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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, T U KSDA V MUKNING, MARCH 7, 1922. alt fake tribune glje two Stmt Vendnf bf Uti Trttom? PbHMp Cwnpetoy TfciUiA or St BIK KIPTIOM -- Hlt ! Wlf tW WromlB- Ml fuiday, im Eluvkei is I. 8 ItailjraaS 8nwtF per m4 o4 Detljr Bel WilyTrlhw. Tribune te tn ttoe t4 Statn. hi ) OBlfc,... .. jr. MOfttfe. Is ww j .... fr7 tprtnt has bees set down fn a book, is the form of a lexicon. As soon as this work becomes available for publication, there is little dodbt that it will prove a most important addition to the literature of th Arctic ssd its people. DIAMOND SIN O CHEAPER. J M city However other things essential to ItMdere necessaries sad 1 urn vies, may show aay elty by tlpbitof tnta ofnf life, ngenu Aaaaclatad diatba of returning to "normalcy, ol ta aiewbar a Trlbun sign thi The V? AMorit4 Pm la Pm. monds are not to bo included in the det tltM to Da rm for rapobllcatioa 4Upatrtoea credited ta It or oat tbrw scending class. Tbs power that rules lied ta thla pa par, and tlaa th teeti . ftabltahed herein. Th, Tribune I. the diamond production and trade, said A.dlt Binr Tha la C Information roowola, tins. tiro to be th greatest and closest monopoly f firm Ui ton will bo auppikad bf tba Audit Bureau at Ohm tat ton Yuaflan bA g. Cwaga. in the world, hat uttered its edict and that edict is that prices of diamonds Tto 8 0 Backs lab bplal Afeoej, Naw Tori, rld bM ara adTrttlaf armt. will not bo reduced. Trader .most buy bid.. Dlapatrt Trlbona bklz Uilrtgo;. wf Mirk rrnt n.sibrr of tk TrlJ-oa- , ltll: ford bld . Dotroft, bid, , Kama. City. II a. W. B Kt Ioaaf Parlfle ro., Biaf.. a- - at tbs syndicate's figures and sell at a corresponding price or go out ot business. $; Poat IntrlUganrar bldg. Seattle Second band diamonds bought up by PaHa offtra of Tba Tribuna, 420 Boa 8L merchants in Europe v from bankrupt ffoaora. Part, Fr aara. "distress diamonds'' Talapheoa Waiatch B1 families, and kphana When r fall to fat your TrHwiaa bought during periods of unparalleled tba dtp elrmiatkm deportment before 10 a, and ropy will be ait pi by anaipt. prosperity and now thrown on the mar-ke- t ktucrwd it tha poatofflre ot Nit Uki CUy M in America and other countries, will oreoad-rlomatter. have no influence toward lower prices. These gems have come into rthej market in quantities. In addition numerous diamonds, large and small, have com out of Russia. The jewel of the crown 1922. Tuesday, March 7, Baa rmnri.ro: Kaammar irptramtatlr. Till Inanraoro bid , channel education. Consequently, they began to send their most, promising young men to th leading educational institutions of th leading foreign countries. Within th last ten years American colleges have returned to India thousands of expert engineer, chemist doctors snd business men. These men have brought enlightenment end the energy of America to their own country and people, and new th result are beginning to show. Propagandists and enthusiasts for a free India ean be found bow in every part of th world. There to be aboat 300 'East Indians in New York City alone, all of whom are ardent worker for the crossing of th goal set up by their fathers. They are making headway. India has her hat ia the ring. , are-sai- AVIATION IN FRANCE. at the present time are operating about 3250 miles of air lines. Subsidies are granted by parliament to tbs airplane During 1920, operating eompaniea 30,000,000 franes were distributed to the companies, thereby enabling 185 airplanes to be kept in operation. Dur- 92 CONSTITUTIONAL of the seuat has - decided that the and appointment pf Senator Smoot members of as Burton Representative th commission clothed with the power to fund the allied debt is unconstitutional. If the judiciary committee uphold the subcommittee, the report will be adverse and the senate will probably take the same view. Just what will be dona in the premises remain to b seen. In the meant! pie, Secretaries Hughes, Mellon end Hoover, the remaining members of the commission, will not take economic any decided action, although in a large rehabilitation , depends measure upon th funding of these dobte.The question of eligibility is not a partisan one. At least It was not subpartisan so far as the vote of th is concerned, as Senator committee Bran J ogee of Connecticut, a stalwart voted against Messrs. Republican, Smoot and Burton. In view of the importance of the issue at stake the queswith settled bo should tion of eligibility the least delay possible. A subcommittee GEORGE TO 6TIOK. liOTD .According to the latest cable advices from London, Tremier Lloyd Georgo