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Show o k i , Pe Jyaltfak griiunt worlds fair year when dh engine, Empire Stats- - express, a achieved mile t in "82 seconds, at the' L t Toone ? Morale "t? rate of 112.1 mile an hour. Jilt Lake TrttMM Pnbluhind r HlPSOHimON. TEKMH It will be news, however,, to know la Utah, Malm. Xrd and Wjatn- the famous locomotive is still is that JJ Lady cad 30 In Ur and Sunday. an year and that its appearanee, except service V. 8 Xlaewhara la swat for the addition of modern equipment, Pally a ad Snaday, par oaa Tribnaa. such as electric headlight and tb like, 'I ha Trlfeoa la am Mia la exex j Important city is not a whit changed, aad that, as No. keadera may Btataa. Coitad ta tha aapjrtal aaata la aay eity by talephoaln thia offtra. 1086, it is pulling short passenger trains Tha Tnbaoa la a maroSer ef tba AtoorJetad on the Pennsylvania division, and on TraM. Tha Aaaorfated PrrM ia. aaclaaiaely some of the shorter runs in the northof all titl'd ta tha aaa for rapobllcaties dtoaitcbaa craditad to It or oat otherwloa ern part of New York. la thla papar, aad alaa tha local IM Charley Hogan, who as a young enpabllahad berets. Tfca Trlbona u a wombor of tha Audit Bureau gineer held tho throttle of No. 999 on o Clrralattoo. IaforoMtloa coaeoralnf Tha cirralattoa Bill bo enrobed by tha Audit her record fun in 1S98, is still in the Baroau of Clrcutatioa, Veeetiaa bid.. Chicago. passenger service of the New York CenTbo 8. C. Boebwttb Poocial Afescy, aala aaat tral lines, although he is now past 60 am adrartlatap areal, World bid.. bw York;, I ribaac bids, years., A few years ago Hogan retired Chieaxo; Pout Bwpttch bldf ford bid.. Oatroit, Mich ; Bryant from active service at the throttles of 8t Loali; Baraaar Co., bid.. Kaaaaa City, Mo. W. B. Pacific Caaat ropraaantatlTr, Examiner bid., engines pulling the Twentieth Century ban Pranclaro; Title lntnranca bid., Io As-Limited, the Lake Shore Limited and bid . gaatila. el.,; other extraordinarily fast trains, and Talophana Waontoh 5Mb Wha yon fall to "(it your Trlbaaa trlephona went into th motive power department, tha city ri reala ttoa departmoat before 1(1 o'clock o, to. aad a copy will be amt yog by weoaenyer. where he still is. Tha 999, speed king of other years, Entered at tha poet office at Balt Lake City matter. ao was designed by the Jet William- - Buchanan, for many years superintendent of motive power of the Newt. York Cea-tradrawing th- topr y aa crod-lta- d Trlb-aaa'- a oecoad-clae- l. Tuesday, December 7 1920. CONGRESS. under in now is thdWilson administration his outline will session. The president views as t what should bo donv in a message or address today and the decks will then be elesred. for action. , There " i considerable difference of opinion t to what will be accomplished in the way of legislation between the present time aid the fourth of March, when Mr. Harding will take the oath as president. Senator Penrose, chairman of the finance committee, does not believe anything will be done crutside of the passage of the appropriation bills. Other prominent senators, however, will insist relief measure the .esJuetweat ' - ttpofc for tbs farmersaud livestock grower. In addition, many members of both house ar interested in other legislative matters, euch as placing an embargo upon immigration and repealing If the usual course is the war law followed a large number of bills b introduced in the house during the next few day, some political speeches will be delivered and then congress will adjourn for the Christmas holiday Wbtn the members reassemble early in January only eight weeks of the sesdisposition to sion will remain and procrastinate will bo in evidence. In tho case of many of the problems to be considered i the near future it will prebably be for the best interest of the country to go slow. Conditions have been changed by the world war and, while it is both possible and de-- , unable to get back to normalcy, our government can never be exaetly what it was prior to 1914. W have a staggering national debt and taxes are abnormally high. Leaders of both parties nro agreed that the excess profit tax should be repealed, so, that part of the program is definitely settled. It is not so clear what other form of taxation is to take its place. The Bepub-lioan- s were given the legislative mandats on November 2, last, and without doubt the policy of the incoming administration will prevail. In the meantime, fbe people of the country should not be impatient if ther is any delay. The