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Show THE SUNDAY HERALD PRO VO, UTAH. SUNDAY, JUNE 22. 1924 STORES Tvum Here and There agine with what pleasure those little house iinigrvs.sed and with what enthusiasm the children met each day work. "Today I have to paint mj stove." "1 want to make a rocking chair." "Will you help me with uiy nrepiace?" Miss Pugsley then goes on to tell how eyea that before had been blind now saw possibilities In articles that would have been thrown as'de with Senator Pepper of Pennsylvania out a thought. Hands thut before bad been listless now offered In tNe senate a resolution prowere eager to work. posing that the United States join the They constructed a existing World court on the condition the court be completely divorced marvelous floor that from the League of Nations. The senlamp from an ether ator framed the resolution, at the recan, a pencil, and a of his Republican colleagues In quest Match box. powder boxes made their the foreign relations committee, for the purpose of harmonizing the differcarpet sweepers. and spools their ences between the recommendation of the lute President Harding and Presilamps. The paper dent that America Join the around electrlc-- court, Coolldge with reservations keeping us bulbs llght supplied their books and clear of the league, and the attitude of the Republican opponents of the washboards. One f.uUi L, V Fun Earns and Pays Large Dividends Pepper Proposes New "Way of Peace" Child Fun earns and and wife. The pair of tickets cost him Monte $17.G0. No complaint whatever about one example of that tax on luxury, but a many. Taking the French franc loud wail against the railroad for the at par, the Casino the world's most sum charged to carry him 180 miles, famous palace of fyn earned a profit although It was less thnn his theater last year of $20,000,000. The stock has seat a par value of $100 a share, and the I know Phlladelphlans who spend dividend paid In 1923 was $75 on as much to keep one race bora for a each share. Steel Is a necessity and month as any Bucks county farmer o Is coal. Roulette Is not Still yon pays to maintain a pair of work horses will search long In the United States for a year. Fun on the track Is exfor any steel or coal company which pected to reimburse the millionaire last year paid dividends of 75 per for his outlay on the thoroughbred. cent, writes Glrard In the PhiladelFlowers are' fun In another formj We grumble so much which have become an Important Inphia Inquirer. at the price of a loaf of bread or a dustry. One Philadelphia florist, marbottle of milk, there is no time left to keted more than 250,000 lilies at Nowhere do 1 hear folks complain at the high price of luxuries. Easter. Within cannon shot of Philadelphia grumbling at the- - price of flower. Is a golf club where the greens fee Is It Is different with potatoes, and $.. Men flock there and fork out that yet all the potatoes in Pennsylvania tax as if it were a privilege to pay ft. last year netted the farmers only $1.14 Then they will sign a petition to have a busheL Go Into a shop and see a public service commission reduce how many flowers a bushel of potatoes the price of a ferry ticket will purchase for you. for their automobile. A Philadelphia hospltnl last year, One of our lawyers re- received $3 each for the treatment of cently apeut a couple of days hi New many thousand sick children. More mw w 1. York. He wrote his hotel to secure aUlaU ,kMlan I ),jyrJ " "i i . that lufit imiuoauu twl1 I him two theater tickets for himself autumn to see one football came. PHILADELPHIA dividends. 25-ce- best-know- n Periolat, First Pullman Car Conductor Every business CHICAGO. year Chicago's business man day oldest steps briskly from the elevator of the Mailers building and goes to his office In a furrier establishment. This sprightly octogenarian,' now eighty-twyears old, Is Clemens F. Ferlolat, who has made and lost several fortunes. Mr. Periolat has several claims to fame and among other things he was the first pullmnn conductor. Here's the story he tells about that: "George M. Pullman was a contractor and got ihe.Job.of raising my father's brick store building, at the corner of Lake and Franklin streets. We got well acquainted while hi- was working with my father's building. I used to go down to watch his brother building the sleeping car, and when It o - was finished George Pullman asked me to run It for him. "We made the trip to Alton at night and waited there until the next day I for the boats from St. Louis. brought back about $25 each trip. My own salary was $8 a week, but I was dressed like a prince. "One day In Alton I visited the peach orchard of Mr. Crawford, originator of the 'Crawford peach.' I bought ten bushels of peaches from Itlni and put them under the seats of the Pul'man. 1 sold them when I got; to Chicago to J. W. Doan for $5 a bushel. I paid 50 cents a bushel for Next trip I bought twenty them. bushels. After that I got Into trouble.' "Mr. Pullmnn was much surprised and seemed greatly pleased at my suc-- j cess, but business was business wlthl him, and he said : 'I have had a com plaint from .W. H. Colvin, superinten dent of the United States Express company, because you have been car- rylng express stuff on my car. His company has a contract that is hardly complete as to details, and I do not wish to aroase his antagonism. But you are a pretty smart young man.