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Show f THE SALT LAKE ffilBUNE, TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 22, 1920. -- akf gritsunft gjt Jjalt Horn In by ImtiM Sn-rIt lake TrtbiiM PublUhtn Pnnuieey. TKKM8 0 SUBSCRIPTIOHl . -- g bbU Ptfljr md Sunday, Pati tod Sunday, w year . f . fcniWkl7 Tribnna, frnt r Tba Tribune la aft tala I rvary tm portaat city Reader fcay artnto to tba Lnited Staley agenta Ip any city by tclcpboaisg Tba Trlbunt la ft member pf the Aaaoelatad Prcaa. Tha Aaaodatad Rrca fa xclnalral w titled ta the nap for rapubUcatton of all waft-((a dlapatcbp credited ta It or wttbaatbriaa local ftawft to this ptperi and till published bcralPe , ba Trttmaa la I aacmbar of tha Aodit Buraa of Circulation. Information coocernlm Tba tint 'a circulation will be tnppltat by tba Audit Ruraaa of Circulation, Vcwcilaa bldf.. Chicago. Tba 8. C. Bcckwitb special Agency, Pole caat- ara adrartlslng agaDt, world bWg., Naw-Tor-il Triton bldg , Chicago; Poet DUpatch bldg. Bt. Louia; Ford bldg , Detroit, Mlcb.1 Bryal bldg , Kaneaa City, bfp. Tba Trib-ne- a, boatncaa commonicfttlofte Addraaa Sait Lake City, Telephone Wasatch 190, When yen fail to get your Tribiin ttfepftoftj tb efty circulation department before 10 a cloci a. a. and a copy will be pent yon by meaaaager, tub, Entered at tba poatoffica at Salt Lata City a second claaft matter. TTf iiun'o Tuesday, June 22, 1920. MR. HAWLEYS ELECTION. The election, of Mr. Curtis B. Hawley as president of the Commercial club will be learned with pleasure by : the people of , Salt Lake. Although he bas already eehieved notable business success, Mr. Hawley is still a ideals, young man and filled with are that and optimism aspirations characteristic of younger manhood, but which too frequently are forgotten or lost in the passing of the years. The presidency of the Commercial club is not a sinecure; it is, indeed, a difficult position, demanding great vision and the highest executive capacity, and a degree of tact which might fit Its possessor for aa ambassucceeds a Mr. Hawley sadorship. long line of distinguished men in this position, the latest of whom, Mr. Lester IX Freed, has just completed a year of remarkable achievement for the club and for the state. te JAPANESE NAVY. The little brows men of Nippon are not saying much these days, but they are working- with feverish activity. They are building battleships and battle cruisers and other vessels of war, and there are no tiresome debates in parliament over the necessity of the country being prepared for whatever, may happen in the future. 'While the United Stages is indifferent to the value of scout cruisers, the Japanese are building them in numbers. Their proof these gram calls for twenty-fiv- e skips in 1924. . Five vessels are com' plete, eight are on the shocks and more will be laid down presently. All Japanese warships are characterized by their large cruising radius. In future wars Japan means to take the offensive as the best means of defense. This carries the scene of battle far from Japanese shores and in this way th offensive gives greater security than any other form of warfare. The plan of operation is to conduct a dashing offensive with all the naval power she can muster and to leave the problems of homo defense to the ships of the second line. Her navy is at present carrying out this plan. The battle fleet, consisting of four dreadnoughts carrying twelve 14 inch guns, one dreadnought carrying twelve 12 inch guns hnd four battle .cruisers of twenty-seve- n knots speed carrying ' guns, ig absolutely free eight of the problems of borne defense. Five scout cruisers and all of the destroyers In the navy of over 1000 tons are with this 'fleet. Compare this force with the United States Pacific fleet, consisting of five dreadnoughts armed with twelve guns and two old, worn out, lame duck scont cruisers that ean steam only about twenty-fou- r knots an hour. Home defense Is maintained by submarines, destroyer? and aircraft. For Japan this is nn ideal arrangements The submarine is in its element in the warm waters of the Japanese islands and when the. submarine is aided and protected by the destroyer it becomes doubly dangerous. A number of destroyers between 500 tons and 1000 tons are building for this Information concerning the purpose. Japanese submarines is noticeable because of its absence, but it is learned on very good authority that nearly