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Show Till: SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY 6 gjjj - t v jUUIf r Ixntn! txA 1 . t, P.lltr ! in- - think, account, in great measure, that the wife eonturaee only 90 per cent riufore a imjlgr tout of their iy much food as her husband; that a aet kin hijpr4 from .California.- One for the similarity of the symptom ia as we growing Child of 13 year af age or bo each throe in the to work maladies, 'Witt w 'Franc, they or msa adult food a much as as nose been weakness, headache, vague pains, quire bug, which rLDUlU CrWF7 ' iur - nwi p.tr i nix mi Hiruoi. wf (a y ra L. 1 MW Iiwavwnnupa WCiWWf iT fitting fbowoeel? In with tli fmt tree in bleeding and intestinkl disorders. working A The other words, influenza, in Dr. OBriens Bonhomme'i orchard. Jacques w r 7 Mttt TrUiwre weatera Jsdybog will go to Prance in opinion, seems .to be an outgrowth of tuberculosis com ! la Ml aaia la 7nbu response to an ergeat ratio plea from typhoid fever and )iy la IM IslieS SUM. Dr. Pan! Mnrehal of Tana, the eminent bined ia one bacillus. mtou la aaf H hr latopleeia ffp-Ia this connection. Dr. OBrien tots naturalist and horticulturist., - The-ladThe Tnbuaa la a mwbi tot lire haa Leo found to bo .the deadly up na explanation for the faiiuro of bug' Press. Tire Areortot il U "T in turn the periments conducted by offieorn of the a lha m far tltlr a H ar aa el Ire, wire enemy of the mealy bug, ! to etvdiied United State public health nerviee, tree. fruit foe of the arch ,lM p nemed la with the medical officers of nature of In nothing, the. economy laa a ml II ' Tba TtiVaaa la a United State wavy at Boston and And 'small the lost. in things aaararola apparently, threes a af Pwearettoe. lafonnttloa or J ha aupailaa Tba Trtbaae'a aamlatloa can be employed in mighty dircc- - 8nn Francisco. Throe experiment were often - ClnulaUaa. laaatUa la A 4it Buraaa with aecretiona taken from thn tioas. There is an antidote for all poi- - !mad and throat of wa influenza patient 'none are which or C and 0. son preyed prey It pertl AgrT bug r !, WefM 0niMI0, MrA irosoh Ss weighty a the moral and placed ia the note and throat of A T TrifcvM upon. rhttwfo; btriUU, Tort; rrii ksimiB. fUal fetiiUUaf. M. ,auij j,e learned from this mission volunteers. Dr. OBrien in of the oplntrrit. MM hon of influenza aecretiona if west, other of that out the tm 'of tb ladjbug from fct 0 (draw Trfriw. 0H Uk dtp. llb But let ua waive the Usson add hope that patient had been uaed, th volunteer WdUteJi the doughty insect fighter from Wash- - would have been inoculated. 'toe form to BOtf ift pB00 W It BlJT 1)0 tlffitkiiw jffiHnMit lb jngtott 4D(1 C&llonilt Will COfflpletl tb ! J . M OS "HI .rise- work ut out for it and make short iog, that Dr. OBrien wa one one of the greatest quarterbacks thn Uni CUJ shrift of th mealy bug, which, doubt! Halt Lull t tM aattar nat- versity of Minnesota ever produced. It M ufod-ftM- i less, had it origin in Germany and conia in ao sense our design to prove urally is bent on doing mischief. nection between a great quarterback and a detector of disease germs, but OUR WAR DEBT. there may bo such 'relation for all we While coinmissiom of the peace con- know. Wednesday, February 26, 1919. ference ia Fans are figuring out the At any rate, Dr. OBrieas discovery SENATORIAL DECORUM. bill for damage to be presented to 4he may be the means of saving hundreds thousands of lives next fall and winGerman government, th treasury offi- of The United States senate pride itself when tW influenza is expected to ter 4 cials at Washington have been doing return in' form of vlrulencs ao wise on being th most deliberative body in little estimating of tho amount Ameri- diminished.- - Because Dr, OBrien .live thg world. Which means that th will be asked to pay for their share in an obscure place, it f aot juet to can bebeve1 that they nenators dike to the work of making the world safe, deny hits recognition. If a physician s ia utcock. Every nefef go off at half which ability were to be gauged by th size d every ac- ete. The burden of indebtedness terance is well weighed town jbt choose to live ia, the Mayo will be asked to shoulder of th Germans tion carefully studied ia ad vane. Thera is described ia advance as brothers .of llochester, Mina., for extggcring. a t4 people who accuse the tens tors of The preliminary estimates of the Wash- ample, would be tenth raters instead of tha celebrated surgeons they are. deington