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Show .. ' , . -. ., '..,t, . , - . 3 ' , ill -- - THE DESERET a . - I Its ' Send remittances and business to Th Dooerat Nowa, Salt Lake Clty. Utak. TONAL. APVERTLSINt3 REPRESENTATIVES Conk Rothenburg and Noe I East elat Streit New York City .Ho Bo,,Micbigsin Blvd. Chicago Sul Detroit Building ....SOS Coot- - S4ttla,-M3tKanatta Citt :01 Constitution Building Atlanta 121 Victoria Building ht. 1.touis Conger and Moody. VS Blggin Building. Los Angeles. California. eq. thaton Bldg.. Ban Irsincisco, California 1 Doan. Fotered as second 1,on.rtma. Map S. The Aseociated Press le exclusively entitled to the us for republication of all news dispatches credited to It. or not otherwise credited in this neaspaper, sod also the local newel Duni heiretni All rights for republication of DOr.11.1 dispatches here ere Coo rewired. A led , ' ' the postoffice at Silt LAthe City, class scatter according to Act of 11179. Th U . FA,LT LAKE CITY, , CONTINUE - - that termined reckless to have number ; me cause; : , - 1 t ; , T is unfortunate. to say the least that I milk should be advanced from 10 to 12 rents a quart at, a time when, seemingly, there is an abundance of feed and conditions generally for the production of milk are most favorable. For some years past a favorite slogan of health advocates and betterment workers has been, "Drink more milk.... this because it irs a food element almost indispensable to physical well being and particularly to the proper growth and development. of children. Charitably- dispolied persons have contributed liberally to milk funds that the poorer element in the community might be amply provided for. In this way every encouragement has been given for the consumptionof milk to the consequent benefit of the producer and dealer. It seems a pity, therefore, that at this season especially, when milk is ne!ded quite as much as at any other time of which the year, action should be taken would render the price almost prohibitive and thus discourage rather than aid the effort made to promote its use by the public generally. Some time ago there was a slight reduction due to vigorous competition. Unless this competition has been definitely removed, it would not be surprising if another such situation develops which y,ill bring the price back to where we have reason to believe it, properly belongs. 1 -- , - 4 - - V JrLY 'i 1144. 1 1 .: - tr .0 TODAY 111107. , Frank Kramer. worlds champion ' I Char ch Ittoorkmo. the on board England, died Jetty 5. -steamship .Nevada." first number of the New settled had who Mints York Messenger" was publish- laillTbe south of Paradise, Cache county. ed by Samuel Brannan in New as the Utah. were organized York City as a continuation of Avon ward: Henry W. Jackson, suspended. ths.'Prophet" bishop. 1817Tbe PiOnterg traveled along 1..101on account of a railroad the right bank of Green River men's strike. no trains entered 3 14 miles and then ascended a left City. or at Lake land. steep bluff to a level table w oodruff Crockett. and, descending aga;o to the an early pioneer of Arizona, died plain. camped on the left bank at Pima. Arizona. of Black's Fork. after traveling SeverlanSThe Rudy ward (Rigby 20 miles during the day. r 131(0. Fremont county, Idaho. sick with were al of the company was dh.ided into two wards, call. fever. d Clark,ward. with C. O. Wes. 1836The ship "Lucy Thompson and the Perri terctiard a fourfrom Liverpool with as w ant With Howard Streeper teen Saints. under the direction bishop. Of James Thompson. It arrived was Reed Smoot at.New York, Aug. ath. of the antioi:.ted 1873Zion's Savings' Bank and ate finance committee. Trust Company was organized; waa 1J. Brigham Young. president. who 19,25Edward of the Ogden appointed 1878Elder Joseph E. a Hyde. Thirteenthward. to mission was returning from i would act the same way it you AV. acted the sartiC 1ts01--Wif- ord , 1911,--in- ator ch,-ri.'- no - 11011- bhp t PARAGRAPHSI t t se The good 'dis Young, This Ingood front page stones. cludes S it It seems strange ttt limit armament and do nothing at a:l hthout oratory. a a a What la fain. A stmws Lindy atill bp- cnI,Irrns , bind KInf Tut. I The thirst for Luiture la genuPeopie go right on atud)ing Freni-heven though they can get as Just naugh,y books in English. Chrrect th.a 111Cotenct: "I mall! dont know hy we can't ttt'Ailong said the wife. "I do my together:. I rtshlr.rs (Coriyrg,V. I ins,. : I I 0 Et!fpvsio, tYi ; t I .. .. ,;4 -- 41110-.