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Show t ! 15, 1924 UST SHI THE MEN AND CLOTHES Last yeur 48 Ainrrl'un men In every hundred wore nothing but old hats and TIMES LAKE Utah's Livest Conmiuiity Builder. Published every Friday Afternoon. " WEN DELL B. LYMAN, Editor and Manager All items of newt on aocinl and busi-Mi- a activities ihould be aubmitted to East Salt lake Times not later than Wednesday each week. The Times offire is in the Sugar Bank Building, at 1109 Bast 21st South. Um e Continuance of second class of Sugar House Times, granted May 11, 1923, at the Tost Office in Balt Lake, applied for. Tbu Times will be sent anywhere in the civilized world for the subscription price, which is 1.U) per year. privi-ledg- Full information on advertising rates will be supplied on application. Phono Dylan J 9lti. SALT IAKK VehKUAKY IriAPPCRs Ark 1924 lf, not all alike Itobsck, a liar-paipsychologist, has been applying Intelligence tests" to "flappers" and has come to tbe conclusion that they art a particularly stupid lot, with practically none of the qualities that sre desirable In human beings and "s f' Dr. Abraham A, d hopeless problem for educators." Tlint la a lianl saying so hard thut one can-phelp wondering Just what girls the floclor Includes In this class and hour bs knows when lie sees one of them, Dues lays the Indianapolis Star. bobbed hair, habitual resort to the expedient once reserved fur the faces of Jezebel's daughters, and s more or less pronounced dlsregsrd for ancient conventions In feminine conduct constitute ilnpierlsml If so, the Harvard man has been unfortunate In his selection of specimens. There are others honing then same signs who really do not luck brains, however murh they may try the patience of elderly observ-prs- , and, on the other hand, the steld-es- t of behavior is no conclusive proof that she who shows It la an Intellectual giantess. Ierhaps the flapper la s phenomenon recurring In every age, taking much Joy In making her critics it up, but avoiding destruction with tbs average frequency of the human species. ot While the rharge of theft brought against her chauffeur by the late or the was on trial In a Fnrls court, an Interesting problem of the dilemma sort was presented for consideration. It seems that the man's wage bad been only 400 frsnrs, or shout 21, month, and his counsel tried to win sympathy for him by saying that an employer who paid her servant an amount on which by no possibility he could live had no right to feel sur( prised at being robbed, and In fact deserved to be. This pies was met by jthe lawyer wbo was pressing the prosecution. lie declared that no man would accept such wnges unless he was planning to rob his employer, nnd that therefore the chauffeur deserved no mercy. There Is about both of these assertions something of plausibility, the one having no leu of It than the other. Whetlirr the court considered either will never be known, but tlie derision was that the mao should go to Jull for ten months and pay a fine of TO, 0U0 franca. I The feminine penchant for benuttfl-tatlocarries back front the powder puff of the present to TOO R. C., ac- fording to A report by excarutora who have been digging Into Carthage's past. In a boudoir unearthed there face powder, rouge, mirror and other beautifying articles were found, which goes to prove that Solomon was light when he Mid that there' nothing new under the aun. From this It would seent that the girls of aneient times were as determined as those of the present to be fair In fact as well as In name. Perhaps the storied pulchritude of I'ldo, Carthage's queen, was of the artificial variety and didn't fool Aeneas, after all. IMscovery that her beauty was not even skin deep the manner In which may account he left her. ltut be that ax It may, the And at Carthage suggests that all women ure sisters under the powder and paint. , ' n its out of lull got along without buying s suit of clothes. Statistics to establish this statement were prerented to the Itetsll I'lotnlers' association by the president of that organlMtion t s convention In Chicago, and pre sumably they are correct. A survey of the American crowd from day ts day It conveys a different Impression. seems to Indicate that most American men blossom out at least three times a year In new togs, and that very few of them got along with less than two hats, but after all the city street la not the only jilucs where men wear clothes. There are still to be found In some of the remoter parts of this country boys who