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Show 'THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER1 T9, alt akf " laio-- d Sett la LlU trtrr Triton yi-a- r Morelos Of Peblt-tii- cowt- nr - Tkuwk or st.sst.kU'XiON: I.Uto, Mevada Ml Wrewlas Ctmk. m Ibd Dmlr wet.... . twUh ? laitflJT, OM 1 U. M jxI ScDd7, Wit-Wtkl- y WHr Trlbtmts tM Anku m Mi in nry Uaportaat 1 tfc Laltrad Siatto. $ a a? city tetepuoftfnf UU Offtd. i liNVlMN ttotl lim TnfruM . pf IMtl in a utmiMf el tk 11m AMecUtad Mhvai Pn. UU4 ( IM Mi iuf ityaWtetliM MJ M U ttiNtlcMa erediwd to ef Mi tfcarwii lecaJ tfc d crto-toa- mm 4 nlm la tlUa papa iwbllahed teertia, tlM iribuM m Member el tM AodUMormia tbe ? at clretfiatlom lulomatfcNi oeerainf tiae'a treutetto wlU be euppUed by tbe Amtor ibicegm toareaa el t ircutattoa. Veeflaa 11m c. toeeaetth topecUl Agae. aole Yeeet ere dwtUiaf Wertd bia$ , New Trlbtme bW., toUpatchbW Mi. Loalat yerd bulf Detroit, WlrtoxryMt Ce bide, kaame City. toe. W.,H. rtkctfle Coaat repreaeotatlTe, Biamieer Lon bee yraocieco; Title Inaaraade bkiy. bklg.. SfiUlA iot lurae Taiapbeae Wuitak Mb When ym fall te get your Trlbuoe telepbeM etmtlatloe tbe etty departmeet before Id o'clock a. aw aed a copy will bo oeat you by poatolflce, et (till Uli City iaurat at wth'noeleiaw matter. Friday, Novsmbag i L 19, 1920. D'ANNUNZIO CONVERTED. - dispatches indicate that the bouffe engagement of Gabriel opera Finme is about to end. in tAnuunxiq The insurgent Italian who dissented from the peace conference realignment of Adriatie territory and marehed a ragamuffin army into Fiume and set up a provisional government, afterward a republics, defying the Italian government and cansing complications nil around, is reported to have been won over to acceptance of the Bapallo setBom - ikiialt i to the Jugo slavs. It appears that Admiral Millo, com- standing the Italian forces of eceupa tion, undertook the task of convincing d'Annunzio that bis role was being overdone and that patriotism had nothing to do with the case or the Cold was Confact that the verting real dramatics Into, rather comAt any rate, the monplace melodrama. poet and the admiral met aboard ship and, after what is described as an intensely "dramatic scene, as beflttsd dAnnunzio, the Italian genius declared that ha .would "keep his word as soldier and remain loyal to hie king." I The Italian king haa declined to martyrize dAnnunzio by ejecting him by fores and haling him to eourt martial for treason which his conduct merited. Instead, the gifted subject of his aejesty was permitted to play his role of superpatriot until it lost Its appeal DAnnunzio exit from the political stage may be marked by his reentry into the world of letters and the drama. And it is there that dAnnunzio belongs. i that there should be alive at. the end of a single any appreciable number Of game birds. The fact, however, is that the condition of game birds in the United States is perhaps better today than it has been for many yearn Only a few years, comparatively, have PLANT DISEASES. The government has compiled a table showing some of tha fosses suffered by American fanners in one year by plant diseases which might have been prevented if known Control measures had been immediately applied. f The list includes: Wheat, 112,000,000 bushels; oats, 50,000,000 bushels; corn, 80,000,000 bushels; potatoes, 50,000,000 bushels; sweet potatoes, 40,000,000 bushels; tomatoes, 185,000 tons; eot-te850,000 bales; peaches, 5,000,000 bushels; apples, 3,8,000,000 bushels. In the ease of potatoes, the loss repres sents of the total crop. t The 8 gores are for the year 1919 and are compiled from data gathered br tha bureau of plant industry. Astounding as these figures axe, there is comfort in knowing that progress la making toward victory in tha battle with plaat affections. There is constant extension of ' knowledge among and horticulturists reagriculturists specting methods for combating the blights which fall upon vegetable and fruit plants, and as this knowledge spreads so also will spread the enclose of preserving trees and stalks and vinca against infection. n, two-fifth- A NATION OF IIUNTER3. tThe chief game warden of the United States, who occupies a post attached te the biological survey of the department of agriculture, estimates that there are 7,000,000 hunters in this eountry. This calculation is based on reports of the number of game licenses iasnod in the different states. In tbs year 1919, 3,800,000 state license were sold. In addition, the chief warden estimates that 3,500,000 hunters are exempt under various state provisions. The revenue to the states rom license was approximately 84,. 