treasury, official indicate that being too deliberative that they broad back Whether the man who isolates the influliberate at the expense of lima end th .load pn Fuels Bam ence germ resides ia Pari or ia Pasco wobble to cause will him omewhat,Jtoo. . worthy measure. But that i another Bated 'on incomplete knowledge of make not tba alighteat difference. It at dry. is suffieieht that he shall have succeedwill war debt be, final what tha juet ' The senate also has a lively sense of freastfry officials deelaro it likely that ed' where thouMnda t of others have if Dr. OBrien ho Mhieved failed. And ' e sense. the American people will ba twenty-fivdignity that Is, a theoretical the people will acclaim the d'utlnctiow, ar off the obligation yearn ia paying Actually, tome of ite performance And since Pasco hap;iens to be hla him; at times anything but dignified. But at the rate of on billion two hundred the ' people will gladly accept this, too, ! another atory. On of th million dollars a year. Thie calculation homo, to keep their eye visitor hi th pub-li- e is made'ott the assumption tbst th net die inviiaXioa senate rules v on heard. loan be eot to hear but for deductions with war galleries may dqbt, The gravity theoretical gravity of th fellies, will b in the neighborhood CAN ON TOURISTS. senate proceeding is not to be inter- of eighteen tullioa dollars. Interest ou 4 cent evidences of thl rate of turn at the publiq appreciaper American- - who have been counting rupted by tion or disapproval rof senatorial r would be 1763,000,000 a year, to bo the 47f .until the conclutioa of final marks. Not even thn custom of thn raised by taxes sad then repaid to bond0 ;in the expectation of joining ia mempeace (117,000-00British parliament ia approving holder. Ia addition, about the rush of sightseers to the battlefield bers remarks by striking ,th desk would hava to b provided with th palm of the hand be permlaai-hiyear as a sinking fund to redeem of Europe, will read with some dismay Hand clapping ia the eld fashioned all bond ia twenty-fivyearn Thie of the contemplated action by the American way of applause is absolutely would require a cumulative slaking fund French and Belgian governments to taboo, provision of 2.32 per cent Congress has head off this army ef, invader. The th least of few aot the authorized estab!iVll0A past la days yet have been crowded by citizen in- sinking fund, recommended by the cable say that the continental governterested in the debats on the leaguw Of secretary of the treasury. TWsury of ment xriH ask thetlaUed State and nations covenant. "Thn perfervid ad- ficials assert that if thie authorization other countries to withhold passports to dressee ef certain of th betogaed mem-- ' is given, bonds might be bought up on bera have caused thn listeners to forget t,h market each year or called for re- persons desiring to visit France and inflexible ruin of the senate that demption at tho period provided for in Belgium for no other purpose than to outsiders ars not to giro evidence- - of tha term padowhirii they were Sold. view the destruction wrought by war. While this war debt is stupendous in The British government has given its being present in th galleries. When throe rules had been fractured three its propdrtlotl," It is small in compari- encouragement to the. proposal to shut time in succession. Vie President Mar- son with, that which tha people of the sightseer from continental Europe shall delivered himself. The1 offender France and Great Britain will be re- until at least some degree of normal were warned that they were not to d quired to car for. And far greater conditions have been brought about in methods into the ktill will be tha debt saddled on the the devastated areas; Washington ad ueo Bolshevist sacred precincts of tho upper chamber; German people a 6 result of the mad- vices are that a similar readiness to cowith France and Belgium ha speeches of those who point with pride ness of Germanys military masters. operate and those who view with alarm," he Fortunately, tbs United 8tates is in been signified by the United States. Thera will be- - no restriction on tbosa went on to sty, are not to be applaud- position to withstand tha drain upon its ed. The galleries will be cleared at the financial resources. But our .fellow having legitimate business in Europe, of newt ejuliiticn of Ibis icharac Ul And citizens are in for many .year of high but wholesale excursion "oversea more, to that effect. taxation. World