two hundred boats are to be built by Japan and that the larger classes are to be superior to the British "K" boats. The very large boats will be experiments wtih the submarine battleship, h and mounting guns. Japan has been somewhat backward in the air. This is not a result of national disregard of this potent military factor, bnt lather from her isolated position and her remote theater of operations in the war. At present both the army and navy are experimenting with and Wilding aircraft. The imperial diet bas made vast sums avaflable for this purpose. An aircraft carrier, tyed after the British ahips of that kind, baa been laid down by the navy to keep the battle fleet supplied with an air foree in any theater of operations. , If there is to be no league of nations, or if this country finally decides to hold aloof, the building of great fleets will continue as a matter of course. But even if all the nations, including the United States, agree to keep the peace, Japan, by reason of her present activity in the Skipbuild-inline,, will have a powerful array of war vessel whoa the time eome to ' cease each Work.-JJapa- a inferior to - h h g X this country upon the high seas and have no fears for the future; At the same time we should not forget that ubpreparednesl for war may coal us hundreds of thousands of lives and billion of dollars. CHANGES SINCE 1916 While it is a practical certainty that there will bo a third pa rty in thS Held, it is not believed it will prove strong enough to threw She election into the honse of representative! But Sve should the unexpected happen, Harding would be elected just the same; si the Bepuhli&ns control the delegations from twenty-ninttatec; Beam-cratseventeen, with twe divided poWould lose tbe Coolidge litically. vice presidency, however, the constitution providing that the senate shall select its own presiding officer. Of the 531 electoral votel four years ago,. Wilson carried 277, California going f of him by a small plurality and thus electing him. Hughes received 254, not including Ohio. Mr. Hardings own state. Of the states which Voted for Wilson in 1919 the following Since that time have gone Republican: California, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Ohio, Washington and Wyoming casting 113 votes in the electoral college. Of the Hughes state! the Democrats have carried New York and New Jersty, easting 59 vote! Governor Smith of New York and Governor Edwards were elected bfi local issues, both States being normally Republican. Kentucky is always debatable ground and the Blue Grass Republicans are confident they can carry it this year. Missouri is in the doubtful column, but, owing to factional fights in the Democratic party, Harding and Coolidge have better than k even chance Of securing tbe electoral votes. Th signs should he very ento the manager of the couraging Harding campaign. e s, pohehere by n highly efficient police system. . Fifty years ago there were on the islands 2,500,000 fur seals. Under the present system ef protection it it entirely practicable to raise their number again to that point within the neat quarter of a Century, Killing, under proper regulations, does not deplete the seal herd in the slightest degree, because tha hnimals slain are the "bachelors," of which there is always a large surplus This will be more readily understood when it i explained that a bull seal on the "hauling grounds" has an SvSrggs of thirty Wives. No bachelor leal has a chance to get oven Oh Wife Until he hie gTown big enough and strong enough to ine vade the rookery and in battle aa aged and enfeebled "harem chief? Then he takes as many wives as he can get and guard, and hi duties As hetd of a family then begin , over-som- WOMEN HELD BACK. Until the year 1S72 only one little girl in thl whole Japanese empire got A chance to receive learning such as the boyi get there. The story of this little girl is quite interesting. She was the. only girl in the echool which she attended. Everybody thought she was a bojr, like the rest. And no wonder. Her mother, who evidently had a germ of hope ioi Womankind in her Japanese heart, had dressed her little girl in boys Clothe, ao that she might be taught the things the bpys were learning and become an educated woman instead of an ignorant wife and mother, like most women in Japan. In 1862, the Presbyterian board, Which was conducting this particular school at tokio, decided to