- 4 E , I 14 I 1.,411r A i sywil Funny world! Dad sco!ds ,he kdi for robbing bird nb,s ani tr. Birthday. shoots the birds when thy 911., grown in the fall. And Reason to Be a "Of MYself, by Abraham Gorky. Thankful. The less conceited into get msr,iikm,mlio we to S we older. get vied. long The others think all the ladles grow A 'AleTts Russia's War Frenzy. back to simplicity, and often are pining for them and get wail'. A00 the poets point us the wet: The The charitable 1.iew is t book that has most influenced me Crowning the Virgin. that the quality that makes , is Thoreau'a "Walden." with its a popular is in tht; sorg and Tht Deseret News does not p:ea for a quieter mode of living notsong the people. in nrcessartly endorse or commend its protest against the tyranny of 11 of Mr. Brisbane's concluan overwrought civilization. In a It pays to heed the forrnaLtlea sions. His editorials are pub. song like Cowley 's there la again Lindy wag careful tn procure good lishsd as expressions of opinthe definite desire to experience letters of introduction, and now ion of the world, IlIghen sal. nothing beyond the benign Joys of look at bim. stied editor. the living present, to put asida N. hopes of false grandeur and price. It takes a great deal of philosophy BT ARTHUR BRISBANE.. T; to reach this perfect state of co! 1 ntentmentbut it can be reached, Copyright. 1927. by the Star and one la all the better for the Company.) Th4 is a young counlry Two attainment. birthdays were celebrated yester- This only grant me. that my day. rnele Sams and President means may he The reason moat patients need Coolidge's. Uncle Sam is 151 years Too low .for envy. for contempt I change of climate is because Al too high. old and President Coolidge have become a nuisance to the they Some honor I would hale. doctor. deeds. but Not from great good Art, : D011t CUSS the "narrow-mindeIt is difficult to realize that as The unknown are better than ill other Any community." community kgriks known' young a man sit President Coolidge Rumor can ope the has lived more than d the Acquaintance I would grave. but have. life of the United States. 't depends What marvels our country has Not on when the number, tut the choice. accomplished in go few years. of friends. klillions realised it as they travelled about their pleasures yes- BOOLII Phould, not busines& enterterday. Cities spread out for miles tain the light. Into beautiful suburbs everywhere. And as sleep. as und.sturbed Hundreds of thousands of beautideath. the night. ful new houses and people who can more a house cottage afford them.- Twenty-tw- o million Than palace; and should fiting he automobiles traveling excellent For all my use. no luxury. roadsenough cars to carry our ty garden painted o'er. 120,000.000 people all at one time- With Nature's hand, not Arts: s and pleasures yield. And. above all, the public schools. envy in hi Sabine Magnificent buildings. high schools Horacemight field. and preparatory schools 'everywhere. And those school buildings, I double my life's for all the children, are the finest Thus would fading space: buildings in thousands of communFor he that runs it well twice runs ities. his race. This na.lon has much to be And in this true deUght Sandwiches made in a minute thankful or with free achoots These unbought 'ports, this happy prominent, and prisons so few. It was the other way round once. all I wouldstate. with Heinz Sandwich Relish may not fear, nor wirh, my over the world. fate: be kept fresh and dainty for But boldly say each night, Russia is enjoying a "war fren- Tomororw let my sun his beams zy and the lion of its hours. And they are delicious. fair is mild compared to the big Or in display, clouds hide them; I have bear working itself into a Paroxlived my day. Yet that is only one way to ysm of patriotic communist frenzyCopyright, MI.) Moirow wants the world to know that Flossie is "uncOnquerahle." of Poland, in 1717. use this new Heinz Fre placed That is number one. If the big bear the royal crown on the Madonna of ever stars against "capitalism" Vilna. combination of chopped sweet heaven help us all capitalists big and little. Last Sunday, in the presence of spicy pickles and other good American millter. Premier There Is real enthusiasm in re- the of Misselki, Pilsudski, president volution, France proved it. revo Poland. all the things mixed with smooth, rich cabinet, two carlutionists in stove pipe heal .aud- dinals. 20 bishops and a vest crowd. denly developing genius that frightcarried out the row of King John mayonnaise. tened all Europe. by crowning the Virgin of lain But Russia, not permanently to queen of the sit recovered newly be conquered at home, has never Polish lands. Try it also as a stuffing for been much of a success fighting I away from home. The Soviet Villon. w eggs or tomatoes. Mix it with a prayer to be theory that Russia's peasants would addressed toriling the Virgin by his to the death for bolshevism mother. fight who could not reed. begrated cheese for stuffed celery. Ls false. They would not fight for gins that most beautiful prayer ,t their land. not for d and poem. 