liberty- - Comes high wealthy and idle persons who wish tp see more than tha motion pictures per-mSol doubt the rebuke waa justified. but w must have it. of the work of Mars ia France and Vi:fitr to public J?laces r xppctd to observe the, rule laid oowfc for their .THE FLU BU(T CAUGHT. . Handera will be asked to remain at home antil matters settle down some; guUlataee. Ahd decorum i something In wbt ia the battle area No reasonable ,to Bo--' respected everywhere. Nevejrthe-- , From the little ewn less, if ths worthy senators expert .the Washington, come tile rfew the world American will find fault with ths sctheir delibera- of medicine for Biflhthl haibecn eager ried of ike continental government. It general public will he year before the marks of the tions jwith awe, it would gocu that bey awaiting. Thirty yrofa astu, Kim pawir War have been effaced. There will be ought to set an example by their own had ambition to Y a great metrop- ample time to see rums which will exist beeline eondilct in the chamber. For instance, when! ths senator from Oklahoma, olis, people far and' wide Ycre shorted ux plenty some seasons henee, when the that something "be uns to im- to "Keep Tour Ey on Fasoo." Prob- people of France and Belgium in the prove the ventilatiod ot the no place, at the time of its 'great devastated regions find themselves and can make a living from industry. ben declaring that impure air win af- ably est fame, tad less real ground Relatives of soldier fallen in battle fecting the health of th members, the for published than did Pasco, but as timd and bar'md in Furope will not be barred senator from Colored facetiously re- wenthope Pasco on and irrigation fxtendod, from visiting the scene af their loved marked that his understanding was that prosperous and today is a thriv- ones there, was "too much hot air emanal became supreme sacrifice, What is in town. tended is to keep at home, for the pres ing; fyom the vocal orgahs of hie col ingHad Pasco waited a few years longer at least, the merely curious. This leagues. Dispatches say thaf a loud to the orid to keep out, etas eftn share their disappointment oetVd of guffaw met flu sally, in with It invitation iuul e, more na eye upoii it, it would b whWF the presiding officer joined. with the thrifty landlords of France it slid a score snd ten and If the Coloradoan indulged hi this response than Unmlsr, who naturally will sec in some now has Pasco for witlieism while the hand clapping mis- years ago, aitiou of ther governments a blow the worth calling attention to to the tourist traffic, in past years no creant were still in the senate gallery, thing really the misguided gallery listeners must aside from its natural resouries. Be it mail fatter in making plutocrat ia s hav been puzzled to know just where knows that Pasco has pursued the germ sir nil wnv of the bonifaces of contitbehike of deuiarkation between public of influenza to its burrow aud has nental Europe. dec brum and senatorial "gravity hap- fastened it "down and hog tied it The germ of influenza has eluded the most FOOD CONSUMPTION. pens to run. vigilant searchers of Pans, New iork, The bureau of labor of the United Washington, Chicago, Salt ljiks and USE FOR LADYBUGS. San Francisco, only to be run to earth States government has just completed An army of American workers is at Fasco. an .nteresHng snd no doubt valuable If eventually it proves true that nbopt to give its services to France, om pilat ion of statistic having to do Pasco is the first securely to ini; risen without akmg or expecting compenv the "flu bug," all honor wil be Pas vvitli the quantity bf food consumed by tioa and without knowledge of the good co's. The world will acknowledge the tie American people. The figures were work it will engage in. In the four fame of Pasco, and tens of thou-rod- s of folieotcd from HM) representative famiyears which marked Germany's inv physicians will doff their h its to 1aseo localities along the lies five in thirty sion and depoliation of France, thou snd millions of jvopie will tall Pas. o he tarnestly hoped that Atlantic and Pacific coasts and on the blessed it Let sands upon thousands of orchards were Pasco will come into all of these honors Great lakes. The experiments, if such ruined, and those left untouched by shell and then more, they may be called, were all made in fire saffered decay. One of the great Br Henry B O'Brien, city md county shipbuilding renters. tasks facing France is the restoration (h'stcian at Pasco, announces that, It was j roved that there wa a con of her fruit tract. Stumps mut be alter making more than ,'ti'OO snlerable variety Different kinds of pulled up, young tries planted and and other tets, while treating food were used in different proportions frutt besrisg trees alive must le influenza patients, he has isolated the in different places. Taking Baltimore freed their natural insut enemies liauHus If Dr O Brien a belief is con as a typn al city on the Atlantic, the folMen can extract the stun ps an plant firmed by further scientific investing lowing daft was obtained: and horticulturists can do turn, it will be possible to prevent and young The average adult man consumed durmuch to combat the mseit foes of still to cure influenza by inoculation With the jear 57 pounds of fresh beef ing living trees. But greater aid is neces-aarserum prepared from the hacillua of and veal, 3 pounds of salt beef, 19 Henee the employment of the the just as typhoid fever is pounds of fresh pork, 23 pounds of salt sew American army. Recent dispatches said disease, to be prevented by inoculation an ork, 3 pounds of mutton, 6 pounds of Olympia told how the University smallpox by vaccination. 20 dozen eggs, 49 quarts of poultry, at Washington had spent the winter Dr. OBrien asserts in ty- milk, 20 pounds of butter, 20 pounds of at that, months breeding some million of lady-bug- s phoid, discharges from patient suffer lard, 4 pounds of cheese, 2 pounds of that tiny red and black spotted ing from influenza carry the contagion, tea, 13 pounds of coffeo, 43 pounds of insert with which al of a are familiar, tnd so does contaminated . , .1 k drinking wa sugar, 78 pounds of flour, 16 pouml of wnttia t oai- lhat the bacillus of looses of bread IS iHNtt meal, 364 ry rhyme of fond childhood z resembles in every respect pounds ef rice and 36 jecks pf potatoes. closely lUoa.,. a, large phrGoa of thero'Washi I thd germ f typhoid fever, and also that . Further icteresbaig fan were rebe scat to Fiance I of tuberculoma. . Thi resemblance, be vealed. Fot example, it waa determined roM FEBRUARY 26, 1919. to J)M. onrii'f bjf MORNING, ! 0. an-gu- Ithat of-ol- woman; tfiat a child from II to 14 year old consuuws 90 per cent as much as tha to 10, 75 per cent; a father; a child child 4 to 6, 40 per cent, aad aa infant, 13 tip in the air may flyin man to the top of hie profession, but its a mighty poor policy for the rest of us. Thars nothin like a VELVET to yipe of both feet on help a fel GETTJN per cent. It is unfortunate that the Investigation wa limited to the ceaeouts, for it would ba of vast interest to know how much a healthy dweller in the Rocky ths ground. mountains eats every, year. Without boast, bat as a matter ef civic pride, we venture the guess that a Balt Lake resident, husband, wife ar child, consume with relish at least 10 per cent of food ia excess of the requirement of a Baltimorean of like station. It would never do to let a town like Baltimore get ahead f ns ia anything, especially ia so important a matter as food. BDft impel Oklahoma, having remarked that the impure air of the chamber wa of killing off the senator, Thom Coloradtr ventured the opinion that the senate ia suffering more ffomhot air. Th general public is similarly afflicted. -- !, bp !,. h, anPil- itjl H .tori;. Lrwt,ln L provti wul o. to Grand 1, bflaco, 3 k peb-po4- I s f $ -- ' i t ; i i miero-Mopi- e 1 i i i u , 1 , Ti s Jys 1hl U el " rtw i 1 risnken. var orbT theth C IW other 1 Va to the w atiited desei s sticky c al to giro " wiri fr T v liwdvantage wii jo. which fcrtowr, this benefit to wl eounty or jt?, whorero rat betwee bo of mat proportion eowity. a , il s Jots count) vd Junction. TH Vvr roei nil about twe . no and s sooty Most hr wagons, I e prevented its , 1' Hi! COMMUNICATIONS Editor Tribune Ae a further illustration of what hae recently appeared in the paper concerning freak, needless and pernicious legislation, permit me to call attention to house bill No. 6S, which has psseed the house and ia on the senate calendar, being, however. Unfavorably reported out of th committee on health and labor, to which it was referred. This bill makes ii a misdemeanor to employ any Individual more than six days a week and would therefore make it Impossible for anyone to work more than six dais a week, no matter how much he might wish to do so, unless he could prove th. application to his case of some of the , exemptions of th bill. This would manifestly be