r bad a suit of "store cloflu-sIn their lives, und It Is not so vtry long ago that this was true of most country hoys, soys tbs Detroit Free Press. Nowadays the country routes to the uicrehiint In town r wea-ln- g apparel, but the farm worker Is Mill able to spend the most of his time In a shirt and overalls, und thut doubtless Is whut brings the average to the low point noted at the clothiers' enliven clothiers retlon. Hut when the call the fact that their business Is, after all, only a thing of yesterday they need not feel so bad over the millions wbo go s yeur or so without i new suit There sre men still living who remember when the retail clothier was an unheard-o- f possibility of the future. They have lived to see homemade apparel for men disappear almost entirely, and tbe tailor backed Into a position of relative unimportance by ths ones despised ready-mad- e suit Much has been said about the wrath of Tutankhamen at the "desecration" of Ms tomb, and curiously many people have seen either possibility or probability In the theory that the Pharaoh, though so long dead, still Is able to avenge Ms wrongs, even to the extent sf Inflicting the death penalty. As the penetration of the tomb progresses, however, and as the value of tbe king's treasures, considered merely as bullion, becomes more nnd more apparent, there Is reason for suspecting that If a curse" has been In operation since the discovery of the tomb. It hse Its origin, not In the occnpsnt of the sarcophagus within the three gilded shrines, but from the long succeMlon of grave robbers who for more than 8,000 yean have been looking for Just such opportunities to get rich quickly that would have bean theirs If only they had been lucky enough to And this great deposit of easily negotiable wealth. Leonard Day, forty-thre- e years old, haa returned to Berkeley, Cal., after hiking 10,573 miles. Two yean ago Day wrote a book entitled "The Unsolicited Generosity of the American The publisher turned It People." down berause he did not agree with the sentiments expressed In ths manuscript. To prore his book contained right theories he wnlked across the continent without a hat or cost and without cent In bis pocket lie marched through temperatures varying from 120 degrees above to 20 degrees below zero and he was only seven times forced to sleep out and missed but sixty meals. Day found firemen throughout the nation the greatest friends of a man without money. i Angora's power la being challenged from all aides. The nssault on the president of the Turkish republic, Keniul Pasha, Is but one of the outcomes. It becomes more apparent that the government will have to transfer Its seut of administration from the realm of Angora to Constantinople. Most of the unrest Is fomented hy the orthodox Mussulman elements. whO'Cannot reconcile the separation of the caliph or head of the Mohammedan religion from the temporal powers of a Turkish sultan. It is said that the amir Is a direct descendant or the prophet and be Is supposed to be u Kind friend cf England. ilis-m- I Envy lx nrousod by the story of the which flourishes In the neighborhood of golf link In the Fl.ll Islands nnd which ennb'es the owner of an elusive golf ball to trace Its course through the rough bv the leaves, which shrivel at Ita touch. Whether the envy Is aroused by the good for tun- of the Fiji W.au-.lcor by the itnng'n:-tit'of the story-tellewill depend mi tho credulity of the audience; it there Is no doubt thut. as the tale :d in gulling assemblies, Its course :m he followed by noting the hearers who l.ae shriveled as it passed along. house, where no woman may uncover. There is a precedent la history about taking off lints which marked ile in. coming of an era of reioimii.n. After Louis XVI opened the bly with a speech from the throne he put Ms feathered hat on and was followed hy the nobllty ;.nd the clergy. The members of the third estate were suiq-osc- l to remain uncovered, but to the great surprise of the (tertian workmen ; rote-- t the serap-pit.