final session of congress t. Officials of the road are considering the suggestion that when tho active days of th famon locomotivo are past it bo placed in tbo Grand Central terminal at New York and there exhibited as one of tho best examples of the- efficiency of American railroads, beside tho first locomotive run by the New York Central in J83I.. It would Tie a fitting recognition. SOUTH IJONS IN CABINET., President Harding, while building his cabinet, appoint Claude H. Huston of Tennessee at a member, th selection would give the south further recognition in thin respect, as well as bringing into the presidents official family, a man of much ability, if half th things said about him are true. Should . TbVsobth- - has v-'- ll te Con-stanti- how-eve- a A. now offending vehicles many of tb ears. Noise which is offenwve to a prison of normal sensibility to sound, so as materially to interfere with tha ordinary comfort of his life and to impair the reasonable enjoyment of his home, is to him a nuisance, says the commissioner. All sounds cannot he agreeable, but if the noise is unusual and disturbing and regularly and persistently to afloat made, nd ia of tho comfort of a mans household or the peace and health of his family and to destroy the comfortable enjoyment of his homo, a court of equity, rfpim application, may find him remedy. This would bo called a private nuisance. However, if tbs noise were such as to annoy, injure or endanger the comfort, repose, health or safety of any considerable number of persons, or in any way to render auch persona insecure in life or in the use of property, a public iuisance would exist. Aa illustrative of this distinction, tho commissioner says, for example, that if the tenant of an apartment creates a needless noise that becomes a nuisance to the family nxt door, but to no one else, the aggrieved family may resort to court for doing a why with this private nuisance But if the tenant keeps a barking dog which presumably annoys ail adjacent families, Dr. Copelands department, upon complaint being made, will immediately correct auch a public nuisance. In point of fact, the New York healih department baa full power to regulate the keeping of small animals, as well as to restrain the production of annoying music, the cries ef hucksters and pedno dlers," and' th noise of fiioter-Hoat- s lose than that of automobilea In respect of noise produced by industrial operations, Dr. Copeland thinks that there i scarcely any meebanical device the noise of which cannot be much diminished if suitable methods are adopted, and he promises that such method will be adopted when complaint is m.ade. but f; tire methods fiTeer earning . noises Dr. Copeland says that a portable wooden abed or even a blanket will muffle th sound of riveting wherever the work is done. Twe ordinary water heaters connected with each other and a gasoline engine will render the engine practically silent, experiments have proved. Ths department has even abolished much of the noise of a blacksmith (hop by having the smith build a high fence before his door and win- Do'frpmnte; x in presidential cabinets of the past Tennessee has fared exceptionally well. Postmaster General Key, who served ia o the Hayes cabinet, came from that state, as did Luke K Wright who was RoJso-velt- , secretary of war under President and J. C. McBeynolds, attorney general in President Wilson s cabinet. Casting back over the records, the Philadelphia Inquirer finds that Republican presides ts have never hesitated south for cabinet about going to materialin spite of the fact that, prior to this years election, the section has been solidly Democratic. Amos T. Ackerman, attorney general under President Grant, came from Georgia, and Benjamin H. Bristow, President Taft secretary of the tree-urewas a Kentuckian. Naturally, President Cleveland, a Democrat, would tysrn to the south for a good number of his advisers. Thus, Mr. Cleveland had John G. Carlisle of Kentucky as secretary of the treasury; A. H- - Garland of Arkansas as attorney general; Hoke Smith of Georgia a secretary of the Interior, and nilary Herbert of Alabama aa secretary of tha navy. President . Wilson has Josephus, Daniels of North Carolina in his cabinet aa secretary of the navy and A. 8. Burleson of Texas aa postmaster general. Certainly ther ia no good reason for ignoring ths south in the matter of cabTINGS TRIUMPH. inet selection, any more than there would be for ignoring th north or the hate xoted east or the west. .Tha people of Greer Many