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Show i TEE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, MONDAY MORNING, 'AUGUST muBmimMiniimiiii Mt Uk Triton ftitml t lift UU FttMUhtei tumi or itmurnoNi n4 tbi poctoffte M m4 Ctty m ri.. Sund e month ...HIM MM DU 9rm6r, mm b tTh rmts apply ta Utah. Idaho. fotada nut Wy aim WlMwhen la th Ucitd 8tatt. Dolly tad flmoii. mm month Tba Trttos i e tab ta ail important ety la tb UoUd OutM Mcmiia Menu In lay ctty bywry telephoning thl office Tb Tritob la a mitor f ih Anoditit frin Th JUmaciaud Pma ta aaela-tl- y credited MUM aol tatlUed to th aw for reproduction of all oevi dipatch therm credited In inn paper. and alo th local a pobliaried herein. a AadU of Circulation. tore Tba Triton la a eharttr member af th Th Trttona It a member at Tb 1M OM Qroop of Amartcaa Clttra. Tba toetorttb Special Aaaney, Ina aaatara advarttstna atont, Pew Tort. PhUa Ca faaUJa OalphuL Cnteaao. SI Loui. Detroit, Kaaaaa Cup Atlanta; M. C Moaaaaaa cotA repre matte. too Trancuca Lot Angel. Seoul. Portland Pow tra toraatn of ftnforenatteo af Th Triton aft Ha I Rna Bento Part. Prone: 1M Fall MaU, Loadoo, Kaaiaad. I UoUf D Uado. ferUA OcrmaAyi KacaUloy lUul Roma, Italy. Monday Morning, August 12. 1929. XfcBf Ml Min - Our Prosperity rpKE net Income of the United States Steel, corporation during the first half of 1929 was except in exceptional Instances, the women do not go to the polls. Neither do the men. Elections, generally, are controlled by a strong minority. . Even with the element of liquor lawlessness that has come Into our national life we do not believe there is as much corruption, national, state or municipal, as there was a few years ago. And are we too altruistic? we like to believe that, despite what has been going on during those years in Washington, in many states and here at home. $132,600,001. This establishes a record which Is new half-yefollowed through the sumbeing mer months by & rate of production at 95 per cent capacity. Usually, the steel Industry shows a seasonal decline during the summer months. Railroads, pipe line companies and structural steel trades have had their part In the continued Make-BelieLand heavy demand upon the steel factories, but It Is shown that final weeks of vacation 25 per cent of the total record THE are crowding upon us taken been has steel of output with swift In a time by the automobile Industry. , vacation pace.so far short as 1929 is Record-breakidomestic concerned,day, will be spotted upon sales of automobiles and exports the like an ecstatic memory have that are unprecedented dream. given the auto manufacturers In the lives of most of us their greatest year. It ha long there are times when we prebeen predicted that the automoto be what we are not As tend be some biles will produced day boys "and girls we "made beat the rate of 5,000,000 or more a lieve" aqd as boys and girls Detroit and other exyear. grown up we leave business figthat assert this year perts cares and enter the land of ure will be surpassed. make-beliewith the same preAll of this means there Is tense. more the than prosomething Recess from dally routine of verbial wave of prosperity work refuels us with an sweeping over the land. It has that carries us over Into energy another been said that the prosperity of our back and year. Turning has Industrial corporations great a task that has no. real bearing upon the coun- mind against bound us with fetters,' the open g. Taktrys financial road changes us into children ing steel alone, however, the rec- tipon whom the cares of busia must have fabrication ord ness are transformed Into worwidespread effect upon various ries about food, oil and gas and lines of Industry, with a factory reflection that has kept the en- tires, and a place to spend the ar ve ng ve well-bein- tire country night aglow. If we live upon the plains or the shore, we hike to the mountains; If we live in the mountains, we hustle oft to the shore or the desert or to other mountains. We crave those sights which are uncommon to our everyday environment , The heaven of the was a "sipapu" In the bottom of a clear, cold lake, the antithesis of the common enSkirts and Politics vironment of the race, somewhich would more nearly served as secretary to thing the approximate Having: of Throughout the west, as a minor Illustration, the effect of the abnormal steel output has been felt, and more especially In the vicinity of 8alt Lake has concrete evidence of this prosperity been seen in the construction of pipelines, the employment of labor and the consequent profiting by allied lines of Industry. , cliff-dwelle- rs cliff-dwelle- r's Ma Ferguson Texas, and also having observed politics as it is played elsewhere, Clare Ogden Davie has written a book on "The Woman of It," which is far and away the gloomiest prospectus of our political 'game that has been turned out in years. "Few women are strong enough to carry their load of idealism very far through the . political morass," she concludes, "either they must drop it or turn back." No doubt her book Is impregnated with her experiences in Texas, where her chief was the catspaw of a gang of politicians, and, for that reason, perhaps, her conclusion may be a bit more cynical than the broad aspect of politics deserves. Yet Mrs. Davis does not confine herself to the Texas situation. She has come into contact with the game as It is played in other states. "No man," she goes on, "can accomplish anything in politics without barter, trade and fraternizing with others whose motives might not bear close InMen understand that spection. the world is run that way, and they make the best of It." The author is easily dlscour aged. We would not condemn the government of other states because of what happened in Texas, nor would we grow cynical because of political crooked ness and graft wherever it crops up. Actually, It 1s a fact that most public servants are honest. Many of them are weak, a few of them are downright crooked, and all of them come into contact with outside influences which are detrimental to public interest and welfare. We must disagree with Mrs. Davis in her conclusion that politics is no place for women that they must drop the load or turn back. Before they had the vote they exercised a powerful Influence for good in political life; since they have been ' sharing the ballot with men not enough of them have taken advantage of it. The vast majority of the people are sincere In their desire to see clean government. They revolt at graft In high places and at each revelation of dishonesty on the part of public servants they rise In Indignation and clamor for punishment But when it comes to voting, dream of everlasting and happiness. comfort get beyond thrills. never the idea of chasing But imagination will be stifled. We may remain at home, some vacation time. Imagining ourselves in some other land close to our hearts, and get even more enjoyment out of it thaif making the Journey. Besides, we may learn things about our own neighbor hood we never dreamed existed. After all. what we expect to find in Xar-o- E Elyslan fields may be better realized In more homely and less beatific environment. Whether the vacation we look forward to Is among mountain lakes and streams. In the colorful vistas of scenic wonderlands, along the ocean shore or the purpling panorama of the desert. It la all too soon a memory that Jars with sharp discord against the realities of life. The peace that comes to us Is the Image of ourselves in a environment far removed from the drudgery of life, but the mental picture Is incomplete without the consciousness of the contrast and the joy of being able8 to return to worth-whil- e hal-cyon- lc work. Southern talking of California is now a coast motor highway through Mexico Into South America. Los Angeles Is prob- ably seeking new territory for annexation. are many Americans understand why England draws the line at Trotzky since the tight little Isle has tolThere who cannot erated George Bernard Shaw for so long. During the first half of 1929 we ate 354.442 tons more of sugar than in the corresponding period of 1925. , Gee, isn't life sweet? - SITUATION. (From Kansas City Timet.) While monotony of diet and other minor considerations may have entered Into the mutiny et the Leavenworth lederal prison. Warden White seems to make a reasonable case in on laying the chief responsibility overcrowding end lack of work. Prisoner with nothing to do and hying in discomfort are apt to be restless. The situation Is e serious reflection on congress, which has allowed these evils to continue in spite of repeated warning. Under the previous administration Warden Biddle ''was greatly concerned over the problems of Idleness end crowding. He called attention to them in his report and urged that means be provided through which work could be furnished all the convlcte. But nothing dona. Of course, it Is a rotten situation when men are kept in confinement with nothing to do. It is strange that men of normal intelligence can keep their sanity under such circumstance. The nation ahould .be ashamed to allow such a condition to continue. Preasure ought to be brought on the next congress to give decent treatment to its prison populations. 