00,000, all ef which, and much more besides, was expended in the administration of law for tha protection of game. The warden furthermore estimates 1 that approximately 2000 salaried state game wardens and 600 foe wardens wore employed The congressional appropriation for tha federal game warden sorties for the protection of jnlgratory birds la $142,500. t At jts recent meeting in Ottawa the international Association of Fish, Game and Conservation Commissioners adopted a resolution calling for the issuance of federal licenses for hunting mlgra-- t V7 Urdu Th recommendation called for licenses in the form of special stamps to be issued by postmasters and attached to state ii ceases.- - It Va estimated that the revenue from such a system would amount to between 81,000,000 and $2,000,000, which could be used for the protection of game. J With 7,000,000 persons engaged in hunting, ono is led at first to marvel eiapsed sine the protection ,of game birds was undertaken in earnest. Now there Is no state but haa stringent laws designed to conserve the existing sup. ply and also to increase those species whoso numbers constantly are threatened. A point to be noted in this connection is that, almost without exception, game laws are rigidly enforced, while statutes on many other subject i are quite often overlooked. Thera are persons, and there mo too, professing to bo sternly opposed to killing of any kind. They contend that shooting for sport is cruel; that the practice takes a- cowardly advantage of the victim; that It is unfair by every concept for a man armed with a weapon projecting missiles to .mal;e any animal hia prey. Doubtless, In times gone past there would have bees much merit in that Contention, bat we do not believe that it is sound today, for the protection which the laws throw about birds affords them euror sanctuary than If they wore left to carry on their owa struggle for existence in theee times when man is taking open land and timbered land-fo- r his own uses There ia a sayingf that thracathlf a wild creature always is a tragedy; that none ever diee of old age; that there are no hospitals for sick crows. The fact that 7,000,000 persons find opportunity to engage In hunting is proof that there is something for them to hunt. In turn, the presence of something to hunt in --number warranting the expenditure of millions of dollars for the privilege of hunting is proof that the things hunted are props- suf-8cie- entertaining news. There is something yell of "Stop, thief." It always engages publie attention, for th moment, at any rats. Overdone, It lose its power to interest. And just nowi the probing business ia being worked to. death. There sever was a war that was without its charges of mismanagement and abuses; probably there never will be a war without them. There will bo rascality so long as there are rascals, and that will be until the human race Is regenerated and that is not coming in onr time. Flagrant instances should be ferreted and pnaished. But if it is seriously proposed to broaden the probing business along the lines indicated by the shipping board witness We wlU, have investigators investigating the investigators, these being investigated in turn. And so on ad infinitum. . It ia too much to contemplate. A more pleasing alternative would be to aeeept a little of the rascality and let it go at that jut THE STORY OF DOUGLAS. Charles Noel Douglas, described as the most remarkable bedridden cripple in the -- world, died the other day in Kew York CityT For thirty years ha was unable to get (bout. But that physical handicap did not daunt him. His talents were employed to the betterment of the world about, him. He was the author of more than 700 lyries, a volume of poems which ran through several editioas, the author of other books, the editor of five magazines with six million readers; he wrote the different states or tterlf tfc United States and Canada have cast about wild life, safeguards which are constantly being extended, are certainly working for the perpetuation of every desirable speeies, which, without this protection, would surely become extinct through the depredation of other and stronger or fleeter species, or of their own . j Killing for the lust of killing is no a practice; indeed, only rare instances of wanton slaughter come to light. Nowadays none of the game birds brought down by hunters is wasted. On the contrary, they provide food which is consumed to the last longer morsel. CABINET TALK. Election day having passed, the correspondents who are popularly supinside" of the posed to be oa the charmed circle are busy choosing a cabinet for Senator Harding when he take the oath of office as president of the United States. As the correspondents do not agree as to personnel, it isvery evident that some of thom, if not all, are eimpiy guessing ss to what will happen oa or about Murch 4 next. The president-elec- t is rusticating at Brownsville, Texas, one of the jumping-of- f places a tha map of the United States. H isnt aaying a word about prospective cabinet members. Before he return to Marion, Ohio, he will visit the Panama Canal tone. So it will be