- g nobles, the commoners also put on oi the eight-houday. Rut the their hats, whereupon the king took off t ierti.tiT-- , fartnor. who worl.s eight hours bis and the third estate followed suit In the I""! nil's :.r.d -- IlIiI In the afteronce more. That was the beginning of noon. has the hotter of It when dinaer the French revolution. lime conns. s country. Not Much Difference in the Average Small Town By ELMO SCOTT WATSON wwwwwwnwwwwnwwwwwwwww 110, Jill, WNirs Kwapar Uatta.) THEY SHOWED HOW A CHEYENNE WARRIOR CAN D1K Chief JN THE summer of 1890 HeadNorthand Young Mule, two ysung ern Cheyenne Indians on tho Lama Deer reservation In Montana, wore accused of tho murder of a boy named Hugh Iloyle. When ths authorltlM demanded that their tribesman surrender the two braves, the Iodises triad to settle the matter according to their ancient custom. They offered the largest number of horses a ad other Indian wenlth that had ever In the history of the tribe been given ss an atonement fur killing a man, but when ths agent told them that this would not do, tbs chiefs sent him this meeeage: "You will hang Used Chief and Young Mult If we give them up. When a man Is banged his soul cannot escape from his body end It, too, is killed. That is no death for s warrior. Let them die fighting." Bo they announced that on s certain data the two man would attack the agency and they expected the eoldlers to be on hand to defend 1L This prop- ortion for s and spectacular suicide was a startling one, but tho agent had no alteraatlvo but to accept It On September 18, the day appointed, n troop of tho First cavalry and tilt Indian police were drawn up In battle array before ths On all of the surrounding agency. heights sat the Cheyennea to see the battle. And with tho stags thus set, ths principal acton soon appeared for their part In ths drama. That meriting tho medicine man had anointed them In preparation for their ride to death. They had pnt on their flnMt clothes and painted themselves. Then, singing their death songs, Ilead Chief and Yeung Mule dashed forward, two men against mors than a hundred. Under the hall of bullets that greeted them Young Mula went down. But Heed Chief seemed to bear charmed Ufa. He rode unscathed past the line of eoldlon end police firing polntblsnk at him until ha was out of range. Then ho turned and deliberately rods back, and this time a bullet found Its mark. Later It was learned that Young Mulo had had no pnrt In killing Boyle, but n mistaken sense of honor prevented his trying to provo his lnnocsaca, It Is worth remembering, wt think, that never In the history of the werld did email town exist In any large number with such n high general level of education and behavior ai In the Middle West today. If our material progress haa somewhat outrun our development In artistic and "cultural lines, after all we feel it is l etter that way than with the reverse condition. Also, every one of the traits Sinclair Lewis Just as much pokes fun at exist among 95 per cent of the Inhabitant! out here of every big city as it among the cattle, corn and wheat. The New Yorkers go to the same had movies, read the same trashy books, play the same bridge as ourselves. We cant see that they have any right to laugh at ns ; nor has acyiiody else. We are honest, sober; If these are qualities w hlcli are to be despised, then tlie world, vre tlilnk, must certainly be coming to an end. We say grace at our taidvs three times a day without shame; we pay our debta when the government follows a policy which penults ua to do so; and we give our children the best education our prairie college? know anything about. Its pleasant, I agree, for you to hop on the 4:33 train nnd slide away from the little town, with Its Jealousies (certainly we have some), it gossip (which is terrific, I admit, being tlie natural product ef active minds with too little to do), Its dally round of the same few short streets, the same familiar fuces, the same Jokea In the barlcr shop, the same smiling stuiild amiability at the church supper. Rut It Is fair to remember that If you had been born here, almost certainly you would be here yet, making the best of It. Also, that If the rest of us didn't stay here the pickings would stain be very poor In those big Chicago restaurants you are so proud of. Bruce lillven in New Re- Sold by 35c. ' 1702 So. 11th East North River. Tl.e application of tbe name North river to tlie lower part of the Hudson dates buck to the time of the early Dutch settlements In New Jersey. North river Is the historic name of the lower course of the river which flows between Manhattan and tlie Jerseys. It wax north of the New Jersey settlements, just as the Deluwnre was south, and the two rivers were known to the Dutch colonists as the North river and the South river, respectively. CitiS ! A. D. 1924. Caroline Martig administratrix I the estate of John Martig, deceased a D. Harrington, attorney. Date of first publication, 25, A. D. 1924. Janw "'ll At Your Convenience Repair Service Battery Department Accessories and Supplies Tires Bennetts Gas and Oils Open Until Nine O'Clock Debenham-Baileyflu- to RAG RUGS WOVEN Call Hyland 2702-- Service Co. 3302 Highland Drive Douglas Save time and money by patronizing your home garage R. LOST hard-workin- 58 I Pair tortoise shell glasses black case. Return to Miss Sorenson, at Irving Junior High 1 t School, Reward. 