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Show y i THE SALT off In an airplane.' Inventors landing solve this may problem. Man Is slow at solving Established 1WI that problem. Why? . Because, for thousands Bll VAIN STREET PHONE WASATCH ll of year's we have been chained by gravity. LivPublished by The Telefrsm Publishing Company. our activiing in three dimensions, we have-ha- d A. h. FISH, General Mjumsrr, Salt All bus! a Exties correiporvtlence Aoui4 be bdinwd ! Ths to confined width. and largely length Tdtfram, Salt Lake Clly. Utah. Tha Telsgram la a mambnr el the Aaaaelatad Press Ths Atae in stairs hills or an or elevator, climbing using a la tad Praaa la aaclaalvaly entitled to tha aaa for republican ta cept to It or not atherwloe credited af laall aawa dlepatchea creditednewa we have not done much with the third dimension, th paper, and also tha local published herein. TERMS TO SUBSCRIBERS. height or depth. DAILY AND SUNDAY. In Utah. Idaho. Nevada and Wyomlny month. one ntall weak.. One of the Vanderbilts .laughed at the Idea (In advance) By By carrier, too par SS par month. wants; ana year, 110 it. All other states. By of elevated and Wyoming SUNDAY only. In Utah, Idaho. Nevada raild railroads. He ana (In advance) One year. 1 J 0 All other states, HOP on to elevated roads stilts. see the Yetfye lived i ADVERTISING BRANCH OFFICES. Verse A Conklin, ina Avenue railroad in successful operation. Vadleon So, too,- - many Ill Tork City .........a............ ia Boo.vrd Boulevard Leuuft who now scoff at airplanes may live to see the Lafayette R. J. Bldwell Compaay. THMarhst8trset sky filled with flying flvivers. ' ' San Francisco ; Stye Salt Hafee telegram Lake Or CALLTU'VJAGOU OFFICER ! FIND tt provides - there more sustenance than milk; likewise, is no food product wjiich --contributes' more to a varied menu, without making deep inroads . on the pocketbook. . But while milk is one of the cheapest articles of food to be purchased, there is som,e variance Lake. George N. Child, superintendent of declares there is something wrong schools, city when the price, of milk is increased 200 per cent -His i before it -- reaches the - ultimate-consucondibut whether well is the contention made, .Salt mer, tion due, to poor methods of distribution Or excessive charges can hardly be determined with ' out a definite and specific investigation. The fact remains that the milk for which the producer is paid from 16 to 22 .cents a gallon sells in Salt Lake for 50 centsJLgallon. more for "Still, many "other cities pay as much-o- r their milk as Salt Lake. Cheyenne pays 14 cents a quart as against 12J-- cents in Salt Lake, Los Angeles pays 14 cents. The prevailing price in enver is ltcents7 with afew Independent dairiesseliing for 9 and io cents. Portland pays 12 cents, Boise 10 cents, Reno 12 cents and Spokane 10 cents.. The average of these prices is but little below- - the price prevailing in Salt is - Lake. There is something to be said for the menfHay and grain prices have fallen materially, visibly affecting the price paid to the producer. Labor and other items figuring in distribution, however, remain high. In one year the bottle loss in Salt Lake was approximately $18, 000. The frugal housewife "Who Carts her jam and jel- lies in the milkmans bottles or diverts them to other household uses, is thus a factor In keeping milk prices at a high level. However, we do .not agree with the contention that the local dairies are entitled to a greater profit this year because they were pinched by war conditions a or so ago. Many business houses suffered the same losses by being unable to foresee economic changes. The most of them took their loss and attempted year to meet the new order to start over again. The dairies are in mqch the same position and if they would increase the consumption to eliminate the losses of surplus they cannot hope to make last profit on this years business. Milk should sell the at lowest possible price which always a reasonable profit on the Investment. provides years flying flivver has arrived. It is the Mes-- 1 senger plane, weighing only 623 pounds without passengers or gasoline. Lawrence Sperry of Farmingdale, L. I., builds it for the government airserviccAutondriversnvilTTte interested in the Messenger airplanes engine. It is air cooled, You can crank Jt easily with one: hand.