( and I advise you to quit being a sleeping, car conductor and sell fruit. "I took his advice, and In the next two years I made $25,000 selling fruit. I used to buy Michigan cabbage at 3 cents, and they would sell for 25 cents in St. Louis." Daily Iowan Now Has a Woman Editor For the first time again. Other departments will be edithe Daily Iowan, torial, sports, campus and city and It of IOWA history newspaper at the Univer- Is more than likely that a girl will disity of Iowa, here, feminism may rect that campus department. Thus assert Its influence with no fear of the two women may be placed directly In blue pencil. The desk of the editor in line for the editor in chiefs chair one chief of the Daily Iowan has been year hence. CITY, IA. turned over to Miss Hazel Samuelson, first woman to hold that position since the publication became a daily, and credited with being the first woman editor In chief of a student publication in a school holding membership In the western conference. The editor elect Is a firm believer In woman's ability to occupy executive She believes positions in Journalism. the average coed who Is studying Journalism has as much ability to write and handle news as have the men students Although Miss Samuelson will not announce her staff until next fall, she declares that several women were being considered for the Important positions on the paper. During the Inst year Miss Samuelson has been women's editor and that Job will go to a coed Iron-Cla- d Will Ties Believing that old underground to the world as the Mammoth cave were too marvelous to be hidden from the public, Dr. John Croglian, the owner of the phenomenon, drew a very elaborate will by which he thought to safeguard the interests of the American Little did he realize that the people. very tonus of that will would be the undoing of his plan. Today, for the first time in 100 years, the Mammoth cave is closed to the public. Upon the death of Doctor Croglian the estate passed Into the hands of his seven nephews and nieces during their lifetime. As long as any one of them remained alive the project must be carried on by the trustees, according to rigid laws promulgated by the deceased Croglian. As It was not possible for any man to foresee the change in cond:tions of travel, of living and of so It was not possible lor him to plan a successful future for his beloved cave. The last living heir Is a niece, who KY. LOUISVILLE, sight-seein- Miss Saniuelson's experience extends over a period of several years. Following her graduation from Shenandoah High school, she worked two years as a reporter on the Shenana doah Sentinel-I'ost- , paper. She entered the University of Iowa In 1920. ' Miss Saniuelson's activities have not been connected with the Daily Iowan alone. She has been active in her social sorority: she Is a member of the board of trustees of Students' Inc., and president of Publications, Tlieta Sigma. Phi, women's journalistic sorority. She gained her latest honor May 22, when she was named a member of Staff and Circle, the senior honorary society, composed of twelve women most active In university affairs. Up Mammoth Cave At her death the property must be put up for auction, advertised in the lending papers of six of the largest cities of the United States and six of the leading cities of Europe for a period of months before the sale and then it must be sold to the highest bidder, with the provision that it must be kept open to the pubIs now over ninety. lic. A few new cave of wondrous beauty was discovered several miles from Mammoth cave. The owners of the new cavern opened a route through six t her caves into the original cave. Having no restrictions upon them as to advertising and manIn they have succeeded agement, flawing the crowds awny from the original and only real entrance. A bill is pending in congress for the purchase by the government of the cave and its establishment as a national park. In the meantime Carlsbad cave In New Mexico, which has Just been made n national monument, probably far exceeds Mammoth cave In extent and beauty. years ago a ft jRfjL . jjsjSi I " ' - w . ,1 f proposal. The committee on foreign relations, to which the resolution was referred, reported It to the Semite with a detailed explanation. The report says : "The resolution accepts the court as an established Institution and con firms the tenure of the present Judges. If the resolution Is adopted the President will be In a position, without further recourse to the senate, promptly to conclude with the states now adhering to the court a simple, direct and reasonable agreement. Under Its terms the United States will align itself with 43 other states in maintaining nd perpetuating this important International tribunal. On the other hand, the United States will remain. In thut event, wholly free from any legal relation to the League of Nations." Andrews Off Asrain for the Gobi Desert Roy Chapman Andrews, the explorer, has left New York for Peking to spend a year organizing the largest In scientific expedition in history for a kitchen window. To search in Mongolia and Central Asl:i be sure, It was for remains of earlv human beings but spelled and prehuman types In the Interest nobody knows who of the American Museum of Natural Invented spelling History. Andrews Is the man who seanyway. cured the dinosaur eggs on the last It was a revela expedition. r." finn to see how The expedition will not start to those houses grew, move Into Mongolia until next spring. i t , -i Some children It will then consist of about 200 camted on the a squadron of motor trucks and on els, others bedroom, motor cars, hundreds of coolies and a living room ; the UPPOSE that day after day number of experienced fossil hunters, but very --often It automobile experts and a group of be kitchen was the children from four to six cut. We American scientists. tM leading were talked over the best places they loved to play they MlSS r for thea and how long and wide they cause In regions of the Gobi desert, furicaio ui a fee nuu BSIlin nnnl-lr- . 