8 A CHANCE FOR HAPPINESS Write me the name of your favorite hymn, enclosing one dollar, and I am sure I can make a suggestion that will bring you much happiness. Box 359, Goldsboro, Wayne Co., North Carolina. I t t f LODGE MEETING Friendship Lodge No. 27, 1. O. O. F., meets every Tuesday evening at 8 oclock at the Lodge Hall in the Smoot I. L. Barr, Noble Grand; Building. W. N. Gundry, Secretary. Legal Notice public. PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP Colon Attract Buyers NOTICES. For further information consult County Clerk or Signers of notice. You may pack pills In a pale blue wrapper, but If you sell chocolates the best colors for the covers or boxes are red, orange, or bright yellow. A good rich brown la not to be despised, but a green or n blue la useless. Indeed, these colors will actually deter a purchaser, even though the content! of the package are of the NOTICE TO CREDITORS C. Buchanan, Estate of John de- ceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 411 Judge Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 18th day of March, A. D. 1924. hlgheet standard. Mildred Buchanan, administratrix Manufacturers are only Just begin- of the estate of John C. Buchanan, ning to realize the Importance of deceased. colon In tbe sale of tbelr wares. Red Date of first publication Jan. 11. and orange are warm colors; they ex- 1924. THE OATH OF A RANGER Daniel Harrington, Attorney. cite enthusiasm. in tho days when Arisons Green Is an excellent color for the QACK was "cow country" two men rede walls of a so la pale primrose. NOTICE TO CREDITORS tbe range together for one of tho big These are room; Estate of Jennie V. Annis, Deceased. restful soft, and colors, good cattle outfits and, although totally dif- for the You do not want a wall ferent In temperament, BUI Smith and which eyes. constantly attracts the eyes, but Carlos Tsfolla were pals whoso friendyou do want warm, bright, striking ship had been cemented by years of colors to nttrnct purchasers to goods hardship and danger. When the cat- displayed In shop windows. tle business declined In that territory, Notice, too, the matter of books Tafolla enlisted In Capt. Burton Moss-man- 's how many are bound In red and how Arizona Hangers, a splendid brllllnnt are the wrappers In which body of picked men sworn to uphold most are shown nowadays. Tlie salesthe law and to place duty over friend- man who studies cglors and who unship, love or life ltsolf. As for Smith I drifted from one Job to another. derstands them la tha one who sucIn 1900 a band of outlaws who had ceeds. been stealing horses, robbing banks and post offices and committing murPlanning for the Future ders In New Mexico, were driven over The city planning commission haa Into Arisons. By a strange turn of recommended the establishment of a fate It was Tafolla and another building line on several of the main traffic thoroughfares of Atlanta, Ranger named Maxwell who discovered tbe bandits' stronghold In n deep with a view to their being eventually widened to a minimum of SO feet. eaayen In the White mountains. It was ths ruitem of tho Arisons Atlanta bus entirely outgrown Its Rangers before going Into action to streets. With only a very few exception, tsko the Ranger's oath. Bo Maxwell and Tafolla rede aids by sldo, clasped tlie streets anil avenues of this city each others hand and repented ths are hopelessly inadequate to meet the secret words that bound them to etlek traffic detnunds made upon them to each other even unte death. They which demand Is annually Increasing were within 50 yards of the outlaw at a rate commensurate with the rapid ramp before their approach was dis- growth of the city nnd the even niora When Maxwell lifted his rapid development of the motor vehicle covered. voice In a demand for surrender there Industry. wns an ominous silence. Then a man Commending the street widening stepped out Into view. plan, Robert II. Whitten, consultant to the planning commission, said tlmr Hello, Tafolla," he said. Iloilo, Smith," replied the Ranger the effect of the plans reemnun-nded- , r&i when earned out. will be to "lncreum-traffimi quietly. efficiency three or four tlmi-s,"This Is hard