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Show THE I IEK A TIIK SALT LAKE HERALD WHY K0T SETTLE REPUBLICAN -- The lB(rrMoun(a!n nrpnbllcu (Est. Feb. 12, 1906.) Thr Snit Lake6. Herald 1870.) (Est. June 50 MAIN STREET. n PubPublished by the H. Booth. president; company lishing A. L. Thomas, vice president; Edward E. Jenkins, treasurer; Adolph Anderson, secretary. E. If. Catlloter, General MioiRer. Arthur J. Ilrowu. Editor. Herald-Republica- Associated with THE AUDIT BUREAU CIRCULATIONS. circulation Information concerning will be supplied through this association, Venetian Building, Chicago. Only Republican dally newspaper in Salt Lake City. Utah. DAILY AND SUNDAY, delivered by carLake City, one week, lii cents; rier in fcundav only, S cent?. DAILY AND SUNDAY, by mall Ona month, 7.". cents; one year, $8.00. SUNDAY by mail (in advance) One year, $2.00. THE is not responsible for any unsolicited manuscript whlchis not plainly marked "with the name and address of the sender and accompanied by stamps for return. IIEnALD-P.EPUBL.ICA- N SUNDAY. MAY 28. 1916, IT? ILLIOXS of Americans will consider the forthcoming national election as worth neither the trouble nor the expense if it does not settle, definitely and permanently, the question whether Americanism means something or nothing. Other momentous questions aro involved, but they do not even approach this chief issue in point of importance. The election ouhl to be a popular referendum, on the issues of preparedness and Americanism. As the result of it. the people themselves at the polls should indicate whether they desire a specific continuous policy of readiness for national defense, both as to the will and the ability, and whether they wish the republic to stand forth boldly as a cohesive nation with rights it dares both to claim and to maintain. Kxistinjr doubt and uncertainty should be succeeded by certainty. Middle erouml can no longer be occupied with safety. Either 1 lie American people are too proud to fight, or they are too proud to be kicked and they prefer fighfing rather than inglorious submission to injustice. Either they prefer peace at any price or they recognize the cost of peace might at some time be found prohibitive. Either they believe peace is better conserved by being willing and ready for war, or they hold that helplessness will keep them out of trouble because of sheer inability to make trouble for anybody. They must accept the one or the other of the two opposing views in the famous western couplet to the effect- that Thrice Is he armed who hath his quarrel just But four times he who gets his gun out fust since the United Statc3 must depend upon the justice of its cause to support that cause or it must be ready to champion justice by whatever measures are required. Able men arc going up and down the land forcefully presenting both sides of the issue. Neither angle of the question wants for able exponents or for arguments, real and specious, to support it. The leaders on each side have been heard exhaustively and exhaustingly on the stump, in the forum, in the pulpit and in the columns of the newspapers and magazines. Everybody has been heard except the people themselves, the millions of Americans whose opinions really matter. Their opportunity will come in November and what they say by their ballots should be conclusive. Of the majority opinion of the Republican party, there is no uncertainty. It believes in Americanism and preparedness. It believes in an adequate army and navy that will insure peace by being prepared for war. It believes in insisting upon respect for American rights, and in being so amply able' and willing to protect those righis and enforce them that it will never be called upon to do fo because they will never be challenged. It believes in a foreign policy that will have behind it force enough to insure its success. Nor is there doubt of the Democratic position, for it has been spread in review before the country for three years. The record is clear and plain. None need mistake it. President Wilson has made it, and so completely is it accepted "by his party that ho is without opposition for renoraination ajncl it will be emphasized during the campaign as his chief recommendation for reelection. It is' the policy that is responsible for the Lusitania horror, for the Falaba, the Ancona, the Gul flight and the Sussex atrocities, for the massacres at Santa Ysabel and Columbus, for all the insults, humiliations, injustice and affronts the United States has endured. Mr. Wilson typifies the