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Show TIE EAST l ull' I. it SIT IAKE TIMES Builder. rt Community Afternoon. Publishiii every Friday MKNDELL B. I.YMAN, Editor and Manager All items uf news on social and busi-- n ess activities should be submitted to the East Salt Luke Times not later The thun Wednesday each week. Times' office i in the Sugar Bank building, at llutt East 21st South. Continuance of aicond class privi-ledg- e of Sugar House Times, granted May 11, lini.'l. at tho Post Office in Salt Lake, applied for. Tbe Times will be sent anvwhere in the civilired world for the subscription year. price, which is fl.50 r Full information on advertising rates will be supplied on application. Phone Hyland JiMi. SALT LAKE. NOVEMBER 9, 1923 NEW DISEASES FOR PLANTS life of the foota sing of lie cure-fregarden plant as It drinks lu the sunshine and llie (lew, but xcgclable doctors fall to swell the chorus, says the Kansas City Star. In a survey Just published liy the bureau of plant Industry of llie I'nited Stales 1'epart-men- t of Agriculture It Is shown that besides the common vicissitudes In the life of the humble potato, tbe reliable beau, tbe popular wuterinelon and the dainty lettuce, those and other of our food friends are getting mi the sick list with diseases hitherto unknown to their kind. In 1022 the government plant specialists found Unit right under their own rare in Washington, watermelons were suffering from what they diagnosed ns Pylhluin, while others lu Washington state were attacked with Uhlsoctonln. Trouble among tomatoes of California proved to be Alternnrln and BtislsiMirluui not formerly listed among the Ills which tomato doctors hud to prescribe for. Splnseli In Idulio was found to be suffering from a stunting caused by the Fusarlum disease, while Pucclulu subnitens wns discovered for the first time attacking spins ach In Washington and Oregon. oleslstus made Its initial appearance among the Chinese cabbages in Texas, while the radishes In Missouri were shown to be sick with 1 e gal-Juru- Aphri-cnchu- Eryslphe poly gold. The plant path ologists say that these diseases are Just as bad ss they sound. Most of them are caused by various sorts of tiny parlsltlc fungi. One of the most menacing of the newer potato diseases Is that known as yellow dwarf. It is not only carried In the seed, but Is also carried In the soli and when Introduced Into a field remains IndefiIt has been found In nearly nitely. every county of New York state and has been seen In New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Vermont IIow the sultan of Sulu was called to order by modern witchcraft shortly after the Philippines were acquired by the I'nited States lias Just been told for the first time In the American The military Jnurnnl of Radiology. otlicer In control of Ktiln one day deone could scribed liow with the see the actual hones within the hody. The sultnn. unable to credit this, told his people that the Americans were great liars and Hint no confidence could tie placed In them. As n result tits people became unruly and the sultan demanded un increased allowance for keeping them in n friendly inood. Mutters having beeoinc serious, the sultnn was brought to Manila. In the radiological department of the lios pltnl tie was shown his bund with the I'n seeing tbe bones be nl most collapsed. A conference followed, and tbe Solus' allegiance was completely One reason dolls become broken In tenlth and meet an early death its a rule Is (hut their "mothers" lire not o vlentitlc a the modern mothers of hildren. according to a baby special 'st. "The modern mother bus given up tbe cradle," lie said, "because she knows the baby should not lie rocked. Tbe modern baby sleeps In a crib or t'ttle hod on four legs on the Hour. The lairs that keep the baby from l falling out give it a appearance. Put the modern dull Is still brought up in the ol I fashioned wav. The dell is rocked in a cradle, like the mother or grandSeme-tim- e mother of in small owner. these cradles are the mechanical kind that can e wound up like a dock. Many modern dolls, a many men and wutnru of an older generation were, are rocked to deep to the dick of the aut'iir.at'c rrndle." .ooh-gtea- We should not permit mi' selves to got "swelled load" over oltr modern civilization. Robert Cecil says; Egypt ami Greece were liitclliftiialiy much further advanced than we. Egypt laid mechanical devices which were I ijoitbtlcss equal to those we have ay. but In tho fluid of metaphysical speculation they were so far ahead of us that I doubt If we ever catch up. Grccco bail art and llleratura and politics In none of these fields liavi they been excelled." tough beef is best The niiiselin uf llie average Jaw, developed me: civ by the necessary work fund, possess performed ill power enough to lift from the ground a until us large us Jack I ellipse. 1 his iiiiigazliie statement, made by Dr. Arthur 1 . ltlack, dean of the Northwestschool, In the ern I'nivcislly I Is based ou Science .Monthly, Popular tests of tin- - Jaw power i.f thousands of persons. 