has decided, in response to Unionist appeals, to remain in office. That the coalition has lost some of its wartime supporters goes without saying. It is equally true, -- however, that the premier and his col- maleagues are still able to muster a comjority of the votes in the house of mon. This is fortunate, because St change in the British .government this time might wreck the Irish treaty prospects and result in chaos in both India and Egypt With these great the problems ones settled, it is probable premier "would be willing to retire from "office and seek rest from tha burdens "he has been carrying ever since the coalition was formed for the purpose tW.of carrying on the war. he can be unhoTsed by the f Of course, house of commons at any time. It Is , also a fact that he has plenty of enemies who ale working to force his "resignation. But the rank and fils fear to, take the step until conditions improve. Abraham Lincoln once said it would b unwise to swap horses while s stream, and the remark crossing seems to be applicable in tbs ease of Lloyd George. -- AW their identity and sold throughout the world by the bolshevik!. During the war period of bonanza wages tho., world - went .diamond mad. Tha people rushed to the jewelry shops to boy diamonds, and i was the first time in history that diamonds became the popular adornment among workingmens families In the present industrial depression many of these diamonds ' are' being sold. ' Thus,' with gems I coming upon thtf market from these sources, it would be natural to suppose thst thoir abundance would have tbs effect of bringisg about lower price. Th syndicate, howevkr, declares it is not to be so, snd tbs synin the diadicate, being mond trade, can dictate as it pleases. Thera is one consolation for the most of us: We don t have to bay diamonds, and a great many of our fellow men and soma of our fellow women have struggled along from the crdle to old age without ever having possessed a The same cannot be truthdjpmond. fully said of bread or beefsteak. to SO TAB. ESKIMO DICTIONARY. Harold Nolce, youngest of the arctic conceal WILL LIVE IN HISTORY. The disbandment of a number of fairish regiments has been approved by the British government, but the fame of these historic organizations will last for generations to come. Americans who are conversant with p English history or who have read Charles Levers novels snd similar works of fiction will . recognize the names of the Irish regiments which have won imperishable glory on countless battlefields. Tbs description, according to the London Times, follows: The six South Irish -- infantry regiments which are to be disbanded consist of regular snd special reserve battalions. "The South Dish Horse, of which the Duke of Connaught is honorary colonel, is s special reserve regiment of cavalry. The Royal Irish regiment, the old 18th Foot, the Royal Irish Fusiliers (the 87th and 89th) and the Connaught Rangers (the 88th snd 94th) hsve each two regular battalions snd two speeisl reserve, or pi lli tie, bsttalions. The other three infsntry regiments consist of two regular snd three special . reserve battalion apiece. On the long list of battle honors of these historic regiments appear the names of most of Marlboroughs and Wellingtons battles and almost all of later date. All of the regiments served with distinction in South Africa and in the gTcat war. The Irish FusUiers, the Royal "Faugh-a-Ballagboys," have the king as their eolonel in chief, snd the Prince of Wales holds the same appointment in the Leinster, the youngest of the b and assistant to Yilhjalmnr explore 8tefansson, has just returned to elv in ilixation after n period of six years ddomCffegtmentsTralsed-origiiiAnyin 1858 for service in India. Canada ' spent in circumpolar region It is re- The coloWls in chief 6t the Royal ported that Noteehas compiled the Dublin FnsHiers and thp Royal Irish first snd only dictionary of the Eskimo regiment, respectively, .at the Duke of J Connaught and Lord French. , J language. It is worthy of notejthat th Royal Notes cams back to. the world of rhits folks on board th Lady Kinder-sle- Ulster Rifles and the Royal Inniskillings of the Hudsons Bay company, FusUiers, which have a special terriwhich picked him up si Three Rivers, torial association with UTster, ere not Included in the list of regiments to be 1500 miles cast of Uerschel island. When only a youth, in 1913, Noice disbanded. joined Captain.