lost prestige the country has suffered, the inadequate army measure his party leaders in Congress have compelled the country to acept, the soft, sticky, sugary administration of the navy nonsense department, the wbich has encouraged the murder of Americans on the high seas, the impractical idealism that takes no account of logic or facts, the assaults upon industry that brought a prosperous nation to the verge of bankruptcy until rescued by the European conflagration, the war tax upon a people at "JVT -- - Justice Hughes is reported to have remarked to the National Arbitration and Teace Conference in 1007 that "Protection against war can best be found In the reit erated expression of that desire throughout the nations and by- convening- their representatives in frequent assemblies." However, that was nine years ago, and seven years prior to a war that began after all the nations concerned had reiterated their desire for peace. A great many persons have learned a great deal within the last two years and it would doubtless be unfair to suppose that Justice Hughes Is not numbered among them. Salt Lake employers are to be given an opportunity to prove their faith In preparedness by permitting their employees to attend the training camp without loss of pay or sacrifice of advancement. Several have doubt already acquiesced and there is no means so. more do will Preparedness that sacrifice and it should be made by both emto ployer and employee. A peopletounwilling them. lose defend their liberties deserve "When the Prodigal Son returned after wasting- his patrimony in riotous living, his the delighted and forgiving father killed new fatted calf. The Colonel, however, is a and modern version that Is quite a decided but show Improvement. If somebody towHl ao his own him the calf, he'll agree butchering. The enterprising newspaper correspondent at Chicago ivho discovered that th "Progressive party Is not altogether In a mood of meek and lowly acquiescence" should run to earth the nebulous rumor that a national convention or two is to be held In that city next week. These little matters ought to be settled as quickly as possible. in favor of Henry Ford's announcement an will bo a dollar hour a day at more Impressive after Henry inaugurates it In hte Detroit factories. However, It is regarded as demonstrating beyond all possibility of a doubt his entire fitness for the presidency. t General Pershing has been forbidden to discuss withdrawal of the American troops when he meetsthe Mexican conferees, which Is our idea of the height of superfluity. The American soldier does not discuss withdrawal, nor does he think of iL He leaves that to his civilian superiors. Captain Boy-E- d was decorated long before the Kateer decided to honor him with the Order of the Hed Eagle, third clas, with swords. The captain laft the United States with something pinned on him that looked amazingly like a can. Although an addition of 20.000 men to the regular army was authorized two months ago, only efght thousand of them have been secured. Everybody is for preparedness, but prefers that the other fellow do the soldiering. Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo should spend today quietly pondering the verdict of the jury which acquitted the Illggs bank officials of the charge of perjury. There is an Inference there for him he will find It difficult to escape. - six-ho- - ur A Frankfort - on - the - Main newspaper which referred to the recent food riots there was suspended for two months. They certainly order these things well acros3 the watr. The office boy who tricked J. P. Morgan & Co. out of ten thousand dollars is entirely too bright to be an office boy. A lot of grown men have tried the same task and failed. As between preparedness and patriotism on the one side, end pork and pickings on the other. Congress has decided for the latter, being guided thereto by a discerning sense of smell. The jury which trlM Dr. Arthur Warren "Waite having decided he H a murderer, it - is now unanimous. The decision that there shall be no parrot in the suffrage parade in Chicago on June 7 was probably made out of consideration for the parrot. Too much competition. President Taft of th League to Enforce Peace counsels h?s associates against attempting too much. Mr. Taft is by way of being an authority on that subject. Any who doubt that there are good bandits in Mexico are respectfully invited, to consider the cae of Candelario Cervantes, lie. It should be remarked, H dead. Although there i excellent authority for