'g It is doubtful If any cloudburst could make the Zion park na- tional highway, In Arizona, at least, worse than it was before, Prison overcrowding. If recent uprisings are to be considered, is even worse than prison indolence. A New York bigamist may find some severity in the sentence to support his two families, prison is the alternative. but Editor Tribune: The Shade Tree commission la very appreciative of your timely editorial on the disadvantages of low hanging trees. The commission has long stressed the necessity of heading up our street trees and has issued many notices to householders to prune the weeping branches from trees on the parking abutting their property. Under the regulations, the ideal street tree, et maturity, has no branches issuing below a height of 10 to 12 feet. No branches should hang lower than nine feet from the ground. Newly planted trees should be freed at the time of ly planting. Each year additional botbottom-trimme- to struggle through the snow and slush during the winter months to the next comer or maybe two corners away in order that the company that is doing more harm to Salt Lake than any other single cause may save a lew extra nlckeia and once more compel the public to pay for its misA. K. A- management. Old-Tim- er Praises Gas Line Efficiency - Editor Tribune; You seem to have a lot of knockers trained to air what call their grievances in your they Forum. 1 have read it regularly and tor some time haven't seen anything much but complaints. Granting some of them may be well rounded, it would be a good thing' now and then lor some contributor to say something that wasn't knocking somebody, bo, 1'U start the ball roiling by saying that of all the public improvements that have been observed by me in Salt Lake for several years the trench work done. by the gas company is about the most efficient thing 1 know of. Parking on Main street might have been interrupted somewhat, but It wasn't any worse than before. The big lines were laid by the company down Main street in record time, it seems to me. and I think the company ought to be congratulated for its exhibition of efficiency. I dont want to do any knocking myself, but I can't help saying that if city workmen were half as fast in tom limbs should be removed, keeping the tree constantly growing upward until, as It reaches maturity, there is no forking for a considerable distance above tha average height of man. Hundred of young trees In city streets are now badly In need of trimming. Training In early youth is as necessary to trees as It la to children if perfection Is to be reached. Street tree should not only be high enough to make conditions safe for foot end wheel traffic, but should allow a free vista of the street from ell dwellings. High trees are far more stately and beautiful than the bush THE WEAKER SEX. type. The additional light and air (From N. Y. Herald Tribune.) circulation is beneficial to grass and N. C., of The mayor Elisabeth City, people and all growing things. discharging from custody the bold Strange to say, there are citizens ripping up the streets and restoreditor of The Independent," de- who have a bush-tre- e complex. They ing them to good order it would be a clared a little wistfully that he strenuously oppose the proper head- mighty good thing, too. wished he were as brave as the edi- ing up of street trees, preferring the tor. The editor, W. O. Saunders, find- darksome jungle of umbrella-knockining even the starched white trousers low jutting limbs. Such people of the south too hot few a July Sun- must team that street tree are sub- Careless Auto Drivers Main strolled down street, had day. to uniform regulations and their Stir Wrathful Words clad In pale blue pajamas and san- ject treatment cannot be left to the indals. The chief of police watched him dividual whims of owners of abut- ' Editor Tribune: Sometime I will be glumly on one Sunday, and when he ting property. for murder, not first degree repeated the offense arrested him. The shade tree department will Jailed The mayor disagreed and released gladly cooperate with anyone wishing perhaps, but just a nice mild form of hit "I wish, he told the editor, that to Improve the condition of trees in murder, but it will be worth while if my act would have any effect as an I had as much nerve aa you. the parking fronting their homes. object lesson. My act would be the Most men will echo the mayor's RUFUS D. JOHNSON, slaughtering, or perhaps just the prayer. They wish they had the courSecretary, Shade maiming, of careless, selfish and unage. They did not have to wait for the Tree Commission. thinking automobile drivers who fall director of the Life Extension Instito use common sense in turning cortute to weigh their elothee to know ners. that they trudged about under a Another Critic Voices object of my righteous wrath weight three or four times as great Car Service Complaint Is The the driver who always and forever as that borne by their wives and gets on the left side of the road to daughters. They would like to wear Editor Tribunal In Thursday's make a turn; and to make a pajamas providing the pajamas had Tribune H. W. D. surely voltes a left turnright he or she, and there are but they just don't dare. It popular feeling In his protest against as men as women, carefully many thirty years since Mark the be damned ' policy of the gets over on the extreme right tide Twain startled New York by appear-- . local public adstreet railway company. In and then turns left,. lng .on Fifth avenue clad In comdition to Infrequency of schedules, Really, Mr. Editor, there ought to fortable white, and the man who Imfares, and a host of other