'Dame Du Ole! Regents Maziain theories. absolutely Spread it on crackers, toasted or inTerrienne. Emperiere Des Infer-nail- s romprehensible to 991 in 1.0011 of thus Pali's." declaring the them. plain. Serve it with fish, or meat. Virgin ruler of all known regions. Foolish also itt RUESid a belief Combine it with Heinz Chili Kernel. boss of Turkey. is said that capitalism, jealous of Russia's' to plan changing Constantinople's success, and tifthie first proletarSauce or Ketchup for unusually ancient name to "Kernel Pasha." ian republic." plans an He might easly do that as Saint war. was Petroto Petersburg changed good Thousand Island dressing. Russia, is not a repubilc. It la a grad, to get rid of the "Saint." and handful of men ruling stores Of th sw to- - Leningrad. For picnics, for quid( lunches, millions that have no say in govBut such will not last ernment And there is nothing Constantinoplechanges will be Constantino-pi- e proletarian about a government for 500 years hence, and Leningrad suppers, you'll find run by men that know hard labor will again be Saint Petersburg beonly in theory. fore this century ends. Heinz Sandwich Relish wonder. You will hot find Mussolini Russ la Is no more a republic. changing 'Rome to 'Mussolini." He fully good to eat. "governed by the majority." than knows too well the value of ancient la any one of our plutocratic govand ha a sense of humor. ernments. 'Russia, a vast country. glory. net always possessed by Slays and Try it! temporarily in the hands of theor- Turks. Is ists, surrounded by countries' governed or controlled by organiNOW YOU TELL ONE! zed capital and commerce. CapiNZ mo It gets pretty cold 1-IEI7111), tal and commerce will win and rule, because they appeal to men's elup hers in tho winter. 'Yeah, it does. You know that fishness and supply comforts: You must change men, if you status ot Lincoln. standing up in want a different government. You the par k. with his hand on a btcan not do that in ten. or a thou- tle negro's head? WelI last winter It got so cold that he stuck I ' his sand years. ,,1 hand in his pocket to warm it" Nearly 300 years ago King Jahn ANYHOW. WHO SHE. WAS Casimir, fighting to recover lands taken from Poland by Sweden. alley were going through the vowed to offer all lands recovered Art institute- - Presently they came to the Virgin Mary. Victorious. he to a halt before a stately sculpcrowned the Virgin's picture with ture. the royal crown of Poland, declarHEENZ SALAD CREAM METZ TOMATO IcrraluP "That," be said. "is a statue of ing her queen of the reconquerel Francesca da Rimini, executed by HILNIZ PREPARED MUSTARD HEINZ PEANUT Burrut Rodin. territory. A similar "The wretch! Was he hung for ceremony eras by K.ini AttrustU4 second. Atr E! --- ovEz- 1 .1,4 When the clothes ,twect Istuttclerittl -- - stt e sun-pos- e -- 7; 011:4; iffiti1 e three-mil- 00 d one-thir- bi- omething open lap race at the Salt Palace saucer track from a large field of speedy riders. His time was 6.05. - It was announced that of this city, and James Fred Wey A. Breen of Butte. Mont.. had purchased Beck's Hot Springa for 660,000. the deal being contingent upon a clear title to th property being furnished within 56 days. - A. them to the sponsors of this excellent movement. If I have been of the slightest service. I will feel gencrousay paid. Sincerely NO. Mi. HOW SHE FOOLED HIM. A certain married woman in London. relates the Weekly Telegraph, has a husband whose devotion has never lagged sinca the first day. But she was born with a temper like gunpowder. During a lucid r-Larval following one of these attacks be ed, "Tell me how it happened I nev( rscovered this unhappy weakness in you in our courtship days, how did you ever restrain yourself then!" The unhappy woman hesitated a moment before answering and dropping her small head on his sturdy shoulder, "I used to excuse myself from you fo; a few minutes and,g-g-g- o upstairs, and pieces out. of the top of the . . He might send for the bureau to which she was accustomed. Capper's Weekly. i . --- LAMB MARY'S ileac "What about the white fleas. daddy?" 010 asked. 'White fleas? I don't think there are any in this country." "Oh, yes, there are white fleas," insisted May. "Don't you remember. !Mary had a little lamb, its fleas were white as snow"fr Chicago News. A andgood to eat 'Varietya super-heate- AGAIN. .Little May bad been listening to some conversation between her entomologist father and another. The subject was black SINGLE STRAIN. it; Dear girl. I know the thing. -- To Sing your praises every day : But. listen. birds that oftenest sing Are not the birds of sweetest lay. , night I , ,, The nightingale but here and there Will let you hear tts sweetest song: There is no itusje anywhere That can enchant if heard too long. One song the mocking bird will .sing. Then hastens to some other tree.',. As if it feared your heart to wring. Hearing too long its ecstasy. smeed, Could I but sing I ingle strain 'n touch your heart on land or sea. 1 hough I should never sing again That Fong were still enough for ma. S. H. M. BYERS. In Los Angeles 01 per-brin- ----- J. . . ., v . . . . . . . , ft' - , . . . I 1 1 cynie rider, captured the , , I Church History e - , i , pk)rolm To ........ . , 1 17n. 1813The -- aP e. ARCH-ENEM- , et EvenAts By Andrew aromas, - oo 4( GLENN FALNA. University et Wiscoovin and former editor of the Century Magazine. away--"savin- S. Tsokuda. a Japanese, shdt and fatally wounded M. Schin, another Japan-evat Garfield following a drunken brawl. Teokuda was arrested by deputy sheriffs within short time and locked n the county jail. 7 , Important II Al ff Thirty-fou- r army officers from LeavNaenworth, Kan., left Chickamauga tional park on a march to traverse the route taken by General Sherman and hio army in the Atlantic campaign of folk-son- R , 5, 11 far-aw- The treasurer of Salt Lake county redeemed one half of the $120,000 bonds Issued by the county just ten years before, and It we. announced that the balance would be taken up the follow-In- s month. The bonds b4.re I per cent Interest. a memorial tablet was unveiled in Fletcher, North Carolina. to the memory of Daniel Decatur Emmett saa Emmett, author of "Dixie." born and reared at Mount Vernon, Ohio, but be is the adopted son of the South and, in the name of the Stales of the Southern Confederacy, Ohio was invited to participate in the ceremony of unveil-in- s the first tablet erected, in honor of Emmett in the South. minstrel and Emmett was an old-tihe knew something about the kind of a ballad that appeals to the people. Dixie is one of the air which has passed into the g. national beritage as if it were a There is a spirit in it which is immensely It has won a place in the stimulating. hearts of the people and is one of the most popular of tunes. Young people like to sing it and bands and orchestras have t I 1. The wildnerness Is an Incomparable echool of wisdom. The ancient ascetic retiring from the world into his monastery and the 'American rushing from nis bulgy office into far-owoods Ind mountains tor a ,vacation may alike be following an inherit ed sense of the healing of spirit and tutoring of mind to be fouud in the wilds. , Alfred Aloysius Horn. now an old man, save for the briar P Pe Protruding from hie white bearded mouth. might be a milder Mo,es peering from the pages of an old family bible, was. for the years of his youth. an adventurous trader on the Ivory coast of Africa. sailing up mystery haunted rivers where white faces had never before been seeo. listening to lbs dawn-cr- y of the gorilla . engaging in zestful contest with rogue and rebel elephants. sucking up out of the lit. Of the wilderness a wisdom that cannot be taught in schools. and achieving a picturesque and colorful grace of speech that will ever remain an unlockedittcret to drawing room rhetoricians. Discovered by Mrs. Ethelreda Lewis. a South .African novelist. as be Wall trying to sell to her a gridiron from the peddler's pack of wire kitchen goods he carried. old Trader Horn was induced to write Out his recollections of the radiant days he spent in the African wilderness. For months this old African trader toiled and cherishing memories that had flowed so near the edge of oblivion." Final the writing has been caught betweer. two covers under the title of Trader Horn. It is a masterpiece ,or wisdom from toe wilds clothed in the garments of an unspoiled imagination. I g:v you these samples of old Trader Horns talk. taken at random from the book: "'Twasa terrible thing to see them being separated." be saYs, telling of the.way in which the early traders tore famgies Part in the selling of slaves. When a savage loxes his kin his heart breaks. He's got no newspaperi and these cinemas to cheer him up. All he knows of pleasure comes, not from food. but from eating It wikh his kind. Not from hunting. but from hunting with his tribe. He pines like a dog- The first thing education teaches you is to walk alone. Aye, you can Lire stand on your on spear when you've learnt the word goodbye. and say It clear." of Maybe it Is the legacy of th.2 savage loneLness and love communion that lies back of so many of our conservatism and conformities. he spent on "Aye, rivers" he says. musing oser til.rtant-latheir bosoms. "you've got to learn from the noble savage the law of rivers. Make friends on One bank-othe river and do it well and Neither in politics nor in riml good. Then there's sate navigation. life can a man make friends