rrniarkir.' that, while speech l silver, golden, thrre i such n thing as overdoing it. Boy, page Justice Hughes! Colonel floosvflt has been assured by the Author's league that it is for him for How these wrltin fellers tlie presidency. do together. sl-I'-- - ne LD-TvK- P IT ttL I CA X, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MAY has spoken. He has earned public respect, however, largely no doubt because his conduct has been in marked contrast to that of his predecessor. He has comported himself in compliance with the traditions of his office and with the public conception of the post. It is expected of a Secretary of State that he shall be dignified, reticent, and circumspect. Mr. Lansing is all three. Among the members of the President's cabinet. Secretary Lansing came to his post with sufficient previous training and experience to insure intimate acquaintance witb the rudiments of the job. He was already an accomplished diplomat, familiar with the preTfcdents and restrictions that govern, and with the understanding that the chancelleries of the world will transact business only according to the prescribed forms. He attempted no innovations and', if he had any desire to make the world over to suit his ideas of it. he early recognized the impossibility of it. THE MOTIVES OF VILLA of the motives PABLO LOPEZ' story Villa to the Santa Ysabel and Columbus massacres evidences the loyalty which this master bandit was able to arouse and to maintain in his followers. While the world sees in him only a murderer incited to bloody deeds by disappointed ambition, his chief lieutenant believes him a patriot actuated solely by love of country. it is impossible to credit Villa with such ignorance of the power of the United States as Lopez describes, although the course of our government has been such as to encourage him in it. For the past few years Villa has been in contact with many Americans. He has visited north of the border on numerous occasions. He has associated with traveled, educated members of hi3 own race who must have brought some enlightenment to his ignorance. The remark of Lopez that Villa " wanted to make some attempt to get intervention from the gringoes before they were ready" confirms the reports that have come from the bandit himself. His raid across the border was for that purpose and probably would never have occurred had it not been plain the wholesale murders at Santa Ysabel were not having the desired effect. If he was convinced ''the United States was too cowardly" to do 'anything, it must be admitted he, has been encouraged in that belief by, the evasive, vacillating policy of the administration. prompted . self-respecti- ng FANNING THE DIVINE PARKS is but a synonym for INITIATIVE the naturalness .'Spontaneous a generous Creator implanted in the breast of every normal being. Its development is tho dut3 of the individual, and of the influences which environ him during his formative years. Its repression is a crime against the individual and against society, for it deprives the human unit of his mainspring of efficiency and reduces him to a machine-lik- e monotony that detracts from, if it docs not utterly destroy, his usefulness. Initiative is not necessarily genius, but genius is invariably initiative. Genius is a variation from the daily path that the millions have trod and, although genius is in the last analysis only an infinite capacity for taking pains, the power of initiative must be one of its component parts, for genius moves nowhere unless behind it is original thought along lines that the generations before have left undeveloped. Genius impels its possessor into unexplored fields where lie the rewards of usefulness and honoro, to the individual as well as to the race. Initiative is glowing with living flame when the youth turns his back at last upon the schoolroom and enters the school of life, or it is repressed, discouraged, and suffering the palsy that comes from disuse. Upon the teacher and the system lies the responsibility. The wise teacher encourages initiative and submits tolerantly to resultant vagaries. The foolish teacher prescribes and insists upon the routine that kills initiative. AN EXAMPLE AND A WARNING Reis little likelihood that the Texas publican candidate should typify the beliefs THERE guardsmen who refused to reof the Republican party. He should be an call to the for service on the Mexican spond uncompromising champion of Americanism border be will severely punished even if and preparedness of whose position there found by the