give, Japanese girls a chance and to convert the school lAto a girls seminary. All tho boy pupils were notified that they were no longer to come to that school. It was at this ttmo that the revelation of the boy-gir- l occurred. She POLICE DOGS. wrote in English os her slate, printing The training of dogs for police ser- the letters, am girl." It seemed vice has been given A great impetus incredible. Apparently she Was as in London by the startling increase of much n boy as any of the others. Bnt a Visit to her home and a talk with crime in the British capital. her mother soon established the fact The London Chronicle says that of her sex. And so she became the success has attended the use first pupil in ths new girls school, the of dogs as aids to the poliee in run- first girls seminary Japan ever had. It has ning down criminals, and prints aa in- 1873. . produced mqny others since account little of the origin teresting It ahould be stated, that of the practice of employing dogs fqr even today the educationhowever, of women in this purpose. Japan la not considered on a par with Dogs were used to assist in bring- that of men. The imperial Japanese ing the breakers of laws to justice government recently appropriated milbefore the word "poliee" was known. lions of Jen for one of the great boys In olden times dogs were used on the colleges, but not a single yea was borders of Scotland in certain districts for educating women. infested by murderers and robbers, THE MYSTERIES and a tax was laid on tbe inhabitants for maintaining the animals; also there With dreams and words we waste our time and breath. was a law in Scotland providing that To solve a mystery ion since outworn whosoever denied entrance to any of Of what, of Where we were ere we were these dogs should be treated as an born. Of what, of Where we shall be after death. accessory to the crime. The training of police dogs ealls for Each sane himself ana others wearleth. And ralneth WhatT A Action all forlorn. infinite patience intelligence and guess for all the rods to far removed from the old Idea , A learned scorn If any god attendeth what he salthl of dog breaking, which was usually to beat the animal mercilessly into the AS If a blind man, knowing not ths earth, should flx bis speculations on a start observance of a few Set rules. his kingdoms worth The modern system is A gradual AsInIf a king forgot coveting some other realm afar; wa what So, what we were ere shall be, a teaching. It is daily birth lesson until the dog become a tracker We prate and know not evaa.what we are! of criminals by hi scent, pursue esCleveland Plain Dealer. caping prisoners, missing persons, or finds suspected ones in concealment. NEVER ASKED WHY He learns fearlessly to seizs and pull A dear old gentleman noticed a workdown any aggressor whether hie mas- man walking along beside a railroad train tapping the wheels. Having ter or himself be attacked, and do and diligently nothing better to do, the old gentleman it with the least possible dimage, approached and asked: How many years have you been work-- r ceasing at once when the enemy surfor this railroad, my man? renders. r,Thlrty-elght- ," replied the workman, The popnlar eonccptioa of the po- continuing his tapping.-- 1 had many varied have suppose you lice dog is a wild, savage bruts, which experiences in your time plenty of I expect? probably accounts for the Antipathy change Ipf occupation, "No; always had this same job. Tv to 'bis use in some quarters. la point tapped tne wheels of trains for thirty-sigof fact, he is nothing of the lart years. "A long time, a very long time. And, Usually he is as gentle and frollesomA If I may say so, shows a steady character. as any other dog, but through train- And. by the way, what Is the reason for tbs wheels? Why do you do It? ing he becomes a skilled taker of tapping The man stood up, scratched his head, Tm darned- U 1 know. Boston and said: thieves, but never injures his captive, Globa. however, save it be in defense of his own life or that of his master. A WARM WELCOME. Business bad been bad with the tourTIIE FUR SEAL ing theatrical company in the last two towns they had visited. But th advance booking In the next The restoration of the fur seal as town was said to be good, and it was a source of wealth and hit skin as only this hope that held the little company together. At last, in the late hours of Sunday an article of commerce