on both banks of the river." If you tome to know him. yl i will thank rne for having introduced you to Trader Horn. Copyright McClure Newspaper Syndicate. From the Flies of the Deseret sews. - 192T WISDOM FROM THE WILDS 00M M .o0o, o Twenty Years Ago. AST Sunday, JuIY 3. ht 1 ' President -- THE AUTHOR OF DIXIE. I tt The act cf.forgiving is one of the est human gestures because it is one of the most daficult to perform. And the test is to forgive in the face of a, real injury which another may have inflicted. Upon a memorable occasion & Lain man pleaded that those who had perreeuted h!rn.be forgiven because they knew ."not what they V." But in the everyday affairs of men. it is not often a question of being Jawed or offended by persons unknowingly. The offense is usually given knowingly; and it is at such a tirce.that forgiveness is put to It. severest test.Tilos human mind is such that men often find it taster to forgive than to forget. This is because the mind is & storehouse of events which have influenced life. The events cannot be erased. Yet forgiveness is possible because it springs from the heart. which is ,stored with the better impulses and finer memories of life. We may twiner forget altogether a sorrow or a misfortune that ,has been caused by another . but we can forgive( because forgivenese knows no reason or logic. It la not an intellectual or mental thing. It is not circumscribed by the metes and bounds of the brain. It is in and of the realm of whatever divinity man has in himself. Above all, forgiveness is among the nobleet emotions because it is based upon the kind of brotherhood that makes men see that whatever their mental differences may be. their hopes and fears are the same. never ceased to play has long since lost its sectionalism. The North loves it as well as the EDUCA'nON IN ANA. South. It is interesting to know that it in tribute to OBSERVANT travelers in India are not was written by a Northerner with the progress the Southland and that both sections pay that isteing made in popular education in tribute to its author. that country. It is reported that there is.no Emmett received little recognition for such thing as a common school system of his famous song, but as its author he will education in that immense country of 300.- - be remembered by millions who have been 00,000 people. stirred by the notes of the old ballad durIt is reported in years. that nine ing the lasl sixty-eigtenths of the population of India are illiterste and that in the villages and country HOME AND A "WANDERER.' districts far less than ten per cent. of the ECENTLY on'this page appeared an edi- people, young or old, can read or write. The torial endorsing the "home evening" few educated people of India are keenly aware of the dearth or education and are movement and making a plea for greater attention to the strengthening of the famfrank to admit that there can not be suecessful or stable government by an illiterily ties. On reading the editorial. one of the "bilys" out in the state prison wrote the ate people. With striking unanimity they declare that the great need of India today following letter. We deem it of sufficient interest and importance to reproduce iu is education. These educated Hindus attach a serious full. Who can read it without being touch-wanderer?' burden of blame for the prevailing ignor- ed by the thoughts of this is his letter: ance to the British government which has Here 1490 east 2ist Sauth. had control in India for the past 150 years, bait Lake City, They point to Japan where illiteracy has June 27, 1927. been practically abolished in a few generaEditor. Deseret News: tions and the Philippine Islands where th! Your editorial on the "Back to the Home." American government has made such strides movement in Thursday's "News" should have in popular education. The charge is made a particular appeal to those. who, like mythat the British government has been aself. are wanderers'. We can appreciate suck theme more fully than the fortunate ones villing that the masses in India should be who hate never lacked,. and therefore never in kept ignorance, believing that, British rule missed, that anchor to windward: a home. ;n India would not be enhanced by educaHowever. you called for suggeations. A line of Maupassant's has been hibernating in my On the &her band Englishmen take the mind for years; "The Chill of a Borrowed Hearth." That is eloquent; expressive. With position that the material progress of good copy to follow, it should make an exunder --British rule-habeen great y encellent s'ogan for an advertisement picturing h a nced and that the education of the nthe contrat between a formal clubroom. for hans been transferred chiefly to' the instance. ar,nd a good living liands',of4he