a flagrant invasion. of natural, fundamental and constitutional nghis, for every man is verily entitled to the right to work when and a much as he pleases, as he Is to rest when and as much as he pleases both rights, of course, being exercised In harmony with arrangements made with his employer. Compulsory labor, for even., an hour, would be Involuntary servitude and Is specifically foi bidden by the thirteenth amendment to the ernstitution of the United States. This bill is therefore entirely unnecessary. One day' rest in seven is nnquestlon- -' ably and admittedly eondudva- - to msn'e temporal, phv steal, mental and moral well being and so k a frequent bath and eight hour of a'eep each dav end hit right to all these privileges la amply protected by fundamental taw. But U la no part of the functions of the state to compel men to take a bath every so often, or go to bed and get up at stated houra, or rest on stated data fiuch matters ran safe.y be left to the exercise of Individual w Hr and choice, Being a piece of unnecessary, mischievous, class legislation, designed to Interfere In the exercise of natural rights, this hill should be defeated Yours for Justice and consistency, W. A. SWE4XT. 14S South Second West. The Handicap Bureau' J. Haskin. WASHINGTON, D C Feb 25 Men and women of 45 and over are still useful to industry, and often more useful than youth. That ia the doctrine of the new "Handicap bureau" of the United States service. It la attracting a lot of attention by demonstrating that middle-aged and old people can be p'aced In Jobe, and can hold them The handicap referred to exists rather In the attitude of Industry toward the old and middle-agethan to the disabilities that come with years These latter are often more than made up by the wisdom that comes with experience. But in bus ness especially, this is the age of the young man, meaning by lhat the man under 45 The voung man owns end operates the bust-n- e world. It is hard to tell employers anything about the usefulness of old men And this despite the fact that the leaders in politics rod the Rrts are nearly a'l men. and the American president who la now astonishing end capt v sting Europe with his advanced ideas and h's Inexhaustible Is only a few years th s s do of 70 energy The war forced the emjdover to fall back on the man past the age of military service, and the woman too oM for the Hed Cross hosntul Now the government tells the employer that the 'old man" has come to stav and the d woman is a fixture In industry To head the new bureau the government has called to Its aid Victor T J Gannon, former n anager of the Employers' Assoctat on of Chicago and expert In handicap work 1 wo wars ago Mr Gannon became head of the Chicago association, fouuAed by Benjamin J Rosenthal, e.lthy Chicago merchant, to obtain emp'oyment for middle-age- d and men and women, and to get data elderly on the assets and liabilities of suth men, in the twenty-tw- o months of hie connection with the organisation Mr Gannon placed 25 ODD men, having about 45.000 The highest salary received dependents by the, old men was ItoWO a year and the lowest 8 a week. Tb average week My salary was about $1T "Svmpathv. not social curiosity, waa the motive that started this movement," Mr, Gannon declares "But the economic value of the experiment was great. For ears industry hae been worshiping at the feet of youth and had blinded itself to tho huge economic waste caused by the pramatur. discarding of mature men. The propaganda of has been pep sweeping, bo) Ish face have smiled at ua from the page of magazine above d, gray-head- gray-baire- -- , wrtprt Write ft Velvet Enfhr of 1 vi && HemlleendU froir water, and 4241 Fetemm Aterne hie 1$ Aeemme, Atom I zut brt v tt koab hat , By rrederic Wilding up $ npr rbV , Mo it .MW aj WOU)d Th e it 10 rjKif for-ever- -- Rlch i tool to tho coun W e. t far rtcb tM I two Bat your pipe will tell you more about VELVET than a page of print 1,1 ,i'a it gal-leri- 8tAt ... Btnn and ( P0 pertodo as 1 Utttol a. cool smoothness. ll Phil Campbell is the latest candidate for speakership honors. Like Mann and Gillett, tha Kansan is a regular at all times and under all circumstances, and ha may win as a dark horse. tbs Mb Those two years give to VELVET its mildness, its mellowness, its Congress will provide for a Victory loan of five billions Wev? bad tho victory, but the bill remains to be paid. Boston is to celebrate the 300th niversary of the landing of the grims next