is now assured. evening, the company reached the city A report of the government on the of its hopes. Tbe manager stepped from the train seal herds of the Pribilof islands, in and gaaed ever tha railway station rail. ings. Bering sea, shows that there are now "What he exglorious sunset! claimed. on the islands 540,000 fur leal! This Garn! yelled a passing youngster, is double the Humber existing there "That s the theayter burning down! London Answers. eight years ago. From this it will be seen that the aeals will multiply rapNO RUDENESg AT ALL idly if given protection. In an underground train two persons, On February 2 of this year 9100 with that easy grace that betokens long They were dressed and dyed skins from the habit, swayed from the straps engaged In pleasant chat when a man Pribilofs were sold at auction by the sitting rose his seat to a and offered hear Whereupon one ol the straphangers government on the fit. Louis market. lady. to the other: remarked They brought an average of 141, thl Although 1 have been riding id these nearly .ten years, I have never highest price ever obtained. More trains for my seat to a lady. given than 600 buyers, representing deal- yet Thed I must pay yon hav no manners ers in ten countries, attended the sale, at all,", retorted the friend, severely. "Dont blame my manners," the other which netted the government 91,096,-833- . retorted, but the company The fact la The prices Were about 50 per I hav never had a seat Harpers Magazine. cent higher than those ruling at the last preceding sale, which WA held in DON'T DO IT had been showing her September. . The bride-eleto a party Of admiring friends. Only a few year! ago there was sc presents she got such n good idea, much trouble of an international char- "And Ive"I'm so afraid people will disgushed.. acter about the fur seals of the Fribl-lof- cover were newly married that IVe made that when when we go Jack owing to depredations of pirati- away promise tomorrow he'll treat me In pubUo cal seal huffier, that the government Just so If ha had DO thought for any one himself. thought seriously of winding Up the except friend shook her head. A middle-age- d whole business by killing all the esals he said In tones of sad wis "Don'L and my husband 'I tried that plan,Houston and sending their skin to market. dom. Post. never hot over it. Congress camo very near to taking RtAOY TO fORGET. such a step, bnt happily UHser counsel "Do you want a lawyer prevailed. After A long period of ne- to Magistrate . you gotiations the United Btate, Groat prisoner "Net particularly, tlr." Magistrate "Well, what do you proBritain. and Japan cam to an agree- pose to do about the ease?" to drop ment on the subject and the Coil herds Prisoner "Oh, Pm nlte willing it as Aar a jhM Concerned. v Lon don have since been protected against Punch. , ' "I v ht - ct s, Three Billion Sneezes By Frederic J. Haakin. time for WASHINGTON, June ll.--Tht the annual hay fever sneesefest Is approaching. g Togged In toggle to protect their eyes, with cotton filters in them noses, and with lips tightly closed against invading Irritants, the old guard of the hay fever fraternity are already preparing to do battle with the fiowere that bloom In the summer and fall Of course they know that they will b In their resolve unsuccessful not to sneeze once thla year. They know that they will soon be saying "Ids a beaudiful hording, instead of talking In their usual bell-lttones. They even foresee that their eyes will be puffed up like a frogs, and their noses will be red, and their faces In general will suggest traces of violent emotion. But they prepare to suffer With ths dignity befitting one Who is afflicted with an aristocratic ailment. The high character of hay fever Is Doctors how Universally acknowledged. Who hav studied the disease most carefully testify that it attacks only the It is a malady of distincsuperesthetlc. tion, and one which you can well afford to cultivate if you dont mind being thoroughly miserable while displaying your Superiority. When hay fever first became prevalent, about the time of the civil war, eufferers Went about qneezing and weeping and weighted down with a sense of tppearlng ridiculous. Hay fever wai then a joke and a mystery. Kow that Science takes It Seriously, ths million or mors people Who sneeze at the mention Of weeds ars coming to glory in the Idea that they are Soul apart, endowed with hypersensitive