people themselves. The state-- , room. Considering the weather. however. it scarcely be appropriate it present. ;tent is made that there has been no desire would But what about this. Qr something similar. nn the part of the Hindus for the education as a rough suggestion: of their children and that it would be futile KEEP THE HOME TIES TIED. to attempt to superimpose a system of corn-mof Theatres..a blare of light,--nig- hts schools upon them in the absence of a gaiety. Ballrooms; with intoxicating music and white arms;all are good. Healthy lives Zenuine desire for it America has estabahould not be seqizeatered.' lishe4abltools in the Philippine Islands aBut when the nights grow long. and the lthougrat the beginning there was perhaps dan, e weariely then one is grateful for a little genuine desire for it. hut ,of greater measure the quiet joy 'of an atening at home, the Filipino population is small in cornever noticed that all the truly the millions of India. with parison hate mastered the art of relaxation t' The common people of India are abjectly great Home :a the one spot on Earths surface poor. They need their children to care for where we can completely relax; where the the cattle and for other necessary work and nerte.destroying little pretences that are nechaving lived for. centuries in ignorance and essary with strangers can be gratefully disiinder the pressure of economic necessity carded. Spend an evening each week at home. Get !here has naturally been scant recognition acquainted with your own. Keep the home fir the benefits of schools and the needs ties tied: This very true sentence might also prove education. e th-'Moreover, city dwellers and the small useful: "THE tile CRIME:THE educated class have until very recently reHOME. 3srded the siMple country folk as mei e If :,r,11 consider that these suggestmai have -stones or cattle," unWorthy'of any special merit, I soujd ,appreciate your forwarding 0 , . 1 I tinie ago city and county officers had deupon a vigorous campaign against drivers of automobiles, there seems been a grstifying decrease in the of accidenti attributed to this This demonstrates what can be effort and emphasizes that when the speed fiend learns some 'done by the fact that public sentiment is against him and that the courts are prepared to mete out punishment that.will deal adequately with the issues involved, there is amore wholesome respect for law and a greater desire to comply with its provisions. The perersity of human nature is such that many people will not do what they know- to be right until they are forced to; and it is perfectly- proper that. such pressure be brought to bear when men are inclined to disregard the law and thus trespass upon the rights of their fellows. In this connection it is gratifying to (Ibsen. that the Fourth of July celebratirm was perhaps as free from purely avoidable accidents. due to carelessness and reckless abandon, as any we recall in a good number of years. This reflects credit on members of the. police departrhentwthe sheriffs office; prosecuting officials, the courts and the public generally, and calls for hearty commendation which is hereby accorded. What an fdeal state of affairs would exist If people would get together end keep together on matters of this kind. Then much of the grief and sorrow incident to the violation of law would disap, pear, men would come to love their neigh bars as themselves and the world generally would be happier as a reault. The good wort here referred to should be continued. 4 - TIIE GOOD WORK. ,,NM INCE the announcement - , JULY, 5. 1927. - Pubic Ledger. THE PRICE OF MILK. 5 . Forgiveness. y. . b JULY , - ithe 9, AIL'Neuts . ,.,1 TUESDAY , , , and incapable of It is only within the &1st felt). years that there has been Iny considerable awak, ening 'of.egeneral desire for erhication for the masses. Phont Walt 1St raga LAk City. Utah. In 150 years of rule in India, England Pubilshtd A rtrii00111 EL,,,ept Sundal base done more for education. but might Member of Audit Hureau of Circa Dittos. the traditional attitude of England toward RATES, billBOCRIPTION I la popular education has always been conservOn Week al has been nothing , Otto Moats LSO ative. Even at home there Ono leet 411 comparable to our public school system. No Ono Tear (If Paid la advance) I Conti nicle CoDlel nation is ever justified in ruling another Utah. idea Ti. aboe ratite applyoLherto states snali. by and WNoming; Nbada. nation except for the weaker nation's betvor month. MOO. terment. England Cannot escape censure Actin's' correspooderro for oublIcation to for the pitiable tragedy of ignorance in th Editor. NEWS t b - , attention .. , a . 1 , ta Vt I 1 i - . , , - aa - , t $ 4 , , , - . --- -r , . . , , . . - -- . r 1,:a,t1AA611Ee4nZd'. |