'J'he Jaw strength of those examined, lie writes, varied between lij pounds and Itikl pounds, the last figure heiug the maximum strength wlib-l- i the apparatus used III the lest could record. Possibly, be slates, the Jaw strength of ninny persons is more than .'a a I pounds and the average svema well above 1T1 pounds, which is alioiit the niuxiiiiiiiii weight wills'll the average Ilian can lift from the ground will) one will yield luillil. The toughest In a grinding force of from TO In !Ki Mutton pounds, says lioetor Black. may he chewed with a force of beBoast veal tween .'0 and Ho pounds. requires from 35 lu 45 pminde, roast pork from 30 to 35 imihiiiIh, corned beef (he same und broiled bam from 40 to (10 pounds. Cold boiled tongue three tv live between requires only IHiuuda of juw pressure. Doctor Black advises everyone to use the teeth freely on hard foods as a way of itrenglli-euln- g them, adding that teeth In good condition will not he harmed hy cracking nuts, or by dosing on small stones, bones, bird shot, bits of wood or similar materials which may accidentally get Into food. che-vii.- bi-e- f Gowns, robes, frocks, blouses and petticoats were worn by men as The gown, a thoueveryday attire. sand years ago, was a robe of fur worn by monks, who were feeble or In Today university students, clergymen and lawyers all wear gowns. Nowadays, when a parson Is dismissed from the church he Is said to be "unfrocked." Frocks originally were big gowns with large, open sleeves, and were worn as an outside rube by monks and friura, says tbe The frock of today Detroit News. owes Its origin to that first frock sported by the old friars and monks. which So, too, does tlie smock-froccountrymen once wore. A man's short coat was once known as a pcttycoat, nnd that wonl survives today to the underskirt worn by women. Knights of old wore a silk overall to protect their gleaming armor from rain and sun. and this was known as a blouse. k Excavating In an early Egyptian cemetery, explorers recently discovered what la regarded to be the earliest Egyptian version of the Gospel of St. John, believed to have been writSeventy-fiv- e ten about 400 A. D. s of the papyrus leaves, In a were rag, work, wrnpiieil complete taken from a pot unearthed In on of the cliff tombs, says the Popular MeWhen translated, chanics Magazine. the find Is expected to shed light on the accepted Idea of the Greek text in ancient Egypt. One of the oldest previous records of the gospel dates Ck feast rtf' offfo Pilgrims nMMfttpT AKING the times and the for dinner-givin- g Into the account, feast which Thanksgiving loaded the rough-hewtables of the Pilgrims was no mean one. Served on the dainty linen tablecloths which had come over In the Mayflower with their owners, the viands and meats must have looked fit for a royal banquet There were turkey, bigger and fatter than their descendants of today, and with a gamy flavor which the bird of the domestic barnyard has lost. Whole sides of venison hobnobbed n with denlsens of the briny deep. meal appeared on the table In many forms, evolved by the Ingenuity of the doughty Pilgrim mother. It was about three hundred years ago that Thanksgiving was first celebrated In this country by the Pilgrims, In grateful acknowledgment of the first harvest In the colonies, and perhaps In nil the varied phases through which the day has passed there wts never one more picturesque in surroundings, or more hearty In thanks. The families In the little Plymouth colony were scarcely numerous enough to have their own home feasts, so they all ate and drank together, their guests being King Massasolt and nearly one hundred Indians of his tribe. What g wonderful sight It must have been the Pilgrims, In their garments; the Inquaint, home-mad- e while the costume, In dians, primeval grand old forests of America formed on three sides a background for the picture, and In front stretched away the broad ocean, over which these founders of nation had safely come. New England practically monopolised the Thanksgiving holiday for nearly two centuries. Still, its celebration waa gaining advocates, and as time pasted discussions were frequently started by different states as to Its adoption. Its first official recognition by the state of New York waa In 1817. It traveled aa far emith as Virginia In 1857, and In 1858 eight of the southern states proclaimed It a holiday. But that famous first Thanksgiving of tho Pilgrims was not given n the gentleninn who has rediscovered the fact that hogs are musically gifted new step to the side of the sly while the Inmates an receivHe will diseover ing their rations. there something strikingly similar to the of bass accompaniment pop. alar among some of our "advanced composer of orchestral music. tie After a little experience in statesmanship many a farmer Is liable to become a little discouraged nhout agriculture and wonder whether he might not as well turn the old plact Into golf links. l'erhaps a better time to hnve begun till announced campaign against the use of tobacco would have been back In tbe days of the celluloid collar. newspaper item says tlic owner of the biggest dairy hn retired, but a man doesn't have to own the biggest dairy right now to reUre. A The man who thinks that the world owes him a living doesn't think anything about what he owes the world. Wntirn Ntwiptptr Uslos.) IS through the gates of thanksIT giving That vi satsr the courts of