some time before he becomes accessible to the great mass of volunteer cabinet makers. We very much doubt if his mind will be fully made up when he gets back, from hia present trip. Still, he may have selected a close personal or political friend or two, such a Harry Daugherty or Will Hays, Evan so, ho ia not likely to take the publie into his- - eonfideaco until all the members of the cabinet have been named, notified and hate sent in their acceptance. t " tured in vaudesle he produced a dozen plays written for amateurs, and he received more mail than most New York bankers. All thin was accomplished on a bed of pain, and yet Douglas was described ss the most cheerful man in all New York, He came to this eountry from England, where he was moderately successful, in 1888- - He passed through the various theatrical vicissitudes' and finally found Jkimself playing the role of a villain in a melodrama This particular villain had to make a heavy fall in his death scene, and it was not long before the actor began to feel the effects of his injuries. Finally he was etrieken with paralysis. Then ho began writing. There is a moral in this brief recital. Mere physical handicaps cannot break the spirit or put an end to asoful activities. WOULD BOOST SALARIES. According to Washington advices, a movement ia under way to increase the Congressional salary, now $7500 annually, to $10,000 or $12,500 the latter figure being favored, naturajly, ss the more attractive. Th same dispatches announce that Bepresentative Blanton of Texas intends to fight the proposal The movement for a salary increase comes at a time when spokesmen of tho incoming administration are emphasizing the necessity of trimming governmental expenses if the promises of retrenchment and lower taxation without impairing vital administrative needs are to be carried out. When the matter was under discussion in cloakrooms last session, one member said the people might object to such a big jump. He was told they would not "cuss" any more for that sum than for $10,000. Some members would like an increase to $15,000. Fof the 531 members of the house and senate combined an increase of $5000 in salary would roach tho total iij j in one year of $2,855,000. The total WARDEN MCLAUGIIRY. annual salary would bo approximately There died in Chicago the other day $7,000,000 or $1,000,000 more than the Bobert Wilsoa McClaughry, an authori- appropriation for enforcement of prohibition. ty oa criminology and as a prison warMember have complained invariably den said to have been the first to ap- about the high eost of living in Washply the "live and lot live" principle ington and the failure of tho present to prisoners. He was at one time he$d salary to keep pace. The duties of of tbo police force of the western me- members have been increasing constantly, and they think woman suffrage will tropolis. make their work harder. The present Chief McClanghry wss bora ia Founsalary was fixed about twenty years tain Green, 111., on July 22, 1839. He ago. was graduatad from Monmouth college Cabinet officers, too, havs found it In 1860, just in time to enlist as a pri- difficult to got along on $12,000 a year. vate in the One Hundred Eighteenth Several employees ia tho government Illinois infantry. Ho was muttered put department, some of them experts, have in 1885, with the rank of major. found their salaries too small and have His prison experience began in 1874, resigned. when ke was appointed warden of the Illinois state penitentiary at Joliet He ANOTHER DAY. served there until 1888, when he went Another day, and with It that brute Joy to the Pennsylvania state reformatory Or that prophetic raptura of the boy as superintendent Three yean later Whom every morning brines as glad a breath he was called to head the police deAa if it dawned upon tbs end of death! partment in Chicago, sad ho remained as chief until 1893. In that year he be- All other days have run the common course came superintendent of the Illinois And left roe at their going neither worse State reformatory. Nor better for only a little older, Duty next called him to the Hliaoie A little sadder thom; and a little colder. (tat penitentiary, and he was head of It seems as if this day might that institution from 1897 to 1898. He But this be became warden of the United State Tbs day 1 somehow always thought to tee. penitentiary at Leavenworth and his And that should coma to bless mo past term of office ended in 1913. He was tha scope the first warden at Leavenworth, and And measure of my fartheet-reaohin- g hope. durlhg his tom the construction of the was maybe, th thing that were Today, prison practically completed. Before th first day wes. shall be reHEAPING IT ON. vealed; The rlddlo of our mleerv shall bo rood. It bo clear whether the dead ore And One ef the witnesses in the shipping dead. hoard investigation, scenting , an atBefore this sun shall sink Into th west tempt at concealment of something vital earth may have fallen on hi to the full unbaring of scandals or al- Th tired breast. And Into heaven the world, bat passed -leged scandals, in tbo waging of the eway. . . . I At it another any rate, day. war, proposes that probers bo set t William Dean Howella. work to see if tbo shipping board probe AS WELL EE VICE PRE8I0ENT. i being properly conducted. 