- Sperry, whose company makes the Messenger plane, uses one himself, traveling between home and factory, also to the golf club and on weekend trips. He says the plane is faster than trains and eliminates waiting at railroad stations. I have landed on Says Sperry; country beside roads, ordinary gasoline stations, for supplies, and dropped into many fields of less than ten acres in size. In all my travels in this plane, landing and taking off in new arid restricted places, I have never met with a single accident of any consequence.--Eve- n prefer this method of transportation to an automobile, because I can keep just as dry, and I do not have to worry about my car skidding. Bed of the time. sides, I can make it in ' The Messenger airplane would not require a very large garage. Its wing spread is only twenty feet In compactness, it comes close to tLe size that will be required when people begin using use autos. That .time is airplanes as they-tiobv the srround space reauired .in delayed chiefly three-cylinde- sixty-horsepowe- r. one-thir- w i MANDOLIN IN MY persons were lynched in the United States by mobs in the first ten months of this year. That is one for every N'week in the year if we keep the record clear for the, remainder of the year. The number is too large for a country which prides itself, on bases its hope and progress" on orderly condilc. When mobs assemble on an average of once a weeJv something drtic were done to ' change the order. No doubt federal control of cases growing out" of mob violence offers the best course' at the present time. Too often local courage and OFTY-TW- rr BOY-WE- CASE UP tu' piSGRACElS I3USTKMCM HEVaMAUV TRYUGTOUVE MOW ! jDOVlU ATflLRRlBLE, LL , PAST it is-ti- me arecowed.by-tticspiritoft- r h mob-whie- - Clever young man Ive reached third, eir. --Father s voice W etL steal, you busher, steal! The American Legion Weekly. "Willie, let mehear you count up to ten." five, . six, One, two, three, four, , eight nine, ten. "Wrong! Tou skipped two numbers. Well, thst's the way my father counts. "Ik your father an expert account-an- t? - OF MUSIC! "r 'You v - s ISUSTER "TALKS VJALKS IN MIS r from .five years to- -" Five years in prison or $5000 fine, or both, for any state or municipal officer who neglects to protect a prisoner from mob violence. Forfeit of $10,000 by any county in which a person is lynched; be given to the victims family or dependents, or in lieu of them paid into the United States treasury. , Radical national legislation is necessary, proponents of the bill argue, because" states have failed to stop lypehings. Mob violence is the commort shame of America and Is to be supFrom 1889 to November 1, 1921, pressed. there have been' 3422 lynchings in the United States. -- The second International congress of working women opens at Geneva, Switzerland. Delegates attend from forty-eigcountries. The big talk, as the convention opens, is about war and how to prevent it. That is a problem that 'Is Politicians will never end war. up to women. The only way to stamp out war is to kill the war spirit in human beings. The place to kill it is In the cradle, by what mothers drill into the minds of their children. The cause of war is In the brain. Kill the seed before it sprouts. ht relics of this time, though the Intellectual fire has died on the altars. The press does not believ that the funcUon of women Is to make a political machine." It does believe that women should be organized, Just as men are, to back the best candidate. As It becomes Increasingly, that organised womanhood Is going to supportapparent at the polls men who stand for certain ideas, those Ideas will come to be written into platforms, but If women enter Into th battle , and barter of politics, they wIH lose their influence for good. Grand Rapids Press. r, Harvard history students are singing their leseons Atlanta Journal. One way to get even with the teacher. Let Age-Hera- ld. SLEEP estate agehiThls" Tobacco see plantation Is a bargain. I don'tworWhy you hesitate. What are you rying about? Prospective, but Inexperienced, pur- chaser I was just wondering whethet 1 -- should plant cigars or cigarettes. The Amerlcan Leglon Weekly. EQUALLY WONDERFUL. "It is not surprising," said Richard Du Pont fci .Wilmington, that there are so many divorces when one considers the truth of a dialogue I once heard at my club. It's wonderful, old man a young Yellow remarked to his companion, what love will enable a chap to see In a girl that he never saw before. AND .No doubt.' sneered hi companion, a married man, but Its equally