of the ablest overwhelmingly for the return of men in the country's history hare bees to rule and reign over them, Southerners, tand many h e served is public capacity with outMamling brilt'sder the principle of t liancy. to undoubted have tha right tion, they select the head of their own governLESS NOISE, PLEASE. ment and it may b that Tino will $ome years ago there was organized again ascend the throne. Grecca, in New YoTk, and for a time flourished, will lose the support of tho sathe Society for the Suppression ef fest alii phyaically, financially and Nois. As time want o th morally, and if ther 1 to bo a reof this society seamed to grow activities grouping of tho European nations instead of a league of all of them, the less, so that today, it ii said, th soHellenie kingdom will be found in the ciety has a membership enrollment of Great Britain one group antagonistic t perse. aad Franc. We do not btlieve tha en'th lamentable fate of the Whatever tente allies will prevent the return of its principles aad its alms ar Constantine to Greece, but we are quite society, a revival which bid fair ta certain that the Greeks will gat bo enjoying as it grows. The moro money from England and franco grow and gather force is due to the recent action on revival and that they will be compelled to pay what they ow their former protectors th part of Dr. Royal 8. Oopelaad, commissioner pf New York City, without delay. Notices to this effect health aa lnepeetor to lead the la assigning were lent to Athens immediately followagainst an exdepartment! th new of ing publication concerning cessive solum campaign characsad dissgreeablo Sunday election. So far aa Greece is concerted, former ter of eounds. Dr. Copeland says that during tha Premier Yenizelos it down aad out H has . personally relast six weeks h may never retorn to hie beloved island of Crsta, which ha mada part of tb ceived no fewer that 123 complaints reHellenla kingdom. Tat he will live in garding noise. Th majority of the relate to automobiles , There history aa on of tho great statesmen protest of the present era, a fact which may cat be no doubt, th commissioner eayi, that many autenubiles operated on tha git him a considerable amount of ar defective mein hi hour of humiliation tnd streets of New York - broken mufflers or havingchanically, Tb defeat. whole world remains in a eut-ea- t or in com open; state ef unrant and there it no telling ar run with how matters will finally shapa them-clv- e ether way are Interfering with th All we can da i to hop that peace aad comfort of our aitizena. A to remedial steps, Dr. . Copeland th passion aroused by th lata war his department will first prothat says will finally burn themwdv out and moral suasion. Aa a beginning, ceed by that all th nation of th earth will k suggests that if th poll or any herenftor Be la harmony. Unfortu-natalw are unable to discover vary eitlae will giv th health department th Uoane aumber of aay machine that many favorable aigna at tb present mo- is operated in a noisy way or that is ment. The result of tho Greek election defective, the department mechanically h swelled the discord of th hoar, will transmit to the owner the information that complaint has been reeelved THE 999. Regarding his machiae, and will as, folks who ar approaching that stage that the nuisance be abated. If th in Ufa known at middle ag or who aotic is ignored, the offender will far penalty for violating the sanihT attained it, or peated ,it, will rw a aerioua code. tary , fall Vividly th furor that was caused Bine half a miilioa automobiles rae hr tb wonderful fsat performed by a through th strm-tof New York, It locomotive cf th New York Centra! would manifestly b ImposiHMe for th o' the health department lee In l9X They will recall how employee nlone to rcgnlete the moter ear. There-fo'e- . iMdeir was heralded the remsrkable th mirtano of the public is of engine in the 'hi,-a3to rmi'ert inlo etl coudiu ted urged A ijj f THE SAIT LAKE TUICUKE, TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 7, 1920. . r-- L, 'j V K dow a Dr. Copeland reports that in quieting ths noisy trades, he has gained a large degree of cooperation from the proBut if shop, facprietors themselves. tory or other business concern fails to act on his department 's kindly advice, he promises to Issue an orer that will compel obedience. Respecting the sole surviving member of the original Society for the Prevention of Hnneeessary Noise, it is proper to inform our readers that she is Mra. Isaac L. Rice. At the time