'r.. nvpr n,t 'free' moment In their kin ought to be. "I want mine like Morther west than those searched last ton's," "I want mine like Frankie's." Pugsley had to stop to drink a cup played "I the expedition will coucen'rato they dergarten year, want tilne a different way." Every of tea. "You'll have to hurry, my 'Hosnltal.' If sou were child wh at liberty on the search for remains of men of to do his as h her out," her take to me their teacher, what would wished. Such Improvised tools as we baby wants thousands, hundreds of thousands and that play millions of you do? First, perhaps, you would had were pressed Into service some hostess would say, serving One bed of Tertiary remains 1,000 feet thick has been ago. years much ceremony, "4'aked tiny saws from old tool boxes that had out" along the base of the Altai mountains. The bones of uniiuula grieve over it, but next you would cer- found their way into the playroom, cup of tea with ns You scissors, a dull knife or two. You do hospitality, and courtesy as If she had often associated with man have been found there. tainly try to find a remedy. own been her teacher's age. would be so sorry that any child In not know how well windows can be cut a house when the owner of that Once the "Clef club,", an organize the world, when he could play anything in house Is lying flat on a "prone board.'' Hon of negro musicians, came to give he liked, chose to play 'Hospital' that his legs held down by weights, but a concert for the hospital. The next you would exhaust your Ingenuity to those children could show you. "I'll picked out "Now, day a little You would hold It. Mikey, and you cut." give him a substitute. hold It you and It a litcut I'll for a you." strummed round box and beknow that he played 'Hospital' That was the slow and steady route tle large If a United States senator is kissed tune, in Imitation of the musicians. cause he did not know anything else over our difficulties. If you want to to play. You remember that such a see the Golden Rule lived, go into a Then with suggestions and help from by a pretty girl and likes It at the time. everybody, they made him a banjo Is he justified in fulling into a rage child had possibly been In a hospital children's ward In a hospital. weeks afterward? Apparently It all since he was one, or two, or three After the painting or papering had from bis box. Out of that experiment Senator George W. Norris depends. years old and that he was playing the been done and the houses were ready, grew the music store, with its phonomost Interesting, the most absorbing, inside and out, the next problem was graphs, cellos, banjos, drums and of Nebraska, chairman of the senate committee conducting the most captivating thing he knew furniture. Here the materials were pianos, all of the children's own mak- agricultural hearings on the Ford Muscle Shoals ing. how to play. How many times have also at hand boxes, of all shapes and With that success, the field of in- bill. Is a case In point. He put on I heard two little girls, each with a sizes, blue paper that comes around the stand at the request of Senator New children terest agnii widened. In doll her arms, say, 'My baby can't bandage rolls, and stiff bristol board new Ideas. A garage with Heflin of Alabama Mrs. K. A. Edmund-sohave any breakfast today. She has to that protects the brought Natplates. of Decatur, Ala., a supporter of be "operated";' or, 'My baby is so urally there was no desire on the a dozen or more automobiles came into The railroad station was the Ford ofTer. being. sick. She has a terrible ease of scar- teacher's part to reproduce the homes "Do you remember that fine bara day In which everylet fever.' from which many of these children evolved nfter "What do normal children play? had come. When their plans provided body had made trains. (They are so becue we had dewn there, senator?" Mrs. Kdmundson asked. "I asked you, They play all the little games that for all the activities of housekeeping easy to make from ether boxes.) Senator Norris, if you might not favor the arrival Peter's Next .produced center about the life they lead; the in one room, the children were led store with Its In- the Ford offer. You said, 'Possibly.' home, the housekeeping, the errands Into a bigger world. Then, says the numerable clay dishes for every child You said, 'If I could kiss one of these to the store, the going to church, the author: pretty girls maybe I could be bribed.' loves to model with clay. They paintrailroad station with Its trains and When the furniture was made, the were Well, you did kiss one and you nre journeys, the garage with its automo- pillows, blankets, bedding and curtains ed the dishes and after they When Tony against toe r oru oner, n was a Dbiles and taxis, the post oftice and the all had to be planned. This indeed had dry, shellacked them. sold fruit efrayal, senator." whose father came me. and I for Tony, Joy peculiar fire house. These are the common inprivate g a new