wonBy Jane Phelp derful What it wont let him see that Detroit Free "Where did you go after dinner? I hell see later on. laughed at him for sleeping so. late, he Press. said; Interrupted coldly. I guess, 'if you had played games I thought we might To a movie. EVIDENCE, l liko l did yesterdayr youweuld be tired, finish-- out the day:" He yawned too. I was stiff from not using my. again. Patience You say that girl you !n- muscles. " I feel wore, as If I had been I asked ho "more questions. I was troduced me lo appeared In i fare pounded. But we had a wonderful no so much hurt over what Robert once? time. You missed it by not going. hadNJon as the careless manner in Patrice Yes, she did. whieb'-b"Yes, I guess I did." bad left me aione all eveHow did you know? Robert looked surprised, but said ning amKhle tone In telling me of it. She showed me her marriage certifiAfter I had made him a cup It was asHhough he had not once cate. Yonkers Statesman. nothing. of coffee and given. him some crackof the. , thought ers to stay his appetite until the Sun-da- v I recalled What Mary Ryan had said The re tmy has lavade Plalaa - . dinner should be served, I said; It loaka Ilk a fight ta a Fiaabout spendings, long, blissful day a gala. Now, tell me all about It. What together, and while I knew she had ala h.- - Life. borrowed the expression from some you did and everything. Seaie fellows are Ud ta get baek ta "Oh, we went out into the country, novel, it some way seemed to fit the aehaeli ethers caa't make tha team- Robert had spent with Marlon Fltat (Mich.) JsaraaL automobiles, played games until din- day ner; had dinner, more games; back Hovey. hr a pat aa th In autos. Thats about all, I guess. I wlshSd all day I had gbne with Oae manItla awakeae takes a Jelt la tha Back t back, hat He yawned and stretched hia arms you. I finally remarked. ethers. awakes Marlon would have missed a treat. above his head, Perhaps you had a better time wilt) "Why, that isnt telling me auiythlng phreletaae etalai that gartle will than if I had gone. at all! What did you have for dindue bleed pressure. It will ales redaea as a a childish It ner? How many were there of you? remark, unworth) tha aaaber af frlaads likely t call If of a woman who had refused to ac- they era warmed la advaaea, - Lee Aa- what time did you get in town? We had soup, cold meats of all cept her husbands invitation, and so' geledsTbaea. kinds, bread and butter, coffee and almost forced - him to take someone I satK the dinkiest little hat this cakes. A good feed and plenty of It else. afternoon!A Marlon is a good little There were about fifty of us In all "Perhaps! Did youhuy It? No. Ive gat to pick out on more "And what time did you get back? pal. She's so Interested in everyone for nty husband to refuse to how they get on, and all that. Then expensive About ( so that I cub compromise on thl and talks of interesting buy "About I?" I repeated. Why, where she's Jolly London one! MalL, did you go? It was after midnight things. And Which I do not when you came In." I could not help TWO WAYS OF STARVING TO DEATB the YWe can aav money bjr notS "It wag time to eat again, and I the remark,I neither could I hide nofelt. But if Robert thought It only decent to take Marlon bitterness he no anticed. attention. He Yes, paid to dinner, since she had been good replied the advertthlng man, swered: and you can also save money by not enough to go with me. Detroit Free Press. You are too apt to talk' shop. eating. "Where did you'go ? Gerry. I guess all women who are in "To Halley's rr CURED HER. ' I knew It was an expensive restau- business or are business women are miles from Folkestone a to. hundred Not seem to able be to They dont rant, and probably showed my aston- apt few months ago a wife lay very 111. forget It. When a man's tired or aHaving ishment, for Robert added: a clever orphan girl, up "I wanted to hear some music and discouraged, he isn't in a mood to hear the sick brought woman called th young woman see some life. That Is. 1 wanted Ma- about Mrs. Smith buying a hat, or to her and eald: I shall soon leave my- little children rlon to. She has been out very lit- Mrs. Jones returning one because it knowwasn't becoming. Dont think I am motherless. They you and lov tle since her father died. fault. I guess you cant help you, and after I am gone I want you "But she was at the picnic. I should finding and my husband to marry. think that might have sufficed for It you business