'He hints "Th king can do no wrong ueed to that the Contrary ia trus. I genaraily acoepted a true. Now tha Which opens a fearful possibility !o kfnfta subject take no chance they won t let him do an thing at all. public already overfed on iaveti'S- - Cl bVi.-- s nn Neva and tourieit lyy.f " con-esai- sd A Line o Type or Two The Quest of the. Lone Wolf By Frederic attractive in tlje .paradivs safeguards which species. tions. At this time something liko dozen probes of one sort or another occupy columns of space in the newspaper to th exclusion of jnueh more J. Baskin. . a. Nov. U.e-T- hi WASHINOTON, D. sounds Ilk a title for a movie, but It Is really on accurate description of a Job just finished by H. P. Williams of Custer, South Dakota, who la one of the meet experienced of tbo small standing army of trappera employed by tha biological survey In Its work of exterminating predatory animals. Williams was directed to spend all ot bis time In the task of getting on old end cunning wolf, which bad beea dining on beef and eluding rifle, trap, dogs and poison for year Ranchmen had despaired of ever catching this old prairie pirate, but word has Just beea received at the biological survey that Williams has been successful la his long bunt The hide of th Dakota freebooter will probably be in Washington before long. , If you think that the pursuit of a single wolf ia an inadequate occupation for a government employee, you should be Informed that this wolf is estimated to have destroyed $25,000 worth ot beef and mutton during hia lifetime, and that be was piling up the score at the rate ot more than a thousand dollars a year. This wolf had developed a cunning which compares favorably with the mental operations ot many humans For example, when be killed a cow. It was his custom to travel a few miles, and then come back, paralleling hie first track at a distance of a few rods He then returned to the edge of the thick timber, and waited. When hound were put on his track, he watched them ko by, and retired to safety In one direction, while they were going In the other. A HARD JOB. ' To find and kill a single wolf In a large and broken wilderness might seem a hopeless task, but the government hunters have gotten their methods of work down pretty fine. They know that a wolf, like a mam Is a creature of widely he may range, he always returns to the same places eventually. fVherroore, wolves are also, like men, id' like rnoef Ocftet- cannot do wholly without others of they their kind. Wolves hat--e signboards, as have dogs, where passersby register their presence for the Information of the next comer. By locating these canine register, the wolf hunter ran map the range of a wolf or that of o band of wolves with tolerable accuracy. He usually finds that a wolf travels in a great circle, sometimes a hundred and fifty miles In He jiever kills twice In circumference. succession In the same vicinity, but the guess about hunts; may, nevertheless, Where th next kilt will be. Wolves soon learn how to detect poison In meat, and express their scorn of such crude methods by scratching dirt ever the poisoned bait. Poison will kill out the young and foolish animals in a region when It is first used there, but . the survivors are wise and cannot be 'taken that way. Traps are a more reliable method, but the wolves soon get wise to these, too. The utmost precautions must bo used tp hide the scent of iron. The hunter stands on a calf hide while setting the trap; ne smokes the trap itself and handles It with blood -- soaked gloves. nd wive Even so, the wolf who is often walks around the trap as carefully as though it were marked with a Sanger sign. Hunting with hounds and lying in wait with a rifle are the other chief methods. A SURVIVOR OF, EARLY DAYS. Th lobo or gray wolf is one of th few figures of the old west that still survives. These wolves in the early day hung on the flanks of the buffalo herds in great numbers, killing oft the eld bulls, the strays and calvea They were so common that buffalo hunters seldom wasted any of their precious ammunition on them. But when the buffalo herds were gone, and the cattle herds, working slowly north from old Mexico, began to cover the great plains, the lobo became the greatest pest of the business. Excepting his small cousin, the coyote, he has been the hardest of all beasts to destroy. Time was when the lordly grixsly used to come far down on tha plains and kill the largest bulls with a blow of his paw. The grixsly could