when the aocicty flourished: she was credited with being th greatest single factor in suppressing the vicious physical uproar of modern urban life. In her famous struggle to vanquish noise, she at first, through act ef congress, stopped needless whistling by river boata Then 'her society, w hich she had organized with forty state governors and other prominent men aa directors or adviser, propagated similar bodies in various part of Europe. They enlisted Mark Twain as the head of a correlated organization. She effected the legal establishment of quiet zones about the schools and hospitals. She. was also' a leader in the national and successful moveaicnt for a safe and sane Fourth of July. A french newspaper, th Figaro, once referred to her as that pious Fairy of Silence. Declining health for several years has prevented Mrs. Rice from energetic aervicd ia th campaign for less noise, hut she is as keenly interested as ever In tha effort to bring her hopes to frultioa, and as th Society for th Pravantioa of Unnecessary Noise, officer and membership, Mra. Rica expresses a hearty willingness to cooperate with Dr. Copeland. POTATO FLOUR. government of the Netherlands is conducting extensive experiments with potato flour aa a jroduet for mixture' with wheat flour. Th aim is ta provide a flour at n coat, because of enlarged supply, which will enable the people ta buy it. It is announced that the government has recently purchased from Dutch manufacturers a stock of 20,000 metric ton of tha potato product which it propose to mix with wheat flour from th United States. Th potato flour bought by the government costs 6.1 cents th pound tha aamc Compared with practically price for wheat flour at tha present time, but a somewhat higher price on a average for aom time past. It is expectsd that by mixing th potato product with that of wheat any farther rise in th cost of bread eaa bo prevented, though It i understood that a fixing of a maximum price for bread will again b undertaken by tha government if it becomes neeeary to prevent any serious incresce in this stuple to tho people. Both potato flour and potato starch were used in Holland a constituents of bread during the war. Thera is now, however, an indisposition on tba part of iha people to use flour containing th potato starch, which, particularly daring tha war, was usually aot ef good quality; but it is thought ther will b no complaint as to the in of potato Tone, which, when properly nuxej with wheat flour, la sail to majie an excel-len- t of tires. I Th A Vt i v Shall We Can Kissing? ., By Frederic . Haskm. -- - Hew to th lino, lot .ths( quips fall vrher The ancient WASHINGTON, Dee. war again; kissing aa as sport has recently broken Out again. Several learned dectora have issued pronouncement on tba deadly possibilities of unhygienic osculation. from Faria cornea tha report that aien a now disease has been caused by kissing, and tlat the malady is spreading- - from tho fragmentary information given, tha disease seema to he something like pyorrhea, for the teeth ar loosened and th gums arw aors. At th earn time, a doctor; In this country urges that if peopla must Idem at least they should forego Indulging ta th morning Idas, as germs especially ths germs of tuberculosis ar apt to be most virulently active In tba mouth then. Medical objection, to kissing in th morning might be made a convenient excuse for avoiding th perfunctory peck of duty expected by some of your relative. No doubt tho family physician would bo glad to furnish a certiflcat showing that you were hot to sngago In osculation until 1 o'clock., The doctor in question was probably chiefly concerned with th' kissing of children, a pr aotic which has long bean looked upon with disfavor by etick'.era for a germless existence. Children are much more susceptible to many kinds of disease germs than grown people. They hav a children's diseases, great many often unneeessanlv. and while there ar no figures, tome doctors hold that these diseases ar frequently contracted by kissing. MOUTH MICROBES. Th number of bacteria you can catch by on ,kiss has been carefully calculated by a Viennese physician. Ho found, presumably by counting them, that there arc at least 40,040 microbes on one aqpar centimeter of the human lips. These bacteria may Include the germs of scarlet fever, typhoid, diphtheria tuberculosis and other dreaded dtseasee. It has been observed that th mouths of children who have fully recovered from diphtheria are filled with the germs for a king time afterward. To