women, The young woman, bursting into business wom- tear Pity you married one day. said : if liked an, you so the kind other W were Just talking about that For heavens sake, Gerry, stop much better!" I Robretorted. if But recovered. Edinburgh Th wife me and finding fault. If quizzing you didn't want to do anything your- ert heard he made no reply Just read Scotsman. his paper until dinner, time. self, don't set the- - dog in the manger rULL Tomorrow A Vacation Alone. If someone else does. I asked you By Hal first. You threw me down, and Copyright, by George Matthew Adams. Full many a demijohnHep. of booze, I ween, The dark and dusty shelves of cellars bear. Full many a bottle to be drunk unseen. CAPITAL While breathes Its fragrance on the RAISINS cloistered air. A senate committee says that to Sad news for cellar chemists: .TOR BIHS SAY i "Hermits Eat Graaa and Bark provide public utilities the capital In- Raisin crop lg very short Imports f Headline. Gone to the dogs. vestment for each inhabitant must be cannot do much to relieve th thirsty, covers and $700. That "Electric Plants Growing Fast" electricity, gas for America grows 40 per cent of the Headline. But the harvest la light. electric 'railways. worlds raisins. Before the war, the figure waa $509 Chicago la claiming th worlds largYou may hear about the short crop est gas plant and we thought It was in Instead of $700. when you ask the price of raisins a Washington. months hence. High prices of materials caused the few High price Increase. One bee stores up enough honey for, would do more to curtail the making down. are Now prices of home made alcohol than armies of ten. Thats sweet of him. going New utility ventures will require less prohibition agent Bad news lg alTh French aviator who traveled 20 to some one. capital. But how to reduce this capital ways good new miles sn hour probably got there befor put into utlllttea, in wartime, on the the bank closed. $700 basis. If you can figure that out, A bandit robbed th guests of a New Mr. Economics will be much obliged. York hotel and eacaped because they Once a debt takes the form of bonds. It FLIES thought he was an employ. loses elasticity. man In the world Is Ooverpment scientists caught ?4.-00- 9 th Theononly perfect wife once refused to live-flitook - them to north marry. your INDEMNITY Texas, dusted red pepper on them, Angeles' twenty divorce decrees turned them loose. It was learned In Los one day leaves th score untied. France fears that Germany may have that a fly often travels six miles in This Asia Minor trouble is a major a financial crash next spring. That twenty-fou- r hours and that It can one. would wreck the Indemnity program. move 00 feet a minute. No wonder BOMB DEER! Rathenau, German business giant, they're hard to swat. Deer storle told in Utah by hunters Other testa ghow that file often wants to avert the crash by stopping this year sound a good deal ilk some payment of reparations In gold and de- travel on the wind, coming ninety-fiv- e of the fish stories that annually make mile from Cuba. livering, Instead, actual goods. The best deer story, howround Thla shows terrlfio vitality. It con- their Germany cannot manufacture gold, comes from Beaver county and In ever, but she can manufacture enough ma- firm the prudence of the "Swat the told In advice received at the state A swat In time Capitol. It is to th effect that th movement. chinery and goods to meet her pay- fly bucks In that section . of the etat have ments. But such a flood of commodi- kills nine. learned the art of playing 'pfssum. sities would hurt manufacturing In Hero la the story: lled countries. A war Is a loss, no matof County Treasurer George Skinner ter who wins. over the Reaver county is still grieving shot-gnil he SHORTAGE buck recently BesverN big didn't get -while hunting In Tatter--" and Lewis mountains Georg You never miss the water till the sail were hunting together when George HORSE well runs dry. Forests will not be shot a monster buck. fat. and Velghlng. The 25 to 50 pound until their destruction on foot, fully almost appreciated at George's feet A horse that died 100 years ago has brings us a lumber famine. Our oil buck dropped dead a deer. to all was appearance an $19,000 statue of himself, erected at supply, gradually giving ou), will not and th Tattersall, however, noticed valued at its Tear worth until we Lewis a little deer move It ears and head Mfddlebury, Vt. From that horse, of be