luck," said the outlaw. "You're us good as dead, Tafol- and tbe widened thoroughfares could la. If you try to arrest us. Wo out- easily bear "twice their present amount number you and we will naver be of traffic tit a speed two or three times in excc of the average under taken alive.' When Tafolla told him that an Ar-- existing eoiiditiiiiw. Don Ranger never counted the odds. Smith reminded liim of Ms own repu-- ! For Attractive Homes tation a a niarksinun who never All tln c .; is not to lit- - placed missed. on the lion i i;erior. Through stu-l- i "I don't want to kill you, Cnrlna!" ugencies a i radio and the motion he pleaded. For the sake of old times, picture nml through the display of hi-- j go sway. If you will, we'll leave this ili vn i and house funii-di-country and never come hack." of this movement lugs the I'm sorry. Bill, l,ut we cant. We've arc niu'.lti.-- , octal effort to iisiM Just taken the Ranger's oath. But If the 'Jii.O'.K'.i-'- n managers of Amorthings come out as you say, do me cti lung I;;:'-- that will make tholi me favor, tiet word to Captain Moss-mahoms iifr.. . nructive and lighten that w did the best we could," their bunli-;-..i; the same time. I 1 P v t: It VELOUR FINISH li..-!i- , ; n j said Tafolla. Then the started forward Huge Building Bill nnd the shooting began. Smith still The I'li it w.ir cost tbe nation about tried to them away. lie put great debt that took four bullet through the top of Tafol-many year to clear. The building Stetson. la's The Ranger campaign wi t this year a pmt continued to advance, firing a he deal i: )n tlie four yetrs of came. Then Smith lowered his sights civil strife. Tho year will go out with and shot ids old friend between the a building I,:.; for the nation of upeye. ward of Last year the itnojKO. j Bill Smith kept hi word. A few homes, apartment Fiohe Cone i coming book, presum-ab'.- v weeks hirer Captain Mossmnn received "li'lay i.ffu-houses, buildings, manufacturto see how hi Incantation have a letter from the outlaw, some ing plants, tiuatera and other types a.ffe. ted the country nnd to of buildings totaled gather In where in Mexico, telling how 4,500,000,000. ami Tnfol'.a had kept th a few more American This Is nht:t 1,000.000,000 under ths dollars, which outh. Rangers look very large In France estimate fur 11C-Just now. Itai-ger- e 1 tm-r- fi-- 1,,-- ti It g h ti w t( Is Your House A Home? ti ft rl e: w The answer is on the walls 7TALLS are the background of fV family life. They affect the b in d beauty, cheer and cleanliness of o; o: every room. o When finished with the soft mellow tints of Devoe Velour Finish (a flat ti n paint) walls not only help to mai the things in front of them beautiful, oil but become beautiful themselves. And because such walls are washa- tl o: tl ble, their cleanliness and fresh beauty are easily preserved by the occasional use of soap, water and a rag. Devoe Velour Finish can be on any interior wall or ceiling. applied Devoe Products are time-teste- d and proven, backed by the 168 years experience of the oldest paint Foundedl754. manufact-uringconcemintheU- 1" It si w I. I" SI tl w .S. p si GRANITE MJMKEK aiul HARDWARE CO. i ' NOTICE TO CREDITOR Estate of John Uartig, deceased. Creditors will present claim J vouchers to the undersigned Joudge Building, Salt Lake on or before the 28th day ofy?H: Adv. bor-siviii- ; Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 502 McIntyre Building. Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 29th day of March A. D. 1924. M. E. Waddoups, administrator of the estate of Jennie V. Annis, deceased. Date of first publication, January 18. A. D. 1924. G. L. Nelson, attorney for administrator, 1115 Deseret Bank Bldg. Lloyds Pharmacy ' r India Leads in wwb Jti With a production In iMrin.il rears In excess of O.WU.UDO (on. India ruls.-more kinds of oil seeds than any other FRONTIER c sensitive-plan- t The women member of the house of commons sitting in tbe old mother of parliaments took off tlielr bats in violation of the ancient customs of the TALES OF THE OLD 10-fo- long-burle- d f-- r SICKLY, PEEVISH CHILDREN , Children Buffering from intestinal worms are cross, restless and unhealthy. There are other symptoms, however. If the is pale. Las dark rings under the eves, tad breath and takes no interest in play, it is almost a certainty that worms are eating away its vitality. The surest remedy for worms is White's Cream Vermifuge. It is positivs destruction to the to the child, nice worms but Kl i; T to tl In .6 i 1,1 t: ; oi u J PI |