Impo- be a law. I am at times terribly weak itate him today still feels uncom- high not to mention the atuify, willed and my repression wlll break sitions; fortably odd. Male waiters and head dangerous, uncomfortable and abom- Into tiny bits the next time I Jam my waiter refuse to serve Interlopers inable buses or coaches," which perInto the car ahead, the driver who attempt to eat without coats. mit the company to escape the pav- bumper does not know and apparThe Irons of convention ere tight ing maintenance charge, it is of which does not care where be Is going. upon the vested end trousered sex; now eliminating stopping at many ently IRATE. Yours for homicide. It lacks courage of its own sartorial corners and other stops in convictions. Yet It still calls women the middle ofplacing blocks, lor the good ntxiiitisnistisitsuaanitnsitisiSM weak. of the service." s For what good of whose service? s g Why not something for toe good of Only the Engineer old public''? The company "miniuiiitiuieiiiuiiuiiimiiaf the poor Was Killed baa not done one thing in recent By FRANK IRVING FLETCHER. that has been for the benefit years Even If you never read a book, buy FOSTER and CATCUINGS. By of It patrons and were it deliberately Why cant we abolish poverty? trying to discourage patronage its two or three occasionally and leave Every day we read of new Inventions indlfterence to the desires or needs them lying around to deceive callers. You may not have brains enough that increase the productivity of la- of Its patrons could not be more apto publish your memoirs, but you twenty-folbor even fifty- parent. fold. That line there, Homes have been built or pur- ought to have sense enough not to running Into your city, tells the story. chased in different localities lor the publish your Ignorance. By the mere turning of a switch we simple reason that they were handy (Copyright, 1929. N.Y. Tribune. Inc.) now oommand a hundred times more to the steet cars." Now, the company and in order to save the expense of one "I wonder why lobsters are red?" energy than all the of our grandall the horse-powbus, or car, and one operator in these ' If you were in a glass case withfathers'. time. What science has lines says that we, and our children out any clothes, youd be red, too." done for industry is as marvelous to and from school, will have Columbia Jester. going as the Magic Lamp. Yet for ths unemployed who are niissssiiiiiinsisisanisiiiiiisiHiiKsiaiasaaMsiaisaisasiissisitfnisisssis now crowding the free bed resorts in New York City, and tens of thouI sands in tike plight in other cities, our marvelous progress still spells S jj DR. W. A. EVANS. By poverty. For them, it U a profitless prosperity. And this in spite of the tuusiisiuiniBSSusauiuBHisisiiisisisisssaaiisiisiiniBsisiinsiiiiiiiiu hopes that have sprung so high, generation after generation. BREAKING CHILD OF STAMWAR GASES AND T. & Think of itl The overthrow of MERING. poisoning with war gaa does not despots, the abolition of slavery, the E. G. writes: I have a son 4 years birth of tree nations, the industrial cause tuberculosis nor even contribnoticed revolution, the organization of la- ute to that end. This is the conclu- old. For six months I havedefect. I that he has had a speech bor, universal suffrage hope after sion of a world war casu- am a stammerer. In my family there of study hope that has left the promised L. two H. are six and Three Colonel made alties from girls gaa, boy. by plenty and security receding before us are stammerers. My mother, many laborers like a mirage. Why, Gilchrist, U. S. army. The conclusion of 55 year old, stammers. My father In spite of ell tills progress, la It, for is based on several investigations. does not. What can I do about my so many of our fellow workers, still A committee of expert in tuberson? nothing but a hope? laboraREPLY. It is partly because so many of the culosis have been working in well-fe- d Blnce your child Is so young It end ones tories for a number of years, studythose who have the brains and the not be difficult to break him the effect of war gases on lab- should of the habit. I doubt your ability power to solve the problem assure ing susas regards their us that there is nothing to worry oratory animals to do it alone, however. The power about. ceptibility (o tuberculosis. They tried of example is strong, perhaps too Why worry?" they say. "There various kind of gas and various strong for you to overcome. Could Is only the usual amount of unemThe animals you get him into a school or under kinds of animals. somehow? In ployment." speech Instruction your city there is a training center. They remind us of O. Henrys story poisoned by gas showed no tendency tuberwith of the railroad wreck. The health department can locate it The acci- to tuberculosis; animals dent was not serious." the newspaper culosis were not made worse, so far for you. was as Infection by concerned, the e said. Only the engineer was killed." AND BEET (Copyright, 1919, by the McClure being poisoned with war gases. These JUICE. BEETS experiments were continued for sevNewspaper Syndicate.) W. W. F. writes: I am very fond eral years. They were duplicated by beets and beet juice. One day when nsuiiiiiiiiissiisssiitsiissiasuiiiss different experimenters in different of 1 was drinking beet Juice a friend laboratories. Another line Of inquiry related to said it was very bad for me. especially as I am four months pregnant. ex --soldiers and statistical in chariiiuiiimiiiiimssuiiiiiiiiiiiiitii acter, was made by another set of I also like to drink vinegar. Is this Investigators. Soldiers gassed during really harmful to the child? REPLY the world war have developed some Beets are thoroughly wholesome tuberculosis during the Intervening years, it Is true; but the tuberculosis By beet Juice I presume you meaft rate among this group of men Is no a mixture of beet juice and vinegar. higher than that among men of the A small amount of vinegar Is wholesame age who were not gassed; in some. but the drinking of vinegar Is rather easily overdone. Eat a modfact, it is a trifle lower. This conclusion, based on a study erate amount of beet Juice, but keep of consumption among world war vet- within limits. erans in the United States, Is confirmed by similar studies made on FAST OF RINGWORM FAMILY. veterans In Great Britain. France, C. B. writes: 1. I have occasional burning beGermany and other countries. That bring gassed, did not cause tuber- tween my toes and sometimes the skin culosis in the first place, and In the gets raw. Please tell me the cause. second place did not make that dis2. Also the cure. ease. once contracted, more deadly or 3. Can It be carried to other parts more rapid In its progress seems to of the body? be the universal opinion among army REPLY. 1. A fungus of the ringworm surgeon In all parts of the world. - Studies of the different gases made family. on laboratory animals showed that 2. Many cases are cured by sulthe lungs were injured permanently phur ointment. Castellain paints in a small proportion of the cases. with a fuchsm Some The Injury consisted In the formation cases are hard topreparation. cure, possibly beof patches of inflammation which cause the Into toe the parasite digs eventually caused patches of scar tis- nails or hides In the footwear. sue. No permanent harmful effects 3. . Possible but far from probable. on any organ other than the lungs were found. MOON NOT ALL IN BOTTLES. A study of 2854 cases gassed In Mrs. O. J. M. writes: Why are "Well, all I kin git out o' the the American Expeditionary forces more violent when prohibition enforcement let- showed that 85, or 2 9 per cent, died Insaneis people there a full moon than at any other ter Is that the distinguished Jurist In sen-ice-: 1273, or 44 6 per cent, made time? seems to feel that If we'd let em have no claim for 585 made REPLY. ft the problem o' keepln 'em from claimsJwhlch compensation; were not substantiated; They are not. gtttm' it would be greatly simplified. 315 received compensation for a while moon out of medicine the Getting said Joe Kite today. Aside from which was discontinued when thev keepln' a bsld spot hidden I don't a ere finally fully cured: 583 were sail has not been an easy Job. believe Art Hanger does anything. drawing compensatlon-fo-r (Copyright, 1929, by the Chicago six year after the war ended. (Copyright, John F. Dllle Co.) Tribune.) fii -- OLD-TIME- R. g, a rkets StIronies d, er man-pow- Fast transportation will eventually bring us Into contact with everything there la to see worth while In the world, and we will Insolvency A SHAMEFUL hlgh-pow- er er How To Keep Well - ( well-hous- Abe Martin ,W!ck-ersha- m y I 3 f i Home o, six-fo- ot (Copyright, 1929, by George Matthew Adame 8ervlce.) niniiisiimniininitiiiisniiiisa Observations By MEDBURY. tSisssisisuiiiiiisiissaissiuiissuui station. broad-casti- NEW YORK, Aug. 11. Diary of a modem Pepys: Up to walk and followed Neal O'Hara, the humorist, a half block, mistaking him for Mayor Walker, and for a snack with Frank Shutta, the Miami publisher, and ate spaghetti and a platter of ice cream, which annoyed him. But annoyed me more later. So along the waterfront, my head buzzing with Hovey's poem: There is no escape by the river, there 1 no flight left by the fen; we are encompassed about by the shiver of the night of their marching men. familiar to attendants they are, and deservedly, given preference, An anonymous gentleman writes in with the discovery I know nothing of English. French or writing and that (Somebody's been tattling!) I am an asa So discerning a fellow could become e correspondence school detective In less than 12 hours. It Parsons eonten with all the Equity pow wows over talkies, the most lmpor tant thing to discuss is Nasal Dis tion Is Louella O. that Give a cheerl But could remember no more, albeit an old favorite, my armament. memory falling rapidly. McNaught SyndiIn the evening with