nervous g nosed ahd perilously close-fittin- ke -- high-strun- A Line o j BY B. L. T. Someone (old ue that there sre bachele buttons for the Intimate garments t gentlemen who are wedded to cam pair managers and members of the Gard, flub; but inquiry at various stores w barren of result. Apparently Not ' Sir; The Literary Digest said recently. Anybody can keep a goat, and every body ought to. Wonder if the man who said this ever waited for trains at Jefferson Junction? . J. F. B. Closed Cars Gaining Slightly changing the late Mr. Phelps immortal lay "I hope In hell his Soul may dwell Who first Invented Jefferson Junction." Increased Popularity Wife Does Cut Into One Work. (From the Marlon Republican.) To whom it may concern 8ome men advertise for fine stock, but not the case with me, 1 am looking for a wife. 1 am a lone man keeping house. I Uork every day and do not have a chance to find a wife. Any lady wishing to marry will please address me at Johnston City, XU. Very SOUTH. respectfully, W. Hunting the closed car possesses of thfe open models Advantage every for summer driving coupled with its indisputable appeal for bad weather use, accounts for the unprecedented seagain in its popularity noted this son. The Hudson and Essex' closed models for 1920 measure up to the highest Standards of fine design and workIn equipment they leave manship. be desired. Throughout, to nothing the stamp of Hudson and Essex quality noticeably aets them apart as su- the fact that v a "I dare you to reverse Mary Garden ad," postals Anonymous from Indiana. Lets see, her ad was: "Voice. Brains. Oh. dear, no. W should Personality. not think of doing such a thing! Wle submit without argument the fact M. J. Proffitt, formerly of the Great Western Sugar Co., is now in the sugar department in 'Washington. that Over Her Head. (From the Decatur,. Ind., Democrat) Notice. I could not quite understand the notice Charles L&mmlman had In Saturday in regard to not being responsible for any debt 1 should contract, for 1 have always had to keep up my own Individual expenses. .MART perior vehicles.- - e As a family car, appealing especially to women, no other models possess the charm of the sedan or coupe. Moreover, their utility for the profes-aionor business man making frequent calls is increasingly apparent In our State street showrooms we have several models for immediate delivery. Call in or telephone ,to arrange for a demonstration. LAMMIMAN. al ARISTOCRATIC AILMENT. Borne of the H. F. Vs (which stands for hay fever victim) claim to be ad delicately balanced that they lose their equilibrium completely if a stalk of ragweed Sprouts within half a mile. Others- - go them bne better by Insisting that they have had attacks of sneezing brought on by looking at ad oil painting of goldenrod and daisies fact that the It Is a exciting cause of hay fevefi is ths pollen of any of a hundred hr more plants and grasses carried about on the wind. Because the wind cannot be depended upon to carry each grain of pollen to ths right flower to promote fertilization, a great many extra grain are produced, so that some will be sure to fulfill their purpose. Thus, in the case of ragweed. It is estimated that several million grains of pollen are scattered on the wind for every grain which lands on a ragweed plant. These straying atoms of pollen sometimes travel five or six miles on the wind. They ire In the air we breathe. Ninety-nin- e people in a hundred have them iti their nasal passages, and the membrane Is efficiently proof against irritation, so that no harm Is done. But in the hundredth nose the mucous membrans is The poison enters the membrane and starts an irritation. Meanwhile the possessor of the hundredth nose Is getting wireless messages to his brain about a violent conflict In his nasal passage. He sends back an order not to surrender, but by this time ths attacking enemy Is reinforced by some more pollen is Inevitable, grains and defeat Susceptibility to hay fever la a mystery. Some people respond only to ragweed; others to the pollen of corn and rye. A great many think that goldenrod is their has shown particular Nemesis, but science that the pollen is so heavy that It cannot be blown any distanoe by the wind, and that, therefor, goldenrod can cause a hay fever spasm only when the the plant Itself. pollen is inhaled from ever allow themAs few hay feverites selves to come within thla danger zone of evil the