- - Trf)iiis INDIA' S HARD FIGHT. from Seattle to the Arctic on a trading schooner Polar expedition on the power No sooner does tho Dish question Bear. Be expected to return in thrCS,. seem to be on tbs way to permanent years, but his voyage lengthened to six. settlement than India comes forward The Polar Bear cruised along the Arctic coast east of the mouth of the bearing tho demand that she bo relieved Mackenzie river, searching for Stefans-son- , of further consideration on Great Britwho had been lost in those frozen ain s park It is one thing after another solitudes for two years. Lane found in England. India, of course, has been Stefansson, and Noice joined .the ex- in the forefront of Englands thoughts plorers party as record keeper and for years, just as IrelandPhas been ocmap maker. ITe remained with Stef-- cupying serious attention in and around n sion three yearn "When the latter parliamentary circles. The great Asistarted back' tarTEuilization, Noice atic asset of Great Britain apparently bought an eld trading schooner at Point will be the source of mueh mors Barrow and began exploration on' his trouble, if not worse problems, of the own account. Thr people are in a political sort Noice made Herschel island bis base. threatening snd menacing attitude In There the Northwest Mounted police various parts of India. . The visit of the have a barracks, snd the Hudsons Bay prince of Wales to that land had Its company, now dosing out its lands on purpose, and tha question- now is, will the prairies to farm settlers to prose- that purpose, materialize in anything cute its fur trade more vigorously, has less than n dash of srmst il farthest north, trading post,;.-- . time England Rest-earDuring the last three years Noice, In India was the fact that th native it is said, has succeeded in mapping the political factions and religious sects roasts of Victoria land and has charted were always at war among themselves. a great part of the short line ot the At last, however, the chief groups, the Northwest passage, goal of many a Mohammedans snd the Hindus, are coluckless voyage in early times, and first operating toward a common end negotiated by Roald Amundsen, later snd the formation of an discoverer of tbs South pole. East Indian republic. Tbs more progressive types of InDuring his long stay In the far north Nole made careful atudy of the Eskimo dian long ago realized that their nalanguage and its various dialects. The tional salvation, or, rather, their hopes result of his stfly and investigation Of ly in just on y k .. - Foe-ado- ng d ir3 1,700,000 yre-were..4- i4 tributed. Tbus it wiU b seen that the French government is encouraging in every way- - tbs initiative ef private- companies which have undertaken the operation of various lines. . At this- time, according to dispatches, attention is eoncentrated on the study of construction and on th perfection of lightweight alleya Other problems being, studied' are speed, resistance, high altitude flying, landing, wireless armament, radiotelegraphy, telephony, automatic stabilizers snd a system for the control from the ground of a pilotless airplane in flight by wireless so as to avoid mortal, accidents during experimental flights with new machines or systems. The French at present are operating 5200 kilometers of air lines. The im- portance of the traffic over these lines may be realized through the following statistics, representing the traffic durmonths of 1921: ing the first si 848,700 kilometers (approximately 530,-43- 7 miles) covered in flight, 3388 passengers carried, 70,000 kilograms (about of packages trans154,000 pounds) ported; 3470 kilograms (about 7634 ponnds) of letters and postal mattea transported. In regard to the safety of commercial aeronautics, it is pointed out that during the firrt quarter of last year only two pilots and two passengers were killed, snd three pilots snd one passenger ' injured. - THE INDISPENSABLE FIN. In the daily routine of work and play about the house, millions of pins aro used, wasted or thrown away. The pin, like the match, is a small article, but in the aggregate they make up a mighty industry in this busy world. It is the UtAe thing that counts id everyday business. Without the little things, the big ones would not get along at all. Therefore, the pin, that tiny item of merchandise, cut a tremendous swath as Time passe on his way. The making of pins is an art about which few know anything at all. The elerk passes out a package of pins, tho buyer tosses over a penny or two, and that is all there is to it the pia is forgotten, Its origin at the factory received not on litti thought. Yet without that pip the meeting of the woman's club would be postponed indefinitely. Let any one man around town start out on the job of making 5 cents' worth of pins. Before he finishes ho will have