proposed will be no doubt and of whose intention and But theguilty is of a character the govincident ability to write his policies into legislation ernment cannot afford to ignore. To do there will also be no uncertainty. Platforms so might seriously prejudice the future emwill mean little, or nothing, for that of each of the guard in situations more of the dominant parties will strike a pa- ployment than critical that on the border. triotic note equally strong. This is not a Both law and logic authorize the Presiyear for taking anybody on trust. dent to summon the guardsmen of the several states to duty whenever in his judgment MADNESS WITH A METHOD He enjoys the power beARTHUR WARREN WAITE 'S they arc needed. DR. will most observers as cause the statute gives it to him, and the court-martia- v.-n- .? cold-blood- ed AN EFFICIENT CABINETEER there existed any danger that SecreIFtary Lansing might retire the country will fed that a menace has been averted with the announcement that he will retain bis post. His department is among the few that ha-- , shown anv routine efficiency, since he cannot properly be held resjwmsi-bl- e for the policy he phrases in official 191(5. G E I Former Resident Iteturns. Fred G. Barker, who acted as secretary to former Chief of Police C. W. Shores, returned yesterday ! i from Idaho, where he was engaged in work connected with transferring the management of the irrigation project at Downey from eastern capitalists to farmers in that district. Mr. Barker will probably take a position with the Utah Copper company and locate here permanently. While trying to Arreted On Suspicion. robe for 23 cents sell a valuable automobile second-hand store at a Commercial street a last night, Robert Smith, laborer, was arrested cn suspicion by Patrolman William Leaver. Twin at 31eFarlone Home. Twins were born to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur McFarlane, 350 Harrison avenue. Mr. McFarlane is the leader of the Waterloo ward choir and Democratic county committeeman from the First municipal precinct. The Society to in new in meet its headquarters society will evening to disthe K. of F. hall on Friday of the cuss the adoption of the new society. Mn. llntn .May Fox Cioew East. Mrs. Ruth May Fox left at noon for New York, where she will attend the meeting of the directors of the National Council cf Women. Itoad Warrants Iiwued. Lincoln G. Kelly, state auditor, made out warrants for 800 good roads builders in practically every coun of the state. They are in payment for ly work which has been performed on state roads in Utah during the present month. The warrants, said Mr. Kelly, will aggregate nvle l.n All-Briti- sh by-la- about $15,000. DEATH ROLL NE l. right because the national government .has been extending aid to the militia of the various commonwealths with the understanding that these citizens soldiery should be available for duty when required. Since it seems necessary to make an example of a few that others may observe and be warned, the Texas incident is excellent material for the purpose. There was strong opposition to substituting the national guard for the federal volunteer system proposed by Secretary Garrison and that opposition has by no means disappeared. It is willing to be convinced ami to abandon the contest, but incidents like that occurrin3 'in Texas are scarcely the handmaidens of conviction. Mr. Garrison felt so certain the national guard could never become an efficient fiahl-in- g machine that he resigned his post rather than accept the opposing view. It is not difficult to fancy his emotions when he learned what has happened in Texas. Justice Hughes might reflect upon the casp of the bird who could sing- but would not. and was subsequently compelled to , s in sr. MODEL I1ILL: Section 9. That the undertaker, or req-ulre- and adsignature supply them, over the He shall then predress of his informant. sent the certificate to the attending physician, if any, or to the health officer or coroner, as directed by the local registrar, for the medical certificate of the cause of death and other particulars necessary to complete the record, as specified in sections 7 and 8. And he shall then state the facts of required relative to the date and place and burial or removal, over his signature, comwith his address. and present the In pleted certificate to the local registrar order to obtain a permit for burial, removal or other disposition of the body. The undertaker Khali deliver the burial permit to the person in charge of the place of