reputation i goldenrod, plants obviously undeserved. WEED TO BLAME. Soma people are victims of hay fever from childhood. Many, however, develop the disease later, some a late as fifty years of age. One reason for this seems to be th facL just mentioned, that different people are susceptible to different plants. Thus, people whose noses would not think of having hysterics over field grasses or honeysuckle, and who are inmay vulnerable to the deadly cockle-bur- r, suddenly be laid low if they travel to a different section of the country where the air is loaded with different pollen ' poisons. to (Whether every nose is vulnerabl some pollen toxin is not yet known. It is certain that a great many people escape hay fever only because they neve happen to get within range of pollens Which would affect them. Once the malady attacks you. the doctors say that you will most likely have It every year at the same time for the next decade or so. Of course you may be able to avoid It by seeking out some weedless place, or If you know what plants srs antagonistic to your eyes and nose, you have simply to spend your summers where those particular plants are Tbe majority of H- F. Va respond violently to numerous plants. Some of them seek refuge on the high seas, or on th top of a mountain pek, in the heart ef a city, or In the depths of our few remaining virgin forest. A few resorts, notably those St high seem altitudes and on the seacoast. do wind-borto be comparatively free from New in England the pollen. Up H. F. Vs hav a retreat which they claim Is completely organized against ths disease. At th boarding houses of thla and parlors are village the dining-table- s bar of flower. Not even artificial flowers bloom here, for the power of suggestion is strode, and then, too, artificial flowers are great collectors of dust. No dancing Is showed In the hotels lest dust start someone sneezing and bring on an epidemic of kerchoos The swiftest growing weeds scarcely get their leaves above ground tn ths neighborhood before they are destroyed. A 8NEEZELE89 CITY. In this tpeilsuy treated atmosphere the convention of the bay feverites meet good deal of fun. for yearly. Thor It the delegates can set th humor Of hay exemplified In their fellow delegates. Ths msln purpose of the convention la, hotvever, serloua Talk da remedies are given and experiences are Persons supposed to be cured testify for the benefit of the test, and others immediately rise to say that they tried tbe same thing for yeara and it is a failure. There are about eighty cures on the market, ranging from the really beneficial to the dangerous. Bom of the remedies with the beet records for cure Contain enough cocaine or morphine to make drug addict of the persons taking ror this reason the hay fever them, brotherhood always advisee members to take nothing without first consulting a reliable physician. most Important development in Th treatment of bay .fever In recent years is the pollen toxin About fifteen years ago n German scientist named Dunbar Inoculated horses with th toxin from gias pollen, end from the counter-poiso- n which developed he obtained a sennn. which be found to be beneficial In preventing hay fever end In arresting Irritation la persons already suffering from It fltnec then Dunbar's experiments hav carrlad further, and toxin hav been extra-sensitiv- e. - ten or Two Hew lo tbe Line, let tha quips (all where they may. systems fevers type e The Co., Advertising, IS In Cleveland, and they say those clap should be live wires. Powers-Hous- Tha Second Post. (In reply to the suggestion that the local superintendent of the Interstate Power company get around at 1 oclock instead of 1:460 Dear Sir: Tour valued suggestion ha been removed from our suggestion box and carefully considered, the consideree standing up, sluing down, and lying down In vatjous positions, looking at tho paper right side up, upside down, from the back, sidewise and edgewise, etc. We have reached the conclusion that owing to reasons which are far above the mentality of you and other such consumers that the. local superintendent wUl report either at 1 oclock or else when he gets damned good and ready. Again thanking you for your valued suggesUon w remain, yours very truly, etc. The Botterill Automobile Co. SS-4- 2 South State Book Review One of the most useful of recent publications Is Impromptu Speeches: How to Make Them. It our sanctum doof from