expended-mandollars worth of labor and time, and the result wHl have netted him nothing. Then it comes into the minds of men how ia this little thing made and how is ft mads so that th cost is next to negligible f While the process of making pins is less complicated 'than that of making needles, the pin reqnires many maniput lations to fit it for market. Usually red copper and tine are put intoa crucible and the amalgam obtained my fusing the two metals is run into molds to form plates. From this plate eomo the pins, but the various processes between the plate stage and the finished product combine to make one of the mQsLJntricate processes of manu-facture. Great machines ars employed, one operating in harmony with another a string of machines, the whole lot synchronizing, as it were, to the minutest detail. From the strips cu-- out of the original plates, long wires are made, and these in turn are cut, molded snd passed on to another machine, and tbenca th machine next in line puts the head on the pan and another gives it point, "Ynd - still agplher gives it luster, and so on until the little pin drops into a box along with milllpns . of its brothers and rfstera From this point the pin is conveyed to another section of the factory, where men and girls wilh deft hands see the pin carefully tucked- away lif a container, these being of various kinds to luit the Dde. The pin is wrapped and labeled and finally boxed and piled in the warehouse, awaiting orders from the thousand of stores ln. alLpsrt pfjhe re are kermoni in country.' Indeed,-thenat-ural- ly t pin " REVOKES.'' " rolfer, In a fit of invited a novice to take part In a gam. The novice, to the expert's dismay, ploughed up th ground at every stroke. After on particularly vicious dig, the expert remarked: Toure revoked' "We are playing golf, not whist," replied the novice. Yee," said th golfer: "but you have played a sped when you ahould have An experienced played a olu." y. S xaQami ol A. Line o Type or Marti Haw By rrederio A Hssktn. t th lias, let th quips sQ j where they may. j -- A Proposition Fifty-Fift- y A Bong of tt) Fralrla NEW YORK CITY. March J. New Freedom and sunshine and air and The original of Peter Dunnes immortal th small loans I've had .off of you probably has more second-han- d bookshops loaa any other, city la tna Th prairie beneath my mustangs feet, character, "Mr. Dooley. kept a saloon lately. world, ixosena of single snops. with their A dustiess wind on my open face Th old man's face gave no sign of hla la Chicago much frequented by newspaper outside tables high wtttt hooka may A troop of antelope, Utbe and Beet real feeling his broad bulk, He be found on every main thoroughfare, mem He waa a born In and hla wit. to the damper, extracted from waddled way while occasionally whole clusters ot them Startled to fright at my rapid pace. bill a word, passed a till end without the a and. wa It a very too good way appear together, aa ia the case oa xower I across the bar to the promising man. sing a sons to the muffled thud philosopher and n student of human na- It The Fourth avenue between Eighth and Fourbis thanka oa That mg pony la strumming mils latter, murmuring street teenth street and on F'uty-n.nt- h ture la Its varying aspect started to cram it Into his pocket, but mli. running east from Fifth avenue. On wintry evening a a he perched be- took a second glance at th greenback. strength in my muscles Ilf tn To book lover these dingy book marts There's "Hold on, there. Unde John." he said. , my blood, hind hla bar In frtendry conversation with g ars a source of delight. A needed ten bones and this bin la ouly No with bide smile. canker i ghastly romance and two of h i regular patrons there entered a I fiver" There is, an atmospnere-o- f S mystery about the.r dusty shelves teat Is Masking the bog of. mental mud. whose reputatiog journalist, all right, me son." said Uncle That' store aa a ready borrower' and a poor payer John. .t makea k never encountered in the th thing com out even. where the standard prices and neat paper Freedom ahd sunshine and peace and waa more than citywide. do "What you mean, makes the thing health, Uncle John," he said briskly, "Tm de- come out even. jackets of the volumes procia.m their abbuckskin steed a A lasso and strong sence of an eventful tailed to an There is also and "Why, five I lose and five you lose,-sai- d heritage; thee my wealth! I m a little short of cash assignment, a certain, tranquillity past. need some coin about them that la These my know Uncle John. of th sordid greed I Naugnt choose for to like to those who t. me travs.ing expenaea a Blip grat.fjlng or toll