my wife for e (Copyright, 1929, cate, Inc.) drive through the park and mightily glad to be home again and stopped in at the Casino. Then on to a play and talked with Karl Kitchen and Mrs. Elinor Glynn, who sat alongside, and she said it was the first opening night she ever attended In New York, which surprised me. e '.Those who Enow say almost the purest English In town Is spoken by the Instructors at a riding academy on Central Park West. They are wellbred Englishmen who have fallen Gbmjzarup on lean days. Their manner Is courteous, but they shrink from the showed ine a fine house vitK newrich who try to patronize them. Offish, my word, and very mal de mer! , Bert (palmer back-slappi- ng SfABNLDU taxi driver with squeaking brakes that lift your hair revealed last night why he used them. The wise boys buy such brakes so in case of a crash, they can produce witnesses who will testify the brakes were applied. trees abouno'ii ADVICE TCfTHE LOVELORN There's one thing about the Slovakian girls. They have plenty of Czech appeal WONDERS OF NATURE man knocked off Many a work too sooa self-ma- e MATRIMONIAL MARTYRS The thoughtful man who married a millionairess so that he could give her ell the luxuries she'd been accustomed to. MOMENTOUS MOMENTS When an Indian spent twenty minutes scalping a man and then discovered he wore a toupee. They were talking of a quartet of roughhouse comedians who proved more popular on the screen than stage. "Maybe," ventured a cynic, "it is because the audience cant smell them. The dun season for chorus girls has dipped to Its lowest. Several thousand are "at liberty and in need. Artists are deluged with them applying for work as models, but so desperate are finances that often when called upon for appointments you. they have moved to cheaper quarter. Cabaret girls, too, are suffering during the seasonal loaf. Few cabaret axe open end the prospects of a FINANCING fall revival are slim. In Broadway parlance, the racket Is shot, which is just as well. $4500 Like the mother-in-lajoke, the Near 15th East earline and getting wheeze is an exaggeration. There is CoUintah SchooL a notion every manicure girl must be lonial firebrick only on year comely, .flirtatious and. constantly - old. It's a Georg L Biesinger spurning invitations to plays, cafes home, complete with furnace, and joy joints. An attendant in a garage and lawns, A snap like big terminal shop collected statistics this won't last the week eat. to satisfy his own curiosity. He Pick np your phone and ar- found by actual record 70 out of 100 range an appointment with as patrons desiring a manicure wanted right NOW- girls not too young and preferred Boom those stuffed with reticence. goes another illusion yihwp as Represented You eou.lclclo' ,kh same, Johri Let me tell -- how 1m:' IT Bargain w 1 The big rush at Broadway movie houses comes Just before afternoon prices balloon to the evening tariff. It is almost Impossible to get a seat then unless you have been In line an hour or so with some garlic eater back of you breathing gently on your neck. Many folks these days reverse the usual formula by going to the movie first then dinner. And there is another large group who attend movies on certain nights year In and year out, and their faces become so REALTOR, 25 "EAST FIRST SOUTH PHONE WA5.7874 A THE POPE Tbs present Bishop of Roms Is called Pope Plus XI: up to a few years ago, be waa a deeply religious, virtuous and very scbolarly man, as his life, which is an open book, attests. Then he was sleeted Pope. Immediately, according to some, he became "The Anti Christ." If so, there so far, for there have been that many must have been 260 or of Rome. Bishops Popes t. But besides automatically becoming "The Plus XI st his election Is supposed to have become Boas of the American Catholic pomachine. litical know that their own Many church organizations and edifices have been used for that purpose, therefore they conclude (most erroneously) that ths Catholic church must be doing ths same. Of course, ths Catholic faith does ascribe great spiritual prerogatives to the Pope; the Pope himself also claims temporal power over a small of territory In and contigloua to Rome, for the same reasons that stripFederal our Government utilises ths District of Columbia. Pops Leo XIII. In his Encyclical Letter of November, IMS, expressly states that in its own sphere, tha lawful state Is supreme: God has placed the dlree- -. tlon of the human race between two powers, the ecclesiastical and the civil: ths former over the divine things and the latter over the human. Each la restricted within limits which are perfectly determined In Its own nature and special aim and each IN ITS ORDER IS 8UPREMI. sntl-Chrl- su u WOULD YOU NOT LIKE TO HAVE THE FACTS? If so, write to the INTERMOUNTAIN CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY, S31 East South Temple St., Salt Lake City, Utah, for a pamphlet, Papal Supremacy and Infallibility. (Adv.) TAKE IT OR LEAVE IT Whenever you find a model husband the chances are hes an 1895 model SPECIALISTS ODE TO A REFORMER of open minds should be closed lots for repairs. SOCIAL ACCOMPLISHMENTS A cave-ma- n may not know "what real love Is, but he'll give you a rough - Aim to do one thing well. For 45 years Tracy Loan & Trust Company has specialized in the handling of mortgage securities, and during that time has sold millions of dollars of such ities to its clients, who now number citizens of 3 1 different states and 7 foreign countries. Idea.