needed Senator Norris became furiously had and long fruit first their vegeterests of childhood. Since the ten for my special pills. It was such a they began had to be put angry. He sprung up trotn bis cliair and snouted: dency of ail modern education Is to good thing for those little paralvzed table store. Shelving "Your story is a falsehood. I know a blackmail plot when I see It. I teach the subnormal child to take his hands to sew! Any work or exercise in for the apples, oranges, bananas, pokiss that girl, she kissed me." didn't muswhich stimulated the and shrunken cabbage pumpkins, tatoes, squash, place In a world of normal people why cles to atttnd their old Kdmundson replied that she Intended merely a pleasantry. Mrs. were which of nil modeled, not start right here?" was so valuable. With what words of beets,- The foregoing Is the beginning of an encouragement I had I suggested plant- painted, shellacked and sold. Tony flower gardens and then received the orders over the telephone. article In the Woman's Home Com- ing the child, basket In hand, to urged A church came next with beautiful colpanion by Rhena Anita Pugsley. The a bunch of flowers for me from pick the children she is writing about are little same gardens because I knew that by ored windows, pews, and high altar; concentrated effort he was then the post oflice, a florist shop, and crippled patients of the Beilevue hos- the simple " little city i doing more for himself In those few Martin I!. Madden of Chicago Miny pital in New York. It Is a touching minutes than applied massage could do finally, that the children's a hospital with Its little be the next speaker of the house. story. It Is also a most Instructive fur him In an hour. How many times lack nothing, beds. Snys Miss Speaker Gillett has an ambition to be story, with a lesson In it for mothers, had 1 played Feas porridge hot and group of a dozen held to be my elected senator from Massachusetts. : up because hjnds clapped Pugsley nurses and teachers everywhere, no that was route to the same desanother is in order. At a So a new But never since the first Idea grew matter whether the children are handi- tination. Now. here at last was our have I heard the children of the Republican liieiobors into being meeting v same The enmedicine sickness but or sewing. heredity, again, capped by of the Illinois delegation in llie'lioe, a different taste! So every day play "Hospital." They live in a little vironment or are normal and healthy what wc tried to get a little of it doie, not village; they have their beds to make, at the home of Representative I'eit-teto to dinners do. their children in wholesome surroundings. too much at a time, yet we were gain- their wifchings a resolution was adopted en !ors-i:ito tend, their sny tp and shops cook ing. Miss Pugsley says next: building and Madden ns Illinois candidate for nothing of 'heir endless Mail and de. So we beffan with the house. That It appears, however, that It is not remodeling operations. the oltice of speaker in the event the Is a universal need. If you do not reallivery wagons, baby carriages the Madden on count next house is Republican. to safe all chilthe demand fooling d in race the It always creating la, ize how has so far made no annomu'einen! of watch any little child In a room with dren all the time, even if they nre lit- the supply. his intentions. other children. If there are two chairs, tle hospital patients. For, one day, Commenting on the If there he will draw them together. Athletes "Pester" nction of tile Illinois Republicans. Repsaid to Miss Girls Pauline: Pugsley behind he that with pets la a screen, resentative liritten made this state"Pauline, your house is really quile At the Putney regatta In F.nglund his blocks. He likes to feel he has a own. So ment : first each disgraceful. his Is You have hud only three all that the police ,hnd to protect the place recently "Illinois has contributed 'Uncle child should have his house. Rut how curtains up for weeks, and visitors are oarsmen of the rival crews from ento do this, with twenty chiiilren or coming to see Cannon and 'Jim' Mann lo the Joe' all the time. Now thusiastic girls who stormed their you more? house of representatives, and new prefirst thing, 'start on your dressing room nfter the nice, asking the tomorrow, Just exactly the right thing was at curtains and see if you can sents the most powerful man on Capget the for autographs. A big policeman, how hand the big pasteboard cartons In other three done." And then from hill." itol told the ever, politely barred the way and which the baking company delivers Representative Madden Is servlr came these the girls the crew was forbidden to of that lips He 19 Ma tenth term in congress. bread to the hospital. ( So a supply of words, "More sewin'! God In heaven, give any autographs this year. It Is has been a leader in th and on these paper boxes was moved into the all that I hear Is sewin' sewin' committee of I he new rule the to appropriations wus made chairman understood playroom. Writes the author: sewlu'l" prevent the men from being "pestered'' houiie for raanv years. " Ira- - aa in ;be past. cannot "sewin' The aside, you there were the windows to be dav an "Ice" card appeared Little Cripples Helped to Keain normal Lite Fin -- con-cont- J Xiy d i He Did Not Kiss Her; She Kissed Him I n y house-furnishin- g sugar-coatin- peg-boa- Madden May Be Next Speaker of Hcuso Mix kf deep-seate- ne,er-ceasin- g g J? : Sb First Iwj |