stealth. That Its 11 garners by might w their reading matter with care and deyou? IU hand It back to you (Copyright, 1D22, by the Central Preaa sure on pay night along with th rest of You ean move slowly about liberation. . Association.) dry sand creek a like a sad exile. a second-han- d bookshop, inspecting book A Forever tide. cooling after book, without interruption from Wakes a s'seeking sak Saint Crispin, the shoemaker' a Englaiyl and In 178$ It beemmb a umbering dream a while: brisk, amb.tloui salesmen. You can read part.. There la alao tradition that King of the United 8tates. But I drown It deep in the muffled t trad whoie chapters, even whole books (many Edward stride IV, In one of hla diaguisee, once la tho significance of tba What people do). In utter peace and quiet, That my pony la strumming mile oa drank with a party o( shoemakers and thirteen buttons on a sailor's trouser ? while the proprietor rummages indusE. COMB8. that thereafter because they had drunk These represent the thirteen original mil triously around somewhere in the rear of with the king they were no more to be state. th stor apparently oblivious to youra- Ti presence. He Isn't. bers of the trade, of th gentle craft. soon perceive If you carry avoirdupois pound TTocST My past Is past, too far and attempt to walk out Tls true: Q. What with a volume without iwylng for It. the lines, poem contains But Tve ever present memories. Bear, Second-han- d "Backward, turn backward, O time .n books are interesting not Of you. . COMMUNICATION j C. c. C. your because of their bargsm pqaaibuitie . flight? only A treasure vast. A. This Is the opening Une of Rock but because they are materiou They And yet; Me to Sleep, have lived eventful, sometimes hectic. TEACHERS1 by Elizabeth Akera Alien, SALARIES. They're all too few. nd art usutUly jwldelx traveled in rncTScKni"-thn-am'OL-9SiHifintf mrtFwIng1 book stores mi flew York the second-han- d Let's knot the threads paper, March 5, carries article, "Teach may be found derelict volumes from all era With whtsps Movement memory's for Reduction e Oppose cities and countries Some of them have Entwine lovea golden beam Salaries," which should Interest every- - " fallen from high estate, aa is evident a dream; make one. MEMORY TESTS Together ) on s the from the names and And make the dream come true. We alt know thst shifting the tax fly leaves, ! while others hive tho tawdry, GKO ROE. THE MAN WITH A PACT. from one Bhoulder to the other will 1. What ia th d apbattered and widely difference In tempera- barrel ture between north and south of the not lessen the load, and the only way to pearance of outcasts that have panned Blrda Mating accomplish results la to let out some ot equator? restlessly from one bookseller to another. I love to ait beneath a tree , 2. What is th length of the little axis the water. Sometimes a book of very little' value Teacher are human, like all other (diameter through tho poles)? brings a high price because ot its fly leaf, And listen to th melody who work "for their daily support, 8. By what which bears the autograph of a cele- Of mating birds in early spring. waa Tommy Ryan peop.e fighter we and when and sweet intrust them with the name, tho How songs they chirp beaten in a famous catchwelght match, brated Individual, so that all fly leaves . . teacher, we have the right to expect that , sing I are generally respected by booksellers and . when, where and number of rounds? will practice what they preach. 4. In mythology are not torif out. even though their Inwho waa tho first they FYom every schoolroom above - Uke the songs of human tongue. the bewoman and what fault did aha commit? trivial scriptions afe seemingly of The opera by great artists aung. . 6. Who was the first American novelist ginners classes the children are being natura. old cause that unnotes our of the But I like best the sllvry whose works were translated Into foreign WATCH FLY LEAVES CAREFULLY. That settled state of business andpresent social afcome front tiny feathered throat languages? fairs "Some of these fly leaves are worth la but th result of Inflation of What and where la the aurora both foi labor and commodities. looking at Just as a matter of human Inyears the artists toU and fret borealis? The aurora australis? What la price book Long There are but few dally and monthly terest, declared one second-han- d For all the dazzling skill they, get. tho aurora poiaris? salaries dealer the other day. "Take this classy But they shall' never learn to sing today that have not felt the ax, 7. Where ta Sse Chuan? old Bible now," he suggested, exhibiting and many have been cut in half. Why 