never got his book written. "It's what I think to myself sometimes, as thsre need nobody run short o' victuals If the land wan made the moat on, and thara waa naver a morsel but what could find Ita way to a mouth." Silas Mamir. 0. When political reformers and political economist apeak of this subject, tbey use the terms "production" and One faction says no "distribution." one would need go hungry If ell the land were made the moat of. They say the reason some people never get enough to eat Is because there Isn't enough food in the world to go around that la, they say the fault la with production. These people believe that there ahould be so heavy e lex on land that no one could afford to own any waste land. They believe that If taxes were assessed according to the number of seres n man owns Instead of according to tho assessed value of the land he owns that no man could afford to own more land that he could farm Intensively. They believe that the present owners of large farms and ranches would have to sell their land to men who would farm It as Intensively as the European peasant farms hi little plot. These people believe that when all the land In the country la properly cultivated everybody will have enough to eat. They forget tha natural law recorded by Solomon centuries ago, "When goods Increase, per cent can read and write. In 1921 the new Indian parliament waa opened, aa a atrp toward A lata home rule. Lord Reading ia viceroy. political development ia the party, compoaed of Chandia follower!. Chandi ia new ia priaoa, aorving a aentenca fol- ain-ye- atate proceaaion of elrphanta ia a aiglit to thrill Europeana: thoae of Baroda are topical of tka aplondor of Old India. The public "walk houae" on the hanka of the Adgar river near Madraa, ia the n eat picturesque acene of ita kind in the world. they are Increased that eat them." The other faction aaya the fault la with distribution. They lay there Is plenty of food In the world if wt could Just get It to those that need It. We can appreciate this phase of the problem when we go Into any average The common statement Is kitchen. that the American family throw Into the garbage ran enough to feed th European family. Certainly the scrap of bread thrown away, the gravy and sanee left sticking to the side of the kettle and pan, the peelings - thick a to waste the vegetables or fruit, the hut ter container with but ter sticking to It. the bones filled with mar row, Htid the scraps of fat meat thrown away are all waste of fond. On even farm there are windfall, fruit that the farmer cannot sell. In the fields n e pni nines too small to gather; lii':i.'-- i t cahtingc tan small to re for wic.vr "e; tomnrket or u matoes that would spoil li ore they could be sold ; and the like. If we could stop all waste In kltrhrn and store and field, the food saved would certainty go far towards feeding all those who now go hungry. I . a urc cnmiL'lT roiuhin.il ion 1 :i viil in I .riii '.is. who iln-i- l 01 year ago, Xovciiilicr -- . 1 7 t. eollalioralcil with 111 friend, long and ralnpnit, says a iraiislalioii from l.c Ictil Ilirisii-- of I'ari. France. Together they wrote tunny plays, sae-- i .nnie of tliein failures, oilier esses, milling which was ii little cii IIihI ''(iroiiilciir,'' which Is still played. SH'iiking of this play, Briley omi' remarked : "The first act Is entirely mine. It I excellent. The second ha been nmrrcil hy u few liy I'alnprat. Il I mediocre. The third I wholly I'alaprat'a. It I very had.' Ililaprat considered the play ollicr-wlaexactly othcrwlKc. That la how rolluliunition was understood ONI years ago mid how, without douht. It la understood today.' An-hu- . God. India, even today, la a land of myatery. Tka term "India uaually rafera ta tka connected block of territoriea over which tka Britiak king aerciaea aitkar territorial dominion or auaerain-t- y aa emperor of India, a title proclaimed at Delhi In 1877. Portugal, how aver, kaa 1,639 equare milea of tka continent ef India on tka waat coaat and France 196 aqnara milea. Britiak India, not yat entirely anrveyed, la eatimated at 1,038,000 aqnara milea. Tka population ia 1921 waa 319,075,132, or about one-f- if ih of mankind. Thera are three aeaaoaai Tko cool, tka hot, tka rainy. The country ia divided inta fifteen The native atatea number nbout 650 priucipelitiaa, enjoying varloua degraea of independence! coma are nearly aa largo aa Italy and aoma aa amnll aa Monaco. They contain abont 80,000,000 paopla. Thera are radical diffarencea among tka many racea. Nearly 150 langaagea era apokan. Tkara are wo principal Hindu and Mohammedan. Thaae raliglona far 92 per eant of tka population. Tha former clalma 217,000, 000 tha latter 67,000,-00Buddhiata number 11,000,000. There are Marly 4,000,000 Chriatlaua, Paraia to the number af 100,000 represent tha Ira worakipera of Paraia. Tha maaaaa are illiterate. Leaa than ais Warning! Unless you see the name "Buyer" on package or on tablets you ire not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe hy millions and proscribed hy physician for 23 years. Kay Buyer" when you buy Aspirin. Imitation may prove dangerous. Adv. Standard External Remedy .if known nine safe and effective. IT "All. nekV--ih- e oripiiul and genuine liorous plaster. A lie. A j ly c Kansas (Ity Star. Quick to Learn. "Latin, hey 7 audibly ruminated You pick up what Uncle Penny wine. you need In the hiislneai you go Inter. The young lawyer soon muster haliens corpus anil other phrase. Tlie drug clerk gets Ills I ft till often the shelf bottles. The medical student asslml lates It In the lecture room. They tell me there ain't any of that stuff In the regular Latin books. Aa fer the legislator, It dont take lilm no time to learn whnt kt dletn menus." -- Radio Station Uses Mountains for Masts A wireless still inn using limtiutulu peaks fur aiiteiniiie itiiisl lias recently in Upper Balas'll (iiit Into scrib-varia. Tin wire are suiqwirted by a strong cable and extend from one pink Mini fist high, u distance of about a mile mid a half ueros eoun- try to the top of a smuller hill of The stasmile 'J.SlI) feet elevation. tion Is designed to eomiminleute directly wlih tin Fur East. Special at" riingeimut wen accessary for the fixing of the entile ends und to allow The end of the for II fiihlc la fusioned to a small carriage weighted with stone and running on rail. When the ruble ia bent by snow or wind the carriage la pulled forwanl. When the stress ceases It rolls backward on Ita sloping e stn-teliln- Couldnt Understand Them. "The wont of these houses ia that the walls are so thin you can hear everything the people next door Bay. Tliere'a a foreign couple next door to un, and It's almost driving my wife crazy." Violent, noisy people, eh 7 "Yes, but It Isn't that You see, they quarrel quite a lot, and she cant understand a word tbey say." The only danger In friendship la that It will end. Why DoctorsWarn Against Coffee or Tea for Children reason is ample. Coffee and tea contain which tend to irritate the tklicaf nervous system of children, and so upset hoalrh- The Federal Bureau of Education includes in its rules to promote health "ng growing school children, the warning that children should not drink tea or coffee at aHM THE Why confine the warning to children? You are careful to protect die health of your children; why, then, take chances with your own health, when a change from coffee or tea is made so easy by Po6tum. Postum is a delicious, pure cereal beverage-id- eal for children and satisfying to adults. Postum for Health it There's a Reason ii Your groerr will Postum ia two imw Instant Postum in tins prepared inntly ia the cup by the addition of baling water. Ibatum Cereal in parkagee lor thoee who prefer the flavor brought out by bailing fully 20 minute. The com of either iurm ia about one-hacent a cup. ll Sold by grocers I rteryu-hcre- l . |