kias such a child, and especially for ane, other child to kiss It, ia to Invite the according to doctors opposed to kissing. They admit that it is possible to kls a mouth reeking with all sorts of microbes and escape if your body ia strong .enough to throw off th poisons- - But then again yol may bd Ur a mwcvptft'te' condition, and the results are disastrous. Very Impressive, all of thla But even while your brain Is struggling to picture the horrors of 40,000 bacteria huddled on a human lip, along comes anixMier doctor and says that a thimbleful of milk contains more bacteria than that, and a drink from an ordinary glass ts far more (If there is suoh a word) than a kias from an ordinary person. Anyway, what could be done about tt? is History shows that the desire to kiss so deeply ingrained In eivtllMii humans, that It would be difficult to eradicate It. It is true that if no one bad taught us how to kies w might never have discovered It for ourselves. It la not an instinct, like laughing or crying, gome savage tribes know nothing of it. Thev de uausllv, however,. have some method of outwardly Indicating affection, such as ths Malay kies, which consists of two people rubbing nosea together. KISSING HAS DIMINISHED. But though kissing is sit Integral part of conventional conduct, it does seem to bs taking a smaller place tn the social life of civilised countries. It used to be the custom in England for a girls partner to kiss hef before giving her up at the end of a dance to another man. Further back, ths lady of the feudal castle kissed the feet ef baggara, even leprous beggars, on certain religious festivals. And to hark still further back Into hiatorv, the worship of many pagan gods and goddesses prescribed kissing some part of the Image. The kls of devotion, kissing between men, and indiscriminate kissing at social functions have fallen off. Likewise, the kiss of casual friendship, which ia HU) prevalent among girls. Is inslowly losing At on time popularity. England It was customary for the hostess of the mansion to kiss her guests, men end women, on their arrival, departure and whenever rise It eeemed courteous. This custom bas long since died out, so far a the men are concerned. There remain with us chiefly the kisses of love and those of duty. These seem permanent to our civilisation. Yet even they change. Here are th ruts laid down by an authority on etlqtiette of th Victorian age for the perfect kiss: "When a t gentleman discover that everything la propitious, he will politely take the right hand of the lady in his. then pass his left gracefully over her right shoulder, and diagonally down to her waiet, accompanying this with a warm clasp, full of magnetism and respect. He will not be in a hurtTi for such loving experiences itlwaj t com to an and toe soon, and never with complete satisfaction. THE VICTORIAN KISA And her la how th damsel is supposed to retaliate: "After playfully delaying to comply with th gentleman's advance, tha bdy will by resting her gradually show willingness head trustingly on his shoulder. A glow will come to her cheeks, and bluehas will g appear. Thee are tha signs of her readiness to share ber sweetness with the man who looks bravely into her eye, whlla manfully drawing her to hts bosons like a hero. who wants Instruction in th art Anyone aa it is now practiced can do better by skilled professionals who five studying ample methods at close rang in any This Is the one moving picture plav. flak! where the kins is gaining ground rather than losing it. Th stage kiss used to bs a palpabe sham franco went ao far as to make it an offense punishable by fine for an actor to give an actress a bona fids kiss unless bv her consent. At least one matins idol of Fart was hauled into court bv an angry husband, and ordered to answer for kisses bestowed upon his wife In a love scene. But now ths moving pictures and a passion for realism on the Wage have changed th rule, ao that what passed for a soulful embraca with a thrill.! audience a few ar ago, would be greeted by jeer If offered a a sample of emotion today. In fact, so Intense did film actor become In thsir efforts to bo that the censor of soma slates had to regulate th number of feet over which a kiss could b extended, ths Idea being that there are limit beyond which a k'ts becomes either tiresome to look at, ar too . , personal for screen us. ' - never-failin- half-clos- Memory Tests. Can You AnswerThese? L A Line o' Type or Two they tty. . "Tha entertainment committee of the Union League club," so it says, "Is with considerable effort spending some of your In th clubs t money to please you. which we be'ong there is no observable - , effort. i Certain toadstools are colored pink underneath; a shad also found on the cheek of utiii dames whom you so on th Poor kalsomlnlng, we call a pixen-ou- s which ia damoeeie avenue. 