blowing shut.keeps Keeping the Line. (Charles Lamb, "Newspaper Thirty Tears Ago.,r) In those days every morning paper, as an essential retainer to its establishment, kept an author, who Wat bound to furnish dally a quantum of Witty paragraphs. Sixpence a joke and it was thought pretty high, too was Dan Stuarts settled remuneration in these cases. The chat of the day, scandal, but above all, drees, furnished the material. The length of no paragraph was to exceed seven lines. Shorter they might be, but they must be poignant. A fashion of flesh, or rather hose for the ladies,' luckily coming up at the juncture when we were on our probation for the place of Chief Jester to S.z paper, established our reputation in that line. We were pronounced a capital hand. the conceits Oh, which we varied upon red In ail It differences! .from the trite and obvious flower of Cytherea, to the flaming costume of the lady that has her sitThen there ting upon many waters. was the collateral topic of ankles. What an occasion to a truly chaste writer, like ourself, of touching that brink, and yet nevdb tumbling over It. of a seemingly ever approximating something "not quite posture-maste- r, proper; while, like a skillful balancing betwixt decorum and their opposites, he keeps the line, froth which a hairs breadth deviation is destruction; hovering in th confines of light and darkness, or where both seem uncertain delicacy; either; a hasy In th Play, still putting off Ills expectant auditory with "Whoop, do me no harm, good man But above all, that conceit arrided us most at that our midriff to tithe, and still tickles remember, where, allusively to the flight ultima Coelestum terras of Astraea we pronottneed in reference to stockings still that Modesty, taking her final leave of mortals, her last blush was visible In1 her ascent to the heavens by This the tract of the glowing Instep'. might be called the crowning conceit; and was esteemed tolerable writing tn , those days But the fashion of Jokes, with all other did the tranas passes away; things, sient mode which had so favored ua. In a few of friends our fair ankles The weeks began to reassum their whiteness, and left us scarce a leg to stand upon. Other female whims followed, but none, methought, so pregnant so of shrewd conceits, and mors than single meanings Gathering potato bugs is a Pastime granted to dementia patients at the Fulton state hospital in Missouri, Do you remember the story concluding, "Just for that you all get off,! pink-colore- d, prls-mat- lo Invt-tstn- ry to the spectators. A fin of S25 shall be guessed by ths umpire against the captain for each violation of this rule and the president of the league shall imQ. What should be don after an apbeen pose a similar fine against the umpire parently to drowned person has E. 8. T. land? brought who, after having been notified of a A- Is to the Th ftrat procedure get change, fail to make proper announceWater out of the lung. Roll the person ment. Play shall be suspended while anon his face, Stand astride his hips, clasp nouncement is being made. him around the waist and straighten up. Thla will cause th water to run out of tha "Defender of th Q. Who wa his mouth. Shake him slightly. Sweep Constitution J- - D. T. T" th finger Into his mouth to aee that his A. Daniel Webster was given thie"'x throat la not clogged with Band or sea- title for his reply In the senate to a weed, loosen clothing and begin artificial speech of Governor Hayne advocating ocrespiration at once. For this, lay him nullification. In Webster's speech face down on the ground, one arm flaxed curred the undying "Liberty and union, so that the forehead rests on it, ths now and forever, one and inseparable. face turned to one aide, so that air may reach it freely. Stand or kneel astride Q Did Jesus eat food after Ills resthe patient, placing hands close together, urrection? B. E. one on each side, of ths backbone at A. King James' version of th Bible about th region of th short riba about States said her Have that Christ ths waist line. Lean forward, throwing anything to eat? Th verses thatyefollow Weight on hands, applying pressure firm- say, "And they gave Him a piece of ly but gentfy. Remove pressure, pause broiled fish. And He took it and ate beabout three seconds, repeat operation un- fore them.' til patient .breathe naturally. Q. Does the term unmarried necesQ. So much 1 said about our dimln-tsarily mean that