8. From .what la tha following quotaLike mating birds In early spring volshould a the large, fine, black leather-boun- d teacher be any more reluctant . JOSEPH 8.. DB RAMUS. tion taken: r ume to which he a as carefully adminsubmit te the indignity of a wage rey im si "In us true growth. In her a Jonah's to duction a coat a of than shoe Fellow. "Its Oh! That polish. anyone else? The arguistering , Hea Deep, gourd. family Bible, and you wonder how It ever ' Dear S. H. In one night and due to sudden sun." ment that they should not is a reflection The Up appear following all corns on -to their Intellieence go astray. It's happened 8 Who la president of Pern? Outline of History; the way from Schenectady and It's got a in H. G. Wells MARSHALL W. RUSSELL. It. Who had Mary Queen of Scots Utah "If th Greek classics are to be read of family births and deaths full record March 5. hotel, beheaded? a bv benefit modern men, they v. t i with any I, m tn tne oacR' of it i fntinf it reay Uke for customer who says she believes she must be read aa the work of men 1- LQVE 80NG. 'hat Is the origin of the letter W ? mows some of the people recorded in 1L ourselves;' violet beside a mossy stons, a Printers sound a not the Cleveland Plain Dealer.) Put yet recogn.xing (From It? ain't funny, W. E. G. , caught in the alphabet: In pronouncing So beautiful you are to me, . 'Such coincidences often happen. Once, vs "V two words certain In all are or do. you using began was " several years ago, I remember, there , Who. In the sixteenth century. Previous hu That I must think, wheneer I see a quiet, studious young man standing by wa common for Some "huen'' when, In short, dusky gown. namely, lovely thing, of you; the table over there looking over the etc. , All poetry brings back your. voice, Pink skin, and a frown dan's bargain when suddenly he dropped $. What is the chemical name of And flowers recall your face, the bo6k he was holding and stood start Showing cobwebby, pdge borax? Sodium tetraborate All music bids my heart rejoice Cerulean eyes ing at It where It lay on the floor as if 3. What middleweight became Over grace. out your io he was paralied. Then he picks It up fighter spirit's surprls Peeping the recognized middleweight champion in and comes running over to me, very IJke birds 1808 snd whom did he And when I see an ugly sight, defeat, when, much excited, and wants to know where I Through tho sedges; where, and number of rounds? Stanley Or hear a piteous thing, ' Hair all tousled, up rot it. Ketchel. who defeated Jack (Twin) SulTia not a thought of wrong or right Feet In gold slippers stuck. "This book, he sav is inscribed San 1808, 22, livan, Ftanclsco, February That sets me worrying with the name of my brother, whom I With a glint of old redr twenty rounds, knockout. But I would smooth It of its flaws. There! You have haven't seen for years. He left home ten 4. What celebrated philosopher, whose That It may, fit Into It all said years ago, and we haven't heard from Urn since. My father would glee anyThe world that is so fair because writings caused the women of the French 'The Professor."- to carfad make of a Is the home of you! nobility AELUEVA. personally was New in It know he that here thing tq Ted Robinson t ing for their children, yet sent his York, alive and well, and here, at last It soon to children as aa born a foundling clew. Dont you know where you got Who 'Cares? Rousseau. Jean U? Jacques asylum? this book whether It came from THIS . IS priWho cares for bag of gold, 5. When did congress first pass an ' vate house or a hotel or Kendall "once lived In crown of queens and kings late Or the The Ezra act to obtain from revenue the making The man who sold me that book, Can he stir a soul to smiles As Is well known, of spirituous liquors? In January, 1781, our national capital. bear along with several others, Uvea right letters Instead streets By the love and mirth he brings? a light tax was levied; It caused great the principal around the corner, and he often comes In of names or numbers. dlscontenL I Interrupted, and, going back to Who cares for fame and glory wa he One walking on th thorday 6. What Is the area of a township? my desk, I looked up the address and wealth and jewel bring That How many acres ars there In a square oughfare next to V street when a lady lave It to him. And do you know that Can he great with some heart calm sympathy mile? Thlrty-sl- x him and asked, "Is this V ? square miles. Six hun- approached ook was the means of this young man ' dred and And benumb the piercing atlng? "Yes. he replied, "this Is me." forty acres. and his brother meeting and making up on "How