- OUR OWN VAUDEVILLE Second MotprisW-Abo- ut to the mile. you five times (Copyright. 1929, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.) iSand Witches! " wsiiiiiiiuMiuiMiiiittuimiimii Prohibition administrator says that bootleg liquor Is ruining the health of the dry agent. To say nothing of our pocketbooks. Look not on wine when it Is red! I don't," said a wicked fellow, For all I drink Is bootleg now, "And thats a dirty yellow. ' H During all these yean we have repur ' chased upon request any securities we have ever sold, without loss to our client of a dollar of principal, or interest due, and regardless of date of maturity. THE SENATOR. Look at that drunken bum of a college wnan, would you? he said as he nudged the prosperous looking individual next to him. Be careful, sir! said that Individual That happens to be my son! Oh. pardon me, I didn't know you were his father! I'm not. I'm his mother. Stevens Stone Mill. Proud Father Don't you think It's about time the baby learned to say papa? Mother I -- YOURE RIGHT A bachelor is a man who's afraid to take his medicine. First Motorist How much did get out of your old car? sH j A tourist was arrested in Paris last week lor throwing a couple of girls off the Eiffel tower. His defense Is that Its a iuuniuiiiiiuniiitifiiiiuMuiiiumiiuuiiiiiiniiiiituiuiuui2 A By WALT MASON. "Why don't you make a trip abroad, you poor old fish, you cheap old fraud." my kindly neighbors say; you seldom go a mile from home; don't off why to Rome, you journey or points in far Cathay? Oh, it would broaden you a lot to go and see the Hottentot, the Bushman in his lair, to see the galleries of art which form a most resplendent part of Europes bill of fare." My neighbors often cross the sea and then come back and worry me with tales of what they saw; they toured around to bot the band and walked the length of Londons Strand and Glasgows B roomle-laThey do not let up when I yawn, but gird their loins and struggle on with yarns of wondrous sights, of Alpine summits high and hoar, of scenes on some historic shore, of gay Parisian nights. They do not falter whn I weep, but tell of mountains wild and steep in certain parts of Wales: of steaming swamp in Bor-newhere long and deadly serpents go, and apes with tails. They do not quit it when I swoon, but drone along all afternoon of scenes along the Rhine; they hand out stories by the peck which give me spasms in my neck, and fan tods in my spine. And if I went abroad I know Id cause my neighbors lots of woe when I came sailing home; I would be primed with ghastly yams of English meres and Scottish tarns, and monuments In Rome. Id back my friends against a tree and tell them of the Zuyder Zee and other things I saw; and they, distressed and broken down, would mutter dourly through the town, There ought td be a law. I a. o. mcintyre. a Staying at 3 By v By M. L. HAYWARD. The forwarding bank and the insolvent collecting bank figure in a recent decision of the Iowa supreme court reported In 212 N. W. 124. where the evidence showed that an Illinois bank sent a draft to an Iowa bank for Collection, the drawee gave the Iowa bank a check on his account, to cover the draft, but his account was overdrawn at the time and remained In that unsatisfactory state until the Iowa bank closed its doors three days later. Consequently, the check was never paid, or even charged to the drawee's account and the Illinois bank claimed that It was a preferred creditor for the amount of the check. In ruling that there was no pre ferred claim the supreme court of Iowa said : It is to clear for argument that the insolvent bank never received any money in payment of the sight draft and that no money belonging to the intervener ever came Into the bands of the receiver. That this is essential to the establishment of a reference on the theory of a trust E too well settled to require citation of authorities Conceding that the Illinois bank was entitled to Impress a trust upon whatever waa received by the Iowa bank In payment of the sight draft, all it received was a worthless check. 3 1 Horse Sense and Satire Collectors, and Official Lauds Tribune Shade Tree Editorial uxu lamniMuimuniu ten-fol- d, iuiHitiiisiiii(uiiiniiiiiisausiusnuiiaaaiixiiiuntcauiisnnuMue Forwarders, PUBLICS itur. 12, 1929. I Oh. no. I hadn't Intended telling him who you are until he becomes a little stronger. The Claw. s . 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