praise; Our thanks for the littls bounties That compass us all our days Shall bring ua to greater blasalng And load us to larger ways. O, Lord of tho manifold mercies. As wa number them one by one. From tho least of Thy loving klndnsaa To the uttermost gift of Thy Son. Lead us on from our gladness To the marvelous Th trigs Thou Hast s lodge meeting Friendship Lodge N0l 27 meets every Thursday --vi'.0,0'-. o'clock at the Lodge Building. Dr. G a Grand; G. A. GundrH Ck IMA One of prehistoric dinosaurs, common to this region, will be taken from the dinosaur quarry at Jensen, Utah, and placed in the Museum at the University in the near future. Arangements were recently competed with Dr. Hubert J. Work, of the paftment of the Interior, by Dr. Frederick J. Pack, head of the department of Geology and Mineralogy at the State Institution, and permission dons. was given the University to work the Frank Herbert Sweet. quarry. The excavating will be under the direct supervision of Dr. Earl Douglas, of the Carnegie Institute of Pittsburg, who has had twelve years of experience along this line and who has been excavating in the quarry at Jensen for the past five years. These prehistoric creatures, according to Dr. Pack, were extant upon the earth about 10.000,000 years ago. They ourished along the river courses and lived partially in the water and partially on land. When they died their bodies floated down the stream channels and accumulated on a great delta at the mouth of a great river. This fact accounts for the large number of fossils found in so small an area. Since that time all the bonea and sediment have been huried and converted into solid rock. The quarrying, therefore, entails the necessity of chippping the fossils out of solid rock. The mammoth creature is being taken out of DO NT know that I have any- the quarry embedded in great rocks. thing to be thankful for, It will be sent to the University in complained the boarder In that form and will later be chipped arrears as he sadly rattled out and assembled by Dr. Pack and his assistants. U. of U. News Bureau. a bnnch of keys. "What do yen want to Work Enough. tart anything like that who knows all tbs batfellow The the urcaatle fori" Inquired averages rarely hss to bother ting boarder. "Don't you know that yon will atnrt ns all figuring out much about his Income tax statistics things that wo have to be thankful for when yon make a remark like that, FOR SALE OR TRADE and It will be an awful bore?" There's one thing," announced the Strictly modem 6 room home timid boarder in a still, small voice finished in hard wood, hot water from away down at the obscure end heat, garage. Will trade for of the table. "There's one thing," he smaller sell. or place Inquire at repeated after clearing his throat. Box 54, Ephraim, Utah. "And what is It?" asked the polite boarder, recklessly. FOR RENT "The thing for ns to be thankful for One furaishesd room, suitable at Thanksgiving la that It Is so near for one person, close to Sugar Christmas." "Oh, yes! cried the pretty teacher, House. Phone Hy. 1410M. enthusiastically. ONE IX TEN "Yea," continued the timid boarder, a little wound, cut or abrasNeglecting greatly encouraged, "so near Christ- ion of tlie flesh may in nine cases out of near. not too mas, and yet ten cause no great suffering or inconveni"That gives us two things to bo ence, but it is the one case in ten that thankful for," commented the mathe- causes blood poisoning; lockjaw or a chronic sore. The cheapest, matical boarder, counting on his fin- mfeet andfestering beat course ia to disinfect the so Is that Thanksgiving gers. "First, wound with liquid Borozone and near Christmas; second, that Thanks- the Borozone Powder to completeapply the giving is so far from Christmas" healing process. Price (liquid) 80c, 60o Tin thankful that It doesnt come and $1.20. Powder 30c and 60c. Sold by near the Fourth of July, declared tht Lloyds Pharmacy fat and saucy boarder. "The arrangement of our holidays throughout tho 1702 So. 11th East, Adv. year la exactly right. We have one holiday per annum namely, Easter which comes In the siring. We have one holiday devoted te the eating of fried clilckeif and Ice cream namely, the Fourth of July. The Thanksgiving holiday In the fall Is sacred to turkey aud pumpkin pie, and Christmas to plum pudding and mines pie." "One festival sacred to new hats and flowers," burst out tho poetic boarder, "one devoted to speeches, patriotism and picnics, one for family reunions, and one for tho giving of presents." As I snld before, resumed the timid boarder, "Ihanksglvlng la Just the right distance from Christmas, Wa can say to ourselves: 'We can't get a turkey or s new suit of clothes or a new house or a new automobile this Thanksgiving, but Christmas will soon he here, and then we'll have ever thing I We'll have more money at Christmas time than we have now, and things will bo easier generally. The boss and the bachelor millionaire (list we were so kind to will probahly send us a check. Everybody loosens up at Christmas time If ever. So we ran be thankful at Thanksgiving time that we are so near s good feed and the season when people are apt to come across, thus enabling us to loosen up and come across a little ourselves maybe." Which messnge of good cheer brightened up all the faces around the table, even causing the hoarder In arrears to smile slightly. Linqs to be Thankful Mile 126, Sn Cemesaft Sas To keep cement moving from the mills to the many building jobs always under way, cement manufacturers require aa astonishing quantity of sacks. This year the industry has consider- ably more than 225,000,000 sacks. These represent enough cotton cloth to make a skirt for every woman and girl in the United States 126,000 miles of fabric. Even a moderate sized mill which ships say 1,000,000 barrels a year must have 2,000,000 or so sacks. 