burial, before interring- or otherwise disposing of the body; or shall attach the removal permit to the box containing the corpse, when shipped by any transportation company; said permit to accompany the corpse to Its destination, where. If within tneto state oftne per, it shall be delivered enn In rhorcra f tha vilaPA f Till rialEvery person, firm, or a corporation sellrecord showing ing a casket, shall keep e the name of the purchaser, purchaser's address, name of deceased, age, date of death, and place of death of deceased, which record shall be open to inspection of the state registrar at all times. On tho first Ct - post-offic- LOCA1 MllS. DAVID .1. THE WEATHER j Fit V 51 AX. i Tit-Hit- s. ! t Following an operation Mrs. Edith Irene 30 years of age, wife of David J. Fryman, 47 S. Pueblo street, died yesterday Fryman. today and Monday, not much change at a local hospital. Mr. fcFryman was an em- FAIR temperature, is the weather forecast Coke company, and ployee of the Utah Gas with Mrs. Fryman came to Salt Lake from for Utah Issued last night by the local office. Kiosk readings: 8 a. ni., 40; noon, 69; Denver about five years ago. 6 p. m., 67; midnight, 52. The following comparative data for Salt nephi p. 1IOLDRV. an Lake for years Nephl P. Holden, for twenty-fiv- e Saturday Is furnished by the employee of the Utah Light & Railway comUnited States department weather bureau. pany, died yesterday at the family home, 518 of agriculture: S. Sixth East street, aged 60 years. He was TEMPERATURE. Degrees.6 born in Utah, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Highest 91 llolden. Two sons. Frank and Rex Holden, Highest in this month since 1874.,.. 42 both of Bingham, and two daughters, Mrs. Lowest Saturday evening 25 George Peterson of Lark, Utah, and Gertrude Lowest this month since 1S74 '54 Holden of this cits' survive Mr. Holden. Mean temperature 62 Normal M ATTIIHW XV. MANSFIELD. TerCent. HUMIDITY. 62 Following an illness of several years from Relative humidity at 6 a. m 32 cancer of the stomach Matthew W. Mans- Relative humidity 6 p. m. at yesInches. PRECIPITATION. field, attorney and native of223Utah, died Tem0 N. West Total for the 24 hours ending at 6 p. m. terday at the family home, 61 in St. Total for this month ple street. Mr. Mansfield was born 1.14 years Total since January 1 to date George,. Washington county, fifty-fou- r ALMANAC. ago. He moved to Wayne county when a Sun Tises 5 a. m.; sun sets 7.50 p. m.. young man and took an active part in comof May 2S, 1916. munity and church work, acting as bishop He Thurber ward for a number of years. represented Wayne county In the State LegCONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY islature for two terms. Mr. Mansfield came to Salt Lake nine SENATE. years ago and tcok up the practice of law of rivers and harconsideration Resumed to him his from health compelled retire until bill. bors active practice. Tostoffice committee began inquiry into In addition to his widow Annie Bastian lobby against proposed change in sysMansfield, he is survived by the following alleged tem of Mansrailway mail pay. and children: Kdward, Ephraim Pearl Recessed at 5.20 p. m. to 11 a. m. Monday. field Chappell. A brother, Ephraim Mansfield, lives at Beaver. HOUSE, bill. Took up navy FOREIGN Adjourned at 6.12 p. m. to 11 a. m. Monday. MADAMr? DIEULAFOY, PARIS. au27. Mme. Jane Dieulafoy, Paris, May CLEARING HOUSE. thor, explorer, chevalier of the Legion of $1,160,503.20; same Saturday's Honor, and possessor of the unique privilege day last year, clearings, Week's clearings, $845,053.57. wearaccorded by the French government of same week last year, $5,277,"- $7,502,403.53; C ing male apparel,e is dead. OOo.uo. In the sixty-fivyears of her' life' Mme. Dieufaloy passed through experiences which BIRTHS. caused her to be regarded as one of the most Abel J. Flint, 34C N. Third West, boy. remarkable women in France. She was born Phillip Mortimer Purdy, 470 S. First in Toulouse and was not yet out of her 'teens West, boy. when she married Marcel Auguste Dieulafoy, Horace Burr Jones, 411 B. and S. court, a young engineer. He went to the front durn war and took his boy. ' Oluf J. Carlson. 