to shoot to our It have Import prepared and Immediately gasoline. famous descended the Arab stock, In England, gasoline has to be im- through the head and thua assure Its breed of Morgan horses. that time about Charles But demise. costs (0 cents a gallon. Horses, In general.'deserve a lot of ported a and an old hunter, came along and matter of) arithmetic untii Oakden, statues They first apeared on earth Just said. That deer can never get up. He s same. we the S 000,000 Hs had pay gone. Don't shoot him agsin. years ago, the size of cat Absence of natural resources in a hardly quit talking when the . deer They did mans heavy work, carried ran down his the to bounded feet, makes hill, Withon condition strange and him in war country long Journeys. after falling and getting up again still would be In the England has 125 bicycles to 100 autos. and out the horse,-wseveral clear got finally times, away. In America, a bicycle Is almost a Hie sudden return to life so astounded barbarous state. Conserve natural re- the hunters that they forgot they cog We owe horses a might debL curiosity. sources! rted guw kind to them., MODERN STORY OF HOME A CHAPTER 49. Tells Gsrry Plain Truths. Mary Mary,- whlla-otteusing alang- -, .hatl. never before been proRine. I was so astonished when she called me a "damn fool that for a moment I could not Then 1 gather my wits to answer. aid: "If I am, you needn't swear, and you might tell me In what way I am such a fool? "Why didn't you go to that picnic? Because X didnt want to. 1 would have been bored to extinction." "Wax that all the reason you stayed home? Honest Injun? "Cross my heart I dont know anyone In the store, and so, of course, knew none of their wives or sweethearts. Fo 1 told Robert to go without me. My vacation comes next week, too, and 1 hated to ask madame for a whole day off only A week before I go away. So you sent your husbahd off to spend a blissful day with another woman. No wonder I said you was a Dont say It again. But, Just the same, I cant eee why you always talk as if I ought to do things I dont want to because of Robert. He doesnt want me to go to places or do things that bore me." I "It would be better If he did. mean, you would be safer. "Safer? "Yes. No woman Is safe whose husband don't care what she does. Take little Mary's word for that. If you had gone. Robert wouldn't have asked Marian Hovey. Then they couldnt have spent that long, blissful day together. Them days ain't safe for a married man, Gerry; honest to goodness, they aint! "Nonsense! Didnt I tell you Bob urged me to go? It was only becausee he didnt want to go alone that asked Marian. It didnt cost him anyThe firm paid for thing, you see. everything." ! wonder 1? "1 wonder, did they? some of they paid for the heartachea will have the wives of them clerks later because they was too selfish to go with their husbands when they asked them? It waa real nice in them, though, to treat their clerks. What & funny girl you are! I reTalking plied a bit Impatiently. about heartaches being paid for by the Calding company. Do be sensible Mary." Ain't I sensible? I thought I waa You see, you want Robert to do good n- 1 work, don't your Of course, I do. Any wife does, I guess Well, he no man cant unless they And no man aint conIs contented. tented living like you and Bob live. That flat has turned your head," I returned, now really annoyed at Mary. Ever since she rented it she had preached the Joys of home to anyone she could get to listen to her. All the girls In the shop teased her about It Marys getting ready to take care of a husband, one of the girls mocked. - Not on your life, Lucy ; guess again. Little Brighteyes dont take care of no Mlss'Demeanor Is another vamp that keeps the courts working overtime. Columbia- - (S. C.) Record. man not unless hes sick or something not even a husband. But theres one who thing sure If 1 ever find a man can be fooled into marrying me. Ill know how to make a home for him. Kids and all, I suppose"' Lucy! What Is home "Bet your-lif- e, without a baby? Now, If you girls me by pokrassled&xsle can think you I, am goThe veil of secrecy must be rent, ing fun, you're msitaken. to keep house. Or news will be but a fog to grope In, ing to learn to cook andchance to show I may never have any A hase of gossip and rumor blent; off what I have learned, but If I do. Let In the light, there's a whole world dreaming Just watch out. Of burdens lightened, of peace secure; f I used