many people ar there -living 7. what was the following quoquarrel of long standing? Well as .1 cares for diamonds that sparkle -- tationFrom U? 1 taken: was saying to a customer the other Who blue heaven' hired two in stars th Like six girls children, My wife, How he who lone in Patmos banished, night truth Is stranger than the fiction Can he spread the spirit of friendliness ( Saw In the sun a mighty angel aland '7 and a ooox. even we second-han- d dealers carry." "A Line o' Type or Two"? volunteered th lady. on Through I live T," Burns. Cotter's The Saturday Night," by FABULOUS BARGAINS ARE RARE. DOC GOSE. Not L or how long?" queried Mr. 8. When and by whom waa Illinois Oolong Some fabulous tales ara told concernwas discovered by Kendall. Illinois discovered? ar movies for th The special writers ing the bargains always to be found In She said So long! fnd left him. Joliet and Marquette, two French e second-han- d bookshop but it is probable now explaining bow sweet and altoin 1873. In 1763 It was ceded to American Legion Weekly. that such delightful instances ara rare. gether pure la Aim colony life In Holly- plorers, Most of the dealers are good judges of lit- wood. But they're going to have a hard erature, as weU as shrewd business men, time keeping a halo on Fatty Arbuckle and they are not likely to part with a unless they pin it on hla ears and glue CONSOLIDATED R. H. L. literary gem for ar price below Its worth. It at the back of hi neck. MUSIC COMPANY The profit on used textbooks and on the best sellers of yesteryear Is very slight. to Answers Questions. It Is sa.d, but that on first editions, books that are out of print, and books World-famou- s of a sensational nature is Immense. Vol(Any reader can get the anew ef to any umes which receive the official taboo of question by writing The Tribune InformaDirecJ. Haskio. the Society for the Suppression of Vice tion Bureau, FYederlo D. C. This offer apare also given a cordial welcome by many tor, Washington, Information. The bureau to of the dealer to sell plies strictly who find It easy medical and them at a fat price, .It Is reported that cannot give advice on legal, not does It financial attempt matter. one downtown dealer made enough profit unon the sale of James Branch Cabal's to settle domestic troubles, nor to subon exhaustive research any Jurgen" alone to open another bobkshop dertakeWrite and Ton heard Gluck, Zlmbaltst, your question plainly ject. uptown. and Werrenrath nowd to find briefly, Give full name and address snd It Is not surprising, therefor return for most of the second-han- d you are to hear two more booksellers Inclose 2 cent In stamps to sent direct In .ars succession. All artists replies strongly In favor of a rigid censorship of postage. cl our literature. In fact, their only criti- th inquirer.) appears here Saturday,S. March Jl: Krelaler appears, April cism of the antivice society la that It Is W desire to impress upon you the too tenant. One such admiring dealer Q. Hava seats on th New York Stock on the west side even has a photograph exchange always sold for thousands of duty you owe these artists In the way of liberal patronage of their concerta D. L. I. of the late Anthony Comstock conspicudollars Further - we want their wonderful artla A. The New York Stock exchange rose ously tn evidence on the wall above h's th after of desk. brought to your home through to a position prominence only records. "The world is getting worse and worse, civil war. In 171 a scat sold for as low To enhance the sale of such records lamented this gentleman recently, echo- a price as $2750, while th high figure of 1520. we tn the following offer: make reached New of much views Yorks $115,000 aas ing the preacher, rs "especially In Us taste for books. The Q. What country did Lincolns movies have mined It. You can't sell the com from? F. E U. good, sweet love stories our mothers used Lincoln who of A. The anceator to read 'any mor The new girls want the name to this country was something snappy. , Today, a young girl brought cam from- - H Ingwho SamueV Lincoln, not any older than my daughter cam if into the store, drew me over In the cor- ham, England. ner where none of the other customer could hear her, and asked me If I had In Q. What country comes next to th In railway . mileage? stock a copy of 'Ulysses' thats the book United . State in this country J. At K. the society suppressed at our store onlyl A. Th United States tops th list last year. Ah. you know It? Hmm here he paused and gaxed at the customer with $64,233 miles of railroad, and Russia 20 per cefit cut trifle suspiciously, but at last seemed waa second