1L Unleash tho Bloodhounds, Watson! Sir: Am I th Only Interested observer of a solitary young woman who hikes along the Midway after dark smoking cigarettes? Intermittent sro lights d an ensemble toe mature for a and too independent for an !ntruotresa dls-Ci- co-e- A MIDWAY MAN. , f. Which best mot Quickly, gas or CIVICS. Gas. . liquid 3 What is distillation?. The convertyor s bat purpose were the United r; h talcs circuit .court of appeal organ ing' of a liquid into vapor by boat, which Ued? , vapor Is.condenaed by cold into separate seal .of 'govern2. What citv la tii an atom? T4IIow would son define ment in Alaska? ao small that it is not divisible. 3. Who has authority to establish the air" removed from th t. Why is incandescent J eleotrio light? of the. - - Where - must a crime against ths bulb To prevent the fine wire or filament inUnited States be tried? closed In the glass from burning op at the g. Of what department is ths attorney high temperature. - . What ia meant by spontaneous com- -, bead? the general of th bust Jon? It i the ignition of a body (. Oa what Is th government of heat development by the interna) United States based? . without th application of fire. 7. Whan doe th supreme court conname of avails 7. What ia tha common vene? acid? Salta of lemon. S. Who grants reprieves and pardons 8. Name one of the most abundant for offenses against ths United States? forms of albumen. Th white of aa 9. For how long are territorial gov' ernors appointed? What Is acoustics? The science of 14. By whom or they appointed? sound. 10. What are some of the best conSCIENCE ANSWERS. The. metals; also ductor of electricity? I. Doe sound travel faster through glaas at a red heat conducts readily, and also sea. spring and rain waters. air or water? dThrough water. 1 Although engweed to th extinction point by the subject of names, we have no right to assume that th subject ts not of lively Interest to other people. So let it be recorded that Georg Demon was arrested in Council Bluffs tor beatia ing his wife. Alao. Mias Elsie Hugger director of dancing In the Ithaca ConW. servatory of Music. Furthermore,waS. seHenn of the Iowa State college lected as Judge for th national poultry show. Moreover, G. O. Wlldhack is in automobile business in Indianapolis, the and Mra. Cataract takes tn washing In Peoria. Sleepy weather, isnt it? Garden of Thy Heart. Within thy heart a garden men can of loveliness Wherein tba flower Hamburg and Alton. They were kept under police surveillance. These people hare since been permitted to return to (Anv reader can get th answer to any their homes. Informaa Tribuno th writing by question tion Bureau. Frederic J. Haikhh director. Q., What city i called "th City of This offer applies strictly to informaA. M. P tion. The bureau cannot give advles on ElmS? A. New Haven. Conn., ia ao known. -legal, medical and financial matter.trou-It but its elms are disappearing. Its streets does not attempt to settle domeerie are still shaded, howevhr, by more than bles, nor to undertake exhaustive re- Answers to Questions. search on any subject. Write your ques- 34,904 trees. Uli tion plainly aad briefly. Give full nam and address, and inuloes stamp ' Q. How many St. Mary' college ar for return postage. All replies ar sent ther in the United States? B. B. A. While there are only sight direct to the inquirer.) 6L ' Mary's colleges, there ar 117 educational insurUfa adll Win Institutions. seminaries th government and Q. Including schools of various designations, which ar ance to all classes of people? named for St. Mary. F. S. F. a A. ''Civilians ar not permitted to take out government Insurance. Q. Wbat la tha origin of tha word , I - - V -- Th s- -e do grow; , Where happy thoughts do wing them to and fro And build thsir neats tn many a magic tree. And there doth pity's fountain hold in fa Q. What determine the pitch of the Mossed hanks of peace wher shadows D. B. M. voice? come and go; A. The pHeh of voice I determined by And there ar quiet paths that few do the length of the vocal cord. The - - know, Tea. only those who "love and worship cord' are' Shorter id worried than I men, therefor tb former hav higher voice. the. Or those in whom la