441 Carlson street, boy. ing thewithFranco-Prussiahim. She disguised herself as a bride Edward M. Waltenmeyer, L. D. S. hosman in the regulation French uniform and pital, girl. her husband's side. Charles W. Child, rear 151 S. Seventh fought by'SOs M. Dieulafoy was commissioned East, girl. In the to go to Asia for archaeological research. Abraham Dalebout, 1470 S. Seventh East, Mme. Dieulafoy accompanied him and .spent girl. several years in Chaldea and Persia. They Robert Hans Sorensen, rear 1138 S. discovered the ruins of Palace of Darius and Eighth Wrest, boy. Artaxerxes. Arthur John Kelly, 673 E. Twelfth South, boy. IHJILDINU PERMITS. ' Ernest Baxter Perry, 15 Elizabeth place, Thirty-on- e building permits were issued boy.Edward B. Bowers, 2130 S. Seventh East, last week by the city building Inspector, callboy. for construction Permits $82,035. costing ing James Henry Brady, 328 W. First South, were issuel as follows: y girl. J. Peterson, 573 Wall street, John W'endell, 619 Concord, boy. $ 2,000 brick Chris Paul Berkley, 658 Park street, girL Sz. Rlchert, 1172 SunnyMcConaughy Worsdal Bennett, 868 E. Twenty-sevent- h Charles y brick 2,000 side, South street,. girl. Emilyy E. Squires, 746 E. Sixth South, . brick 2,000 SCHOOLS. IX HEALTH Emilyy E. Squires, 750 E. Sixth South, of the school nurses The report brick 2,000 of the weekly of for the week health board city Emilyy E. Squires, 751 E. Sixth South, is as follows: Friday ending '. . brick 2,000 Visits to schools 96 Mrs. Pitts. 176 XV. North Temple, brick 658 visited Rooms 900 addition 1,135 Number examined y P. Ricourt, 822 W. Fourth North, 21,758 Number Inspected 500 frame SO Permits refused J. D. McDonald, 159 W. Third South,S7 Excluded 200 brick alteration 24 to medical Referred inspector y B. L. Corum, 219 Rio Grande, 4 taken Cultures . brick '4,000 Minor dressings 44 John R. Smith, 1339 E. Twelfth South, . 63 Horn'e visits y brick 4,000 Parents to schools 27 y E. Berg. 80S Dalton. brick.. 2,000 Causes for Exclusions. Clayton Investment company, 50 L 1 500 Scabies First South, brick alterations 9 2 . E. Utah State National bank, Impetigo 3 .' . . lice 100 Head First South, brick vault 22 itis Tonsil S. 1379 S.. Thirteenth Ashton, George 15 y brick 4,500 Eye infection East, 31 Unclassified Ashton Improvement company, 1420 5 measles y brick Suspected Fifteenth East, 3,000 4 mumps. E. R. Hatfield, rear 39 J E. Second Suspected 2 100 Suspected whooping cough South, brick alteration 1 diphtheria" Suspected E. J. Keveren, 321 E. Edith avenue, 1 . brick 3,000 Suspected chicken pox Obtained. 551 E. Sixth South, and Snrgrleal Treatment William J. Schaaf, 5 35 Adenoids frame garage 5 J. C. Lynch. 1167 E. South Temple, tonsils Enlarged 6 brick addition vision 3,000 Defective E. C Davies, S55iS. Seventh East, frame garage 100 'HEAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. E. First Hollywood apartments, 234 Thomas Hobday et al. to Tracy Loan & 1,000 South, brick alteration . . . Trust company, part of lot 5, block 13, 10 P. Biesinger, 812 E. Twelfth South, F plat y brick 2,000 C. A. Christensen et al. te Joseph D. Edward Laird, 818 E. Twelfth. South, section 29, township Millerberg, part1 west y brick '. 1500 2,000 2 south, range William Dunkerly and "wife, 277 E. to al. et Richards, F. H. Stayner Thorup brick apart10 Sixth South, three-stor- y lot 3. block 3, plat B part ments 23,000 Stayner Richards et al. to N. J. Carter, 507 S. Twelfth East, Ilalloran-Judg10 part lot 3. block 3, plat B brick . . . 4,000 Arthur A. Cowley to Nina Oberg, lot 26, y Regina Amott, 569 Chicago, part lot 25, block 1, Chicago addition.. 1150 brick 1,500 Robert Hazen to Sam B. Hazen, lots 1 .lames Lipman, 1067 E. South Temple, block 2, Desky's Fourth addition brick alteration $00 George W. Smith et al. to George Petery G. M. Timms, 166 G street, e son, part lot 4, block 16, brick 2.000 10 A plat y I reston Nibley, 1369 Butler, Charles J. Landh to Joseph Hanak, part brick 2S00 7,000 lot 1. block 91, plat D y R. C. Green, 261' Hubbard avenue, Ada M. Surbaugh, to Charles C. Dey, 10 brick 2,000 Lucky Boy lode mining claim Mr. Black, 34 I street, brick alteraJohn Hannay et al. to Robert Hannay, 5 tion SQO part lot 3, block 42," plat B Susan Davis et al. to Robert Hannay, Total , oj $$2,035 part let 3, block 42, plat B . ' ; C " - one-stor- one-stor- one-stor- one-stor- one-stor- - two-stor- -- one-stor- one-stor- 17-1- two-stor- one-stor- . .. ." one-stor- one-stor- e, one-stor- y one-stor- 3-- one-stor- Ten-acr- two-stor- communications. Election Agent "That va a good long Mr. Lansing has occupied public atten- rpeech our candidate 'made on the agricultion but little since he succeeded to his im tural question, wasn't it T' Farmer Plow.son "Oh, ay, it wasn't bad; portant post, fof he has only been the but a couple o' nights' pood rain ud 'a' done mouthpiece through whom the President a sight more good." per- son