year. Soma unhappy well as happy memories will be sffia Every grain of VELVET that goes into your pipe has been aged in wooden hogsheads for at least two years. that the senate a fast pace ia the closing days of congress It is idle to expect that any speed records will be broken. istertsoa i ii c of would be Vrf tb rildlai 6 does Tnkr--1 ttve wig ask th there is nothing like VELVET. There is nothing hot or hasty about VELVET, either in its making or its smoking. ii The Jerome, Ari&, miners have declared th atrika off. Unfortunately, tha decision came after the mine had been closed for from three to six month Hera Is another object lesson. tha Orn4 4 I Calm, Cool Smoke ef Tha dispatches tell us committees have struck w Bkea British peace problem are more formidable than the war problem. Lloyd George will need all his strength and will power during tha next few months. Owea foe-- a mporuuK 1 h u alternative . Juu eountli izt ihould eve at reconi mended et to wort on I the orodeta e : owner, Hut the io wort ob the I Setterd franc Vondhiots ire goo Mr. vxan Wiif te tone wl t t tlutt (lding the a itrttoa to i sr camp war a xpenng and mpmementa. Juet now gi a tmpravema x simmer. The ,a lerge nurr Sufficient i 4 X da purpose i 1 legends that proclaimed them beads of great corporations. Our government ha : taken care of the builder of tomorrow, but the builder of yesterday baa been foi gotten Meanwhile.1 th Than and woman past 45. with all the richness of experience and 4.i ra. have been relegated t the Junk heap, tagged dead timber by Industry. Crying for help, the employer yet refused to consider the man or woman past 45 War changed thl - It was hire the old man and- woman or shut up shop, and to the surprise of both emforty-fivand the old man' ployer made g iod In bia experience with the Chicago buredu Mr Gannon found that the loyalty and steadiness of the man or woman was apt to offset entirely their lack ef youthful enthusiasm. Over 87 per cent of the men placed made in sa'anes have good; over $9 00U Oh been paid to them, and thousands of employers gladly acknowledged value received. man or woman SelThe middle-age- d dom had dates that prevented them from work ng overtime, and they were less apt to quit without notice and on slight provocation The mature worker acts a a stabilizer." Air. Gannon says. The young man will quit his job for the difference of 5 cents an hour, but the old man is more disiroxed to consider hi employer and Youth indisposed to mslte a change ssys, 'I can always get a Job. and, anyI see world to want but the the how, old man want to stay on the Job aud keep the plate be has Mr Gannon believe that nine out of ten old men and women could be getting at least five dollars more a wee If thev were proprlv placed and understood. He has frequently made ths test of accosting a d.scours god appearmg individual on the streets and f.nd ng him more congenial, better paying work withIn his dealing with in a few hours men and women of the class of 45 and over he had learned to Judge them almost at a winner . and he has found that his Judgment seldom fail One m stake Mr Gannon has noted down In the tablets of his memory Is a warning for the future. While In Boston recently he spw a bedraggled, discouraged looking old man walking down one of the principal business streets and staring Intently at sn unusually imposing office building The handicap expert approached him and offered to find him employment that would enable him to live and dress decentlv After a few astonished moments the old man burst into laughter, and finally gasped out that he was th owner of the office bu lding at which he had been staring, and the president of one of the largest banks in the city. Mr Gannon ssvs, in fellAnyway ing the store, they tell ms that ths old chap appeared at his office the next dav wearing a frock coat and a silk hat and has been wearing them ever since The success w th which th efforts of the Chiongo bureau met, and the satisfaction of the smplovers emplovtng the men and women sent by Mr Gannon rolled the attention of the United States employment service to the heretofore neglected class of worker, and early In the new year the handicap bureau was organized and Mr. Gannon called to act as its bead The work begin in Massachusetts, and during the first month 1387 men and women were placed In good positions at The youngest placed wa .good salaries 50 vears of age and the o'dest 73. At twelve states have present working bureaus and