perfect friendship 0 born; what chemical Q. Can you tell m For hid within this garden of thv heart preparation ia used for bleaching to a A holy temple stands, wherein at morn straw color ornamental grasses? And eve, before an attar heaped with E. A. H mvrrh, A. The following la a formula for A Vestal spirit bids a bright flame start Pulverize stick sul grasses: To heaven with prayers already granted bleaching phur and makeon a paste with water; C. G. B. her. tha grasses, and put In plaster thickly th air to dry; when dry brush off th A new gas boosted by the Safety Gas & Appliance Co., of Hpntington, led., sulphur. t'can be blown out while you sleep.'1 Of Q. Which state elected th moat gaelal,Jtatref ttf somnambulists. .. . S-.- But Suppose th Band ia Playing (From the Rosendale, Mo., Signal.) A person coming from th .south, going west, should go around the band stand, and a person coming from the east, going south, should go around the band stand, that would put him on the right side of the road and there would be no danger of a colsion. When we begin to read a book we begin with th title page; but marry people, probably most, begin at "Chapter I. W have recommended books to friends, and they has read them: and then thev hav said. "Tell me somethin about the au tbor.lL The preface would have told theiru but they do not read prefaces. Do your Pair of Them. n Sir. Riding th rattler of th Dixon and Sterling electric. I remarked to tha bosa in charge, who la motorman, fireconductor, switchman, electrician, man, and janitor, I set, sea I, "Mighty cold In the car tonlghL brother. "Ye.'' sex he. "the other damfool let th fire A one-ma- di Q. What 1 H. A. Xaws-Advoc- It ! , I , leather? B. J. P. A. Cordovan leather is a soft, fin a colored for grained, leather, long time chiefly manufactured at Cordova, of goatskins tanned and dressed. It la now made of pigskin and fins horse hides. Q. How many different word ar used in tha Bible? A. n. A. The fact that the Bible bas bad auch great Influence upon literature led to the supposition that it had a large vocabulary. A tabulation of tho words In the King James version shows that about (400 words are used, while Milton used about 13,400 and H hakes pear 21, Odd. Q. Where at Arrivals." Q. Wbat became of ths native popuTa Peggy in Her Mother's Arm Before lation of Heligoland during th war? J. C. M. D. Christmas- A. Th native or tha of Hellgo Upon a subject world young Peggy land at th beginning ofbland the war were smiles. hours six at notice aad Beet to expelled Secure in Love's most puissant citadel. For her. long caravans tramp duety miles With cashmere from the lands wers rajahs dwell: Philippic''? W. A. W.. A. Anv oration or declaitiatioii Abounding in acrimonious invective has bean given this designation, since the first famous orations ok this scat wbre a series In which Demothenes denounced Philip, king of Macedon. Th nam waa applied first to the orations of Cicero against Mark Antony. a Q. Poles? How high aro tha tallest telephone ., G. I. T. A. Probably ths hlghsst telephone line ever built was on West street. New York City, with poles ninety feet long, some of them carrying as many a thirty cross-arm- s. AUTUMN BONFIRES. Bonfires tn th streets; . Sticks Beys wikb , Lash to and fro; Girls danciflf in th flames Join madly In tho gam a Their figures silhouetted Is ths glow. Tang of the burning leaf. Wafted by sluggish winds. Drifts hero and there. Embers of floating fire. That In the dark expire, Llk fairy ships aad on Th pungent air. flrd-tlpp- ed Memories of boyhood Live in tho fllck'ring blase Tramp, tramp of feet, Tho torches smoky glare, Flags flashing everywhere, RhoutA cheer and music down Th street leaf-stre- I let th flam mount high, Red on the murky sky; Ever th patriot cry: "IAv th Republic; It cannot die." -- Richmond Herbert Genner, in the ton Transcript God Bos- EVEN IN THOSE DAY. Belshsxxar saw th handwriting on the wall, "feign that fellow to do tb for my next production, he order L From December Film, FUn- sub-tlt- ie A WEETC HESTER i It my DISSENTER, ffrem the North Castle Sun.) la said that by beating a cow vote set whipped crawm. Wa don't be-U- ev it Great ships bring wondreu lac of Quaint device From Flanders fields where red the popples blow; Old Nuremberg sends toys, and Ceylon, aplce. Artists ef China blend soft blues to glow On dainty porcelain. The blue qea's drift Give crimson coral. Syria, on a night Of stars, will have for her th Angels' gift God's Rttle Sett to be her soul I delight. G: V. B. Clock puucbeta who work in th new district north of th river now have twice as good an excuse for being late as they used to havk They eaa be bridged twice. 