to listen and smile at Mary Have done, have done with the whispered scheming when she talked this way. She was Which leads to Ills that we may not cure. so earnest, so honest. Once I repeated some of her nonsense to Robert, and Let. In the light;. let the work be --fashioned he said; So all things done may be understood; Mary's got the right idea. She will The world cries out In a voice Impassioned, make some man a fine wife" "Let ki the light, for the light Is good! But I. said nothing to Robert of By secret meetings and plotting quiet what she had said about his taking The woes we suffer were brought about; Marian to the picnic, nor did 1 tell Let in the light! Shall we fall to try It him what she had called me. That And plunge once more into fear and dov get in until after midnlght'heI didnt was In bed and he said he night. The light Is good and no man will fear It to was too tired talk; had had a loveWhose alms are honest, whose plans are fair;-Onl- y ly, time, and would tell me all about It the plotters, the mean of spirit. In the morning. Will shrink from under the vivid glare; These are the days that shall tell us whether CHAPTER 50. Our future fortune be weal or woe; The Picnic' Aftermath, The nations rulers are met together, in the light that the world may KNOW! Robert slept heavily until 10 o'clock and When I called him "lasybones (Copyright,, itn, N. E. A Service.) --- are, eh? replied tha corpulent man, as he continued writing. "Well, It yoil can prove that anybodys missing you, well take up the case. Birmingham HIS DIFFICULTY. . The Woman Who Loved And Earned - life .for any member of jjnob JhaLputs fodeath any guilty or innocent person. AND - lost "Real" ft , Imprisonment-fo- 1 Nom! Ho sells ga so tine." Judge. IMPERTURBABLE OFFICIAL. "Is this the detective bureau?" asked the disheveled stranger. "It is," replied a corpulent man in uniform who was seated at desk and ledger. writing In & large - - - n- takes a lone individual and strings him to the nearest tree or telephone pole. In other instances local influence saves members of mobs from the full penalty-of-the- ir acts when they are brought into court. has introduced a bill in Congressman Dyer which is congress designed to bring about this control. It ought to pass in order that the coun-- , try may free itself of this one blemish on its national character. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is backing the bill. It is heralded as the one club that can curb lynching. These are the penalties for lynching pre scribed by the Dyer bill: --- lit HIT AND RUN. -- deter-imaatio- THINK IT OVER. a certain, figure plug of ths certain figure equals It. while ene plus ths same -- figures upside down equals are the figures that, added to one, equal Answer to yesterday's: The beggar was s woman. One plus three-fourt- Father's voice Maud,- hasn't that young man started for home yetT MELOtY-- ROOK! THERE ! O Timely Topics 'T'HE QUART OF J KlklO OF V10LF WE IS, AM UE MENER GAVE US A uJ vmisPER on HAMDOUtf CASMW-WELL BUS OL CALLoN VOU FOR SOME ' A BAR Too Many Lynchings Perhaps the Salt Lake price is fair and perhaps no reductions can consistently be made. Only the dairymen actually engaged in the distribution know the possibilities of price reductions and so WOMEN "IN THE MACHINE a distinguishing characteristic of th sexes the public must trust to their, fairness in establish- to Perhaps data has been that men organize behind men and Ideas. The party and the lesser ing prices which are just to the dealer as well women behind machine Is tbs work of men and now very seldompolitical raises as the consumer. any real Issue of theory In government. But there was a time In the history of the United States when men. Just as women now. voted for what symbolised to them s scheme of right government. The present parties are Flying Flivver YOU'LL , HOOCH MID IN A 11 PRODUCERS, distributors, school officials and the board of agriculture-ir- e agreed that- - the people of Salt Lake should drink more milk. Wider use of milk as a food product was urged the conclusion of an all day conference of ' these officials, and there can be no doubt but what the recommendation is in the best interests .of the public. There is no article of food which tLL WALK TO tail vjrm YOU pooh-poohe- Salt Lake Milk Prices By Ahem HERE OUR BOARDING HOUSE 1 t ' SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 19, 192f telegram BUSINESS as-wel- -- es, slx-pol- nt W e f |