acting as undertaker, shall file the certificate of death with the local registrar of the district in which the death occurred and obtain a burial or removal permit prior to any disposition of the body. He shall obtain the personal and statistical particulars from the person best qualified to - second h::st. ALOGY (Continued.) one-stor- peace. As Mr. Wilson typifies the above, the impress being amazingly replete with method. There none of the aimlessnes in his fiendish career that characterizes the homicidal paranoiac who knows perfectly well what he wants to do but is hazily uncertain whv he does it. He had a definite goal in mind when he married the only daughter of a very rich man, when he killed both her parents, when lie sought to murder her wealthy aunt, and to remove other obstacles that fetood between him and the enjoyment of the fortune he coveted. If this young man, who had the nerve to kill but lacks enough of it to face bravely the just consequences of his acts, is insane, the twilight zone between sanity and lunacy is even more restricted than the alienists suppose. CITY BREVITIES 128, one-stor- 5, day of each month the person, firm, or cor- - JJ poration, selling caskets, shall "report to the I state registrar each sale for the preceding month, on a blank provided for that purpose; I provided, however, that no person, firm un-or- J caskets to dealers or corporation selling dcrtakers only-- shall be required to keep such J record, nor shall such report be required J from undertakers when they have direct j charge of the disposition ot a dead body. Every person, firm or corporation selling J a casket at retail, and not having charge of the disposition of the body, shall inclose j within the casket a notice furnished by the state registrar, calling attention to the re- - )i quirementg of the law, a blank certificate of death, and the rules and regulations of the J state board of health concerning the burial or other disposition of a, dead body. section 10 That if the interment, or otner L disposition of the body is to be made within the staite, the wording' of the ourjal or re- moval permit may be limited to a statement J bv the registrar, and over his signature, that J a satisfactory certificate of death having j been filed with him, as required by law, per- - j mission ig granted to inter, remove, or dis- pose otherwise of the body, stating the name, age, sex, cause of death, and otner necessary details upon the form prescribed by the state registrar. 11 Section That no person in charge of any premises on which interments are made, shall inter or permit the interment or other disposition of any body unless it is accompanied by a burial, removal or transit permit, as herein provided. And such person shall indorse upon the permit the date of interment, over hissosignature, and shall return all permits indorsedto the local ten days from registrar of his district within the date of Interment, or within the time fixed by the local board of health. He shall bodies interred or otherkeep a record of all wise disposed of on the premises under his charge, in each case stating the name of each deceased person, place of death, date of burial or disposal, and name and address of the undertaker; which record shall at all times be open to official inspection; provided, that tho undertaker or person acting- as such, when in a cemetery or burial a body burying .. .. . U 11 A1AWMA M..nx.. ilia. H in iu puaii jjcioun in giuunu sign the burial or removal permit, giving the date of burial, and shall write across the face No person in I of the permit the words or file burial the removal per- - j and charge," mit within ten days with the registrar of I the district in which the cemetery Is lo- cated. Section 12. That the birth of each and J every child born in this state shall be reg- - j istered as hereinafter provided. Section 13. That within ten days after j the date of each birth, fjhere shall be filed i with local registrar of thte district in which j the birth occurred, a certificate of such birth, J which certificate shall be upon the form J adopted by the state board of health with a t view of procuring a full and accurate report with respect to each item of information enu- meratefi In section 14 of this act. In each ease where a physician midwife,- ! or person acting midwife, wag in attendance tipon the birth, it shall be the duty of I such physician, midwife, or person acting as j midwife, to file in accordance, herewith the J J certificate herein contemplated. In each case