plan have been perfected tor milar branches In every mate, ef the union, to n.erte In connection with the state empxomcnt , , service. Ths Oldest man placed by the government so far is 9 years of ftg and his employer writes that the aged 'xurau is er gray-hair- ed -- -- aminer to be hopeless. - . Mrs B , a widow of IT, was left with a small grandchild of 7, entirely without funds and 'with nh Industrial training outside of the home. The examiner had failed to find the woman employment, her lack of experience of any kind and her age prevented even the most sympathetic of employer from considering , bar as an employee. It was thought advisable for the childs sake that the grandmother be kept from the factories and placed in a position where she could In some measure care for the boy. Mr Gamion wrote to the examiner suggesting that help might be obtained by means of the chain system, the examiner telling ten of her friends of the woman's need, and each friend telling ten of his friends, and so on. "Within hour th church for In schoo tt h ur appurtem asme etmns at a are kept from the streets and is the belief o the bureau that t ' i 'It Koab eater 4e by the interests of the two the eld and X s a the town very yorfng are so closely allied that would b impossible to separate them I yrtaMllty a V no 004, will The handicap buicau will deal not hr to people, With those handica'qied by age. but tb : -- 1' d.liabilities have whose physical I f mx' them from securing the meati-oI lug a decent wage. Deaths a Word created by Mr.birthdr from non, refer to th crippled t by accident, who are forced to auppo-- -j L r O themselves- bv their own labor state come dependent H Henrietta upon either men nv ro Wilson, l1 private charity. Many of these ct't1T women are capable of enrntng 4tr at a re. who was fortable living if their earning catah Iska th tie ere directed into the right chanters of the bureau tl arrange m and it is the a adit. v'c to Jt that they obtain euch Went J u some cases th branch bureaus a11 tfeiapland, tilth the returning crippled sotowm A4kg in a 8 t 4 though th bureau was net orgamaed t d Tha body rtStla that purpose. 1 he Illinois handicap funeral reau reports that It has found pos.tloi 413 aoldiers. , for crippled A BaUv, 70 The call for. the retired hasjwundes. t "'al yeaterda Mr Gannqn say4 the United Statesh da chapel av awakened to it responsibilities totoyi u toftrw fun the builder of yesterday, who are, atotod. often th Jobless of today. the most efficient bookkeeper he has ever hsd in his shop. it la the policy of th bureau In every case where Jt is possible to place the applicant in the community in which he ha lived, and through the agency of his In most cases, when the fellow citizens eemrmmttv-- i attention of-tea!le(I to the matter, Community pride is aroused. letter to th handicap bureau In from a western city, this epeciai case i cited a case thought by the local ex- twenty-fo- ke w -- b- - put-pos- -- e -- after the chain hed been started, the examiner wrote' Mr. Gannon that his plan had been successful. and the woman had secure employment as companion. to a woman of Sfi who had been willing to take the child also. A large percentage of the work, though It deals primarily with the aged, entails child welfare work of no Insign ficant The father of the family, or quantity. In many cases, the grandfather, secure employment and th dependent children k tMl city, CASTOR IA For Infants 1 v! Jrar and a i yeetert and Children ' Stihap1 In Use For Over 30 Ye FU foaeraJ ol toriew, mno bll he held w. Always bear the $natuM of U a. n .? awrtman servin 7'ho held Flour Special-8- 00 Flour Thai You Know. Dne 48 lb. Two 48 lb. sacks 100 lbs. Bran. you nr n stockholder you buy 204 . Our Warehouse. Quotation at retell J? r 82.65 $2.45 $1.45 S2. 54.85 82.20 sack If Sacks die at 2 X m. t tx Lav wrvlcc held t 3 p nr hr oemei Njtoeral Jth , oi State hirst stockholder cost. If you are not when you dubscribe for stock. it ia your fault. Dividend begin Consumers Warehouse and Storage Co. Phone Hyland West 21st South. Coal Regular Prices. w ASK FOR The Original r J - I?.-- , . - J aip.r re!to 2233. th the ini lost. . Al Get Grocery Prices. r -- - 'tf-t-v a ' J! to exarr t S.A-- . Etoi Mn bvn nnh .M. 1 rtotad ir ! 4n ar V. ed Nourishing Digestible No Cooking m For IrtfantsInvaliJa andGrowing Children. I RkbMilk, Malted Groin Extract lb Powdsf " Tho Original Food-Drin- k For AH Agea.. OTUn3nro. IMITATIONS . 'JTmatio the .''ton - A pr |