a person has never oil supply, la anything being dona married? J. SCu. A. This word may also be Used hv a L. K. about it? , A. Senator Phelan of California has person who has been married, but whose husband or wife la not living at the time, Introduced a resolution In the senate proor by one who has been divorced, viding for a United States oil corporaa a a tion, something on the order of ths shipping board, to stimulate American deQ. Are there many more Chinese and velopment of foreign oil landa. Japanese men than women in the United States D. F. H. Ao A. The proportion of Chinese women Brazil nuts grow? Q. How A. Ths Brasil nuts ar contained In to men is one to fourteen; among Japaa round, wood y pericarp or seed vessel, nese, one to seven. almost the slae of a mans head, within which there ar many of the seed or (Any reader can get the answer to any nut. These are packed so closely that question by writing The Tribune inforit would bo quite Impossible to replace mation bureau, Frederic J. Haakin, dithem, once they were removed. rector, Washington, D. C. This offer ap. to Information. The bureau strictly plies Q. Is It necessary for the captain ef cannot giva advice on legal, medical and team In a major league to notify the financial matters. It does not attempt to umpire whenever on player la substisettle domesfto troubles, nor to underP. H. J. tuted for another? take exhaustive research on any Subject A. Whenever on player la Substituted Give full ttame and addrees Snd Inclose for another, whether as batsman, base two cents for return Write your runner or fielder, th captain of the aide question plainly and postage. briefly. Ail replies making the change must announce the are sent direct to the Inquirer.) Same -- - hl - .:A j. ii.il Off Th 8 weed of Gideon, glr; In a Fort Wayne hotel I round a razor blade that had been Used as S book marker in the Gideou bihl. MIKE DE KIRA. fTL .ate "The farmers of South Huron are bolding a monster picnic In Fred Tyndalls Huron Expositor. grave. Fred will hav hard work turning over. li; j ifS Two Ways to Save Cut dawn elpehsei and increase your earnexing! When you economize Oh any item of Dethe Same aa an increase in salary. pense, posit in the Savings Account every dollar saved It begins at once by economized management. to give you added income. Application, study and persistence will make Tour Service! more valuable, bo tharyour earnings will increase.. Add the extra to the Savings Account Stay On the iob and work hard plan sacrifice SAVE. A dollar saved now will maki two in E few years. The hope of your future happiness and success lies in a Savings Account. iti - hr ix Wasatch 636. Answers to Questions. You Never Can Tell. glr: Received a bog of glace frtlits from Los Onglaxe and when the steno bit into a peartv.slt remarked to me, Shying A Oh, you're my best friend." circular object- stringed to her typewriter, Eberhard Faber? I said, How about Guess that'll get through her Dresden WAG. china. of produced fbom various combination hav pollens In some cases these toxinsseason. cured th patient for the entire Then again, no Improvement occurred, possibly because th toxin wa Comtoed of the wrong pollens for that particular case. Though the toxins have proved a valuable remedy, th-- y have not driven out hay fever as it was prophesied. In fnct, the dlseas is eaJd to ta on the Increase. It is not contagious, but the nasal condition favorable to It is sometimes inThe advance of hay fever Is herited. ascribed partly to ths fact that so many city dwsllers live in the suburb, weed usually grdw abundantly. Hay fever siatiztlcs are vague but imMembers of th Hay FSver pressive. association estimate that there ar now at least 1,000.600 hay fever sufferer lit this country, and that during ths sneezing season, averaging forty-tw- o days, they sneese on an average seventy-si- x times a day each. Equipped with these Indisputable estimates, the statisticians proceed to show that these organized sneezers produre ,105,000.000 sneeze every year. I.urklly for the United States, th sneezers hsve not' organized to the extent of agreeing to set off thSir dally sneezes at regular times The reverberation of a million simultaneous kerrhooe would Surely bring 6ur kvserapera toppling down about our ear and deafen the country wi'k their re sounding echoes. St i Loan Trust Co, Tracy "Organized io serve H)ePublic )j XtMBER FEDtRAL RttERVt Savings 06m 4X |