30-inc- h When a customer returns a sack he gets credit for it, if it is usable or repairable. The convenient returnable sack means that each plant has to have large departments where men and women sew, sort, clean and count sacks continuously. This work alone costs the industry nearly $1,250,000 a year. And cement manufacturers keep increasing their sack inventories so that they can ship prompdy. Last year they purchased a total of more than 100,000,-00-0 new cotton sacks. For replacements alone over 50,000,000 were needed; for increased supplies over 30,000,000. In addition over 18,000,000 paper bags were used representing?, 000,000 pounds of paper. This problem of containers causes a large and steadily growing investment by the portland cement industry. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washington Street CHICAGO o4 National Organisation to Improve and Extend the Use t of Concrete Dm, DaMoha Biiahaa DmtchI Baawa -- - - KuanCky LmAbmIm Mrapha Milan Minarapolia NnlMua NcwYwk Parfccnbaia PhiUdcIphu PinAwah FottiaaJ,Ois. SakLaktCOr Vo Wa egg-eatin- g back to A. D. 200. In New York city the hurdy-gurdwith its mure or less picturesque Is being replaced by inei'liaiilelan. A motortruck surradio eoncerts. mounted by n receiving set Is provld lng un ntiraetbin to greater ero veils Ilian ever stopped to listen to the strains of "Annie Booney" and her contemporaries. . Thanksgiving three-fourth- It has been decided In Cerinany to lessons In cooking at discontinue girls' schools, and it is declared that husbands of the future will he lnllp nanL Maybe not. It all diqiends on the aptitude of the rtlcular pupil, and tbe home kitchen store has produced some excellent performers. The cooking school has to encounter Its share of skepticism In tills country owing to Its nppearance In the same era that develoicd the kitchenette and the delicatessen shop. The Gates of FOR RENT Fine 6 room modern home, with garage, hot water heat, and everything finest for rent at 2678 Alden St. $50.00 per month. Key next door north. y. DF U. SECURES What a Wonderful Sight It Must Have Been. t permanent national status until 240 years afterward, when, on the 20th of October, 1804, Abraham Lincoln, In grateful acknowledgment of victories achieved by the Union army, and the "hopes of an ultlmute and happy deliverance from all our d Ungers and afflictions," asked all of his fellow to Join hliu In thanks to citizen God. Lincoln's proclamation wn followed hy proclamations hy the governors of the stntes, and this cukiuiu ha been a yearly one since. It Is claimed that the authorities of Harvard college were the first promoters of the movement to fix a set date for Thnnksglvlng In the New England states. Until 1080 the holiday had been celebrated, off and on, In winter or summer, Just ns the spirit moved the colonists. In consequence of this all sorts of disorder prevailed among the college students became some jiortlon of them was celebrating Thnnksglvlng the whole year round. When a day was set for tlie fonst In the place where a student lived, of course lie wanted to he there, and equally of course ills parents wanted him. There was no way to prevent thli state of affairs, so tlie wisdom of the Harvard professors was levied upon for a way to ahollah It Their eogltatlona resulted In the proposition to advocate a fixed data, and they give It widespread publicity. The colonists eaw the good cense of the change, and the colonial governor! finally concurred In making the last Thursday of the eleventh month the regular Thanksgiving day. 8n widespread has the observance of that first, and now historic feast become, that wherever American congregate the wide world over the last Thursday In November finds the Stars and Stripes flung to the breeze nnd our countrymen In China, Russia, France, England, and even In the wilds of Africa gather around a bounteous hoard and tliank the Giver of All Uoml for the progress and prosperity which bars attended their efforts to found groat nation under 111a guidance. Paint and Varnish Products s Prevent Destruction Unmindful of Mis I The Wrenchings of an Earthquake are in the Frost! grip team apart the rSestIcyJoints, and and strong- Fate thousand rot rain fof wood openings in the forces Its freeing dutch starts certain roln b it hundred to enter. places in your home. Shut with out the fury of the elements ss magic wall of paint Invina-bi- s Products to give your home beau J protection and enduring Prevent this destruction. W iian Frul cmnl wrtti pnttetri milk; Davos I.ead tad Zlno Home Paial Devo Porch end Deck Palat Devoe Shingle Stela. GRANITE LUB1BER anti HARDWARE CO. a |