before the war with 48,055 to be reassured by what he saw "have mile. Germany waa third with 30,600, catalog lines fyom mor of her ou seen the latest Lawrence novel? I and it probable that estab-llsne- d appen to have one there on the back are In operation than those of Russia, , prices, th e Is likely shelf. And here Is- another that by lo be Tmppressed goon-- " HehMTip s Q. Since tha sun has such terrific factorybrand-nei copy of a book ahd added Ircharged by all relevantly, I am getting In a large stock heal, why doesn't It burn itself up? dealera other of this book tomorrow, although, of yy of A. The source of the vast amount course. It Is a little late fop the society record EVERY be cannot off tei sun the gives to act nowj-afnearly everybodyv has heat whichof N o' Included. combustion, for If such wer the result read the work. consumed s' Your the case It would have been SOURCES OF BOOK SUPPLY. la genHelmholti The ego. theory favorite artists' Thi great majority of the books solcf long erally accepted. It assumes that the sun's records are here In the second-han- d shops are obtained by bulk Is gradually contracting, and that at a cut of 20 the dealers at auction sales of large es- the energy thus produced Is turned Into H tates and from other sales of private li- heat. It has been calculated that a conper cent. OALU-CURare S also but be good many bought traction of 180 feet a year would braries, up at a low price from European dealers enough to account for tho heat developed. To one who and shipped io this country ia a close observer It la also apparent art snd Q. Is there a legal phrase that at least a few of the dealers (or part"? S. F. perhaps the people from whom they have Is a Scotch law and A. Art part purchased) rely upon the public libraries phrase, meaning an accessory before and for a certain percentage of their stock. after the faoL A man Is said to b art Indeed, In the past the libraries have suf- and part" of a crime when he contrives fered mo many losses to tbs second-han- d manner of th ded, and concurs with book trads that they recently secured an the who commit tha snd encnurS(es-th- n amendment to tha penal code of the stats crime, hs does not put his own of New York, protecting them from such hahd toalthough th sctdal execution of It. f depredations. At one time," declares a library ofrn a bird In th expression, A 'use in ficial, "it waa possible to go out and find theA. hand Is worth two In th bush, and I whole pushcarts full of library book In th B that corrects him, claiming names and bom marks, bearing library saying It t "ten In th bush" years- - ago I found a whole circulating original of Which la right? "two. Instead subscription library full of them. They Go K 8 were all library book which had been MW In the hand I bird "a A. The laying, rebound to make identification less easy, two In the buah." la commonly the bindings having been removed worth tm originated trom and replaced by This used, hut tt'probfbly binding of John Heywood which ass a subscription library where people of the proverb on in hand than tan Better byrd made, to so book. out a weak a much take paid We dont have many case of this kind In th wood. s s s now, though "Q. What la th oldest city In Finland? If th dealers ar occasionally guilty ' t C. O of selling a library book which .somehow Abo. founded, In 1157 and th capiA. w sod ars Into their possession, however, Of Finland until 1818, Is th oldest city tal ar of victims much themselves th they bold thievery. They are constantly los- In that country. ing valuable first editions In this way. other genth Q. What trad I known aa th day a bookseller on th Only east side lost two volume worth at least tle craft"? C. C. M. 1300. to a clever and distinguished looktrad of A: Th ahomaklng baa been ing old bibliophile, who moves In th beet called th "gent! craft." th dMlrnttlon society, and la said to earn a handsome arising from the, fact that In sn old roIncome by Supplying coveted first editions mance. a prince of th name of Crispin I mUUuuaiio ooUeutora made to exerclee, In honor of II name- C York ... never-failin- ed new-boo- ten-spo- The government of France apparently deems th encouragement of aviation one of its normal duties. The French B--1 Book Second-Han- d absent-mindedne- ss j inscr-ption- rubber-stampe- 1- - -- I: V on -- her' prtists appear personally in Salt Lake, offering unusually full musical season nk world-darne- GalU-Cur- -- Vie-tro- dls-eue- ae Reaeh-Btrate- Bj fors-fathe- Every Red Seal Viclrola Record b ' til Reduced 20 Per Cent 1 and j hold-out- OSS -- M-ee- nt V -- -- its up, its true. 3 but not sky high |