4 T HERE "Y, by an announcement by th Columbia Mill that window shades ar communicates W. II. B. "Can down, it be that th Columbia Mills are ashamed of aomethlngT Mebbe.people Or peraro fixing price. haps they That speaks pretty well both i for their mechanical condition and their appearance, doesn't it? It is also a good index of the high quality that character- -- ing Admiral Crichton. , Ehai Long hava I called you, and with song hav wooed In noonday wood by summer sun shin says Calgary Herald, "ballet e ho was deepondent.' Enceuraga Others, - ifrom th Minneapolis Journal ) 1 th comhUia'Ion that fell he. Although fore loaa last week played good football, It I thought that set era! coaltloh 1t izes alt our used 5ar offerWhether Christmas ings. ! chopping or just plain car buying, come in and look them over. tri nstheosd u San'nVn,r, , i S ! 4 The Botterill Automobile Co. 36-4- 2 South SUt. 21-4- WMatfh 638. ta T ran several i! , Bright Sayings sf tha Barristers. "Who I the president of th State Bar association now?" "Logan Ilay ef Springfield, a brilliant fellow, even If be hs s a countrified name. "Yes, I should say be ought to staok up all right. "For tho lovamlke. requests th Head Seen Shifter, "keep the Admirable Crichton out ef the Column. 1 hav five and it takes a guard presees. twenty at each press to prevent It from appear- are used cars in .our State Street Store which we heartily recommend as family Christmas gifts. Missed th yltal Spot Sir ; Aa Italia a fruit dealer wa caught In th railroad yards in his Ford truck. Becoming excited, ho killed hi engine, topping the track oo the track, from which it was knocked by a gwitch engine. Next day a friend asked him If th car was badly damaged. ho pretty bad smash up. "Did it damag the en"No, I tinka not. Da gine very' much? horn ho stills blow. J, W. 8. gilt. When the last thrush hid stilled his her. mit lilt WHV TEACHER BITES HER NAILB. Expectant of vour answer's Interlude; "Pon p was destroy by an eruption Ur on cool heights, wher benedtotory from the Vatican. . brood "The Oorgane war three slater that Tha home.y hills, my lonely heart has looked like women, only more terrible." split ' "Edward the Third would hav been It longing. Echo Only, the aad Jilt, king of franc if hts mother had been a Laughingly mocked my random aoiitud. man," Benjamin franklin produced electricity Thrilling across th yeats, at last your vole by rubbing cat backward." "George Washington married Replies to hope, ever rebuffed before. Curt! and In due time became th Mary even now I half Cars not But father of his country. Lest phantom lot prove just rejoin, on ocht 'A deacon la th lowest Jdnd of Chrismore. tian " I eamnot doubt, yet still seme fears reAn Index is where you look in th main. back part of the book when you want Tell me again axamt jour leva again to find anything that I f tinted th in PBTRARCHLNO. front part of t.ie book. Exrhangs. Plttaourg Shriner gave a minstrel eltow th other night, and the Inspired 'FRONT, RLEA$E. i tor- A d reporter for th Poet mentions that "an threatened to Virginia f lish the namrof a certain young pubman Intermission separated th two parts and who was seen hugging and kissing a girl broke the monotony." tn the park unless hi subscription to the A farmer in Pander, weak. paper wsa paid up In Nab, killed h)s nn owing men called and paid tipFifty. wife and children and then, aa an afternext day, while two even paid dl yearthe in thought. hanged Mmoe'f. Neighbors ad anoe. Boston New h FINANCIALLY MEANING. Honest, old irari, jou sppqar to h I growing ehorlar. Vo wonder. Three time fr been Irt In on the ground floor of oil proposition!., with the utml teauhs " Itntfulu 0 Cordovan eom-lnrin- Bureau. ,p. C. A. Tti American Woman National Suffrage association says that Connecticut stood Lrst in this respect, alerting five women to Us general assembly. Kanes came next with four, California, and Utah, three, and New Hampshire, New Jersey and Oklahoma, two each. Several state elected one woman, twesty-nl- n women being entitled to serv la th legislatures of fifteen state. is Jefferson Davis burled? R, K. A Jefferson Davis died on December No doubt the Manistee and 1889. was New buried ia (, has Its reason for running the "hogs re- In 1833 th body was removed toOrleans Richceived" news under th heading "Hotel mond, Va. go out rt post-offi- She 3 Third East s |