where there was no phy- - J sician, midwife, or person acting as midwife, j in attendance upon the birth, it snail bethe duty of the father or mother of the child, tho householder or owner of the premises where the birth occurred, or the manager or superintendent of the public or private Institution where the birth occurred, each In the order named, within ten days after the date of such birth, to report to the local registrar the fact of such birth. In such case and In case the physician, midwife, or person acting as "midwife, in attendance upon the birth Is unable, by diligent inquiry, to obtain any Item or Items of information contemplated in section 14 of this act, it shall then be the duty1 of the local registrar to secure from the. person so reporting, or from any other person having the required knowledge, such information as will enable him to prepare the certificate of birth herein contemplated, and it shall be the duty of the person reporting the birth or who may be interrogated in relation thereto, to answyer correctly and to the best of his knowledge all questions put to him by the local registrar which may be calculated to elicit any information needed to make a complete record of the birth as contemplated by said section 14, and It shall be the duty of the Informant as to any statement made In accordance herewith, to veriby his signature, when refy such statement do so by the local registrar. quested to 14. That the certificate of birth, Section shall contain the following items, which ar hereby declared necessary for the legal, local, and sanitary purposes subserved by registration records: (1) Place of birth, including state, county, township or town, village or city. If in a city, the, ward, street and bouse number; if in a hospital or other institution, the name I of the same to be given, instead of the street and house number (2) Full name of child. If the child dies without a name, before the certificate is filed, enter the words "Died unnamed." If the living1 child has not yet been named at the date of filing certificate of birth, the space for "full name of child" is to be left blank, to be filled out subsequently bj' a supple- - I! mental report, as hereinafter provided. (3) Sex of child. (4) Whether a twin, triplet, or other plu- - i ral birth. A separate certificate shall be re- - Jf quired for each child in case of plural births, (5 For plural births, number or each in . order of birth. (6) Whether legitimate or illegitimate. ( (7) Date of birth, including the year, I month and day. (8) Full name of father. (9) Residence, .of father. I (10) Color or race of father. of in father (11) Age at last birthday, J years. (12) Birthplace of father; at least state ! or foreign country, if known. (13) Occupation of father. The occupa- tion to be reported if engaged In any remu- - j nerative employment, with the statement of (a) trade, profession, or particular kind of J work; (b) general nature of industry, busi- - j ness or establishment in which employed (or employer.) (14) Maiden name of mother. j j (15) Residence of mother. ' J (16) Color or race of mother. (17) Age of mother at last birtiidas', in years. (18) Birthplace of mother; at least state J J or foreign country, if known. (19) Occupation of mother. The occu- - f pa tion to be reported If engaged in any re- i munerative employment, with the statement of (a) trade, profession, or particular kind of work. (b) general nature of industry, Dusiness or estaDiisnment in which employed I (or employer) (20) Number of children norn to this ! mother, including present birth. (21) Number of children of this mother i , living. (22) The certification of attending phy- sician or midwife as to attendance at birta, j including statement of year, month, ' day (as ! given in item 7), and hour of birth. and whether the child was born alive or stillborn. I This certification shall be signed by the at- tending physician or midwife, with date of signature and address; if there is not phy- sician or midwife in attendance, then by the father or mother of the child, householder, owner of .the premises, or manager or super- intendent of public or private institution where the birth occurred, or other competent person, whose duty it' shall be to notify the local registrar of such' birth, as required by section 13 of this act. (23) Exact date of filing, in office of lo- - J cal registrar, attested by his ffici.il signa- - f ture, and registered number of birth, asfi - .1 1 I tua-igc-- , S , a-- s , . . , - 4 ; - - (To be Concluded.) |