fight, but ho could neither hide nor run very, well. Before the repeating rifle he retired in dwindling numoert to the farthest recesses ot the mountain canyons. He still kills a few sheep, but scarcely . any where Is be a factor In th cattle business. But the wolves, after Just about fifty years of persecution, are still very much a factor. They are greatly reduced in numbeis, but nearly every section ot open range country stilt has its little And their appetite for band beef is enormous. It cost fl.'u a year or more to support every on of them. The biological survey has therefore decreed unmerciful war against them, and It is probable that they are doomed. In some sections, as In that where Williams huntsd, only a single wolf is left. In such cases the wolf has boon known te steal o march on civilisation by mating with a dog and raising a litter of woll-dothat or Just os bad as wolves, and , sometimes worse. THE WISE COYOTE. , Th little coyote, also a true wolf, has survived th advance of civilisation much better than the lobo. He Is still numerous all over tho west, and ia reported to bo extending his range eastward. Tha coyote does great damage to cheep, taking regularly 1 per cent of the iamb crop, in many sections of the southwest, but he Is not s menace to cattle. Furthermore, he does not depend upon stock for a living to the extant that th wolt does. If the sheepmen make It too hot for him, ho can yetire into a desert country, where you would think a buaxard would starve, and there live on mice, llsanis and an occasional jackrabblt. It Is possible to reduce hia numbers In sections where Jie Is o pest, but he la In no danger whatever of being exterminated. Th one other predatory creature which engages the government hunters Is the mountain lion, puma, or panther, as It Is variously called, This creature is native to almost every part ef the United Htate. but it has been exterminated In much ot tho oast, leaving a trial of legand and is no creatura myth behind it. Thera more weird, and about which you can hear Is said to be stories. Its cry thrilling g sound In the world, the most resembling tha scream of a terrified woman. It la said to trail men fer days and nights, seeking a chance to pounce But there are remarkably upon them. few records of attacks on men by mountain lions, and the animal kills few catonly In mountain tle, because It liy In some sections of mountain country. summer rang it la very destructive to cattle and to horses, young colts being its favorite food. Few lions ar killed, and thry ar still abundant In tha Rocky mountain , This government campaign against predatory animals may be regarded as last act in the drama of subjugating tho wild west. When th wblves and lion ar roa th western rangeland will be a tame as an lows hog pasture, and there will he no more need of men who can shoot a rifle and set a trap. -- habit-Howev- -- oM-W- hair-raisin- NO CAUSE FOR ALARM. You ought to hav area Mr. Marshall when h called on Dolly tho other night," remarked Johnny to hi sisters young man, who was taking tea with th famT 'tell you he looked fin ily. there alongside of her with his fac "Johnn! gasped hi lter, tha color of a boiled lobster. Well, ao h did. Johnny. persisted "He had bis arm "John, screamed his mother frantic!- - arm" hr lY- - whined th hoy, T wae hi father sternly, "Hav room." And Johnny left, crying as h went. "I was Only going to eay that he had ills rrmv clothes on!'' New Yoik Central Masaxlne , "Why, th "John," sold , 1920. 8 Memory Tests, Can You AnsuierThese? wrn. 1 Hew to tit lin, let th quip what they may. t ber of our house of representatives? ' Twenty-fiv- e year 4. When does the term of each conBy 8- - t. T. odd or the on the nd commence gress On March 4 of' tbo odd even years? ' Llmerik, ysar There was a young man from Art Creek R Who has power to call special sesWho went around dressed in Batik. written? sion of congress? Tho president of tho When they asked, Are you well?" ' Lack L'nitd State "Th . Who was th ef author He replied, "Ain't It hell? of Roaring Camp"? name of tho small the 4, what 1 Bat in Art its the very lest shriek." noveland 8. What American essayist principality in th Mediterranean sur-of ist wrote "Th Blue Flower"? Whitcomb rounded by th French department It mast be a relief to Mr. Harding to be 4. la what line did James id excepting on th able to writ or say something without Riley distinguish himself? sea? Monaco. the toward It will affect Hiram first considering how ?. Who waa tha author ot "Old Creole ?. Who was elected governor of New Johnson. Too bad- - he didn't know what L. 8. What historian wrote "Montcalm and York state on November 2? Nathan o walkover he was going to have. ' Miller. . WoUe"? ? main duties God the some of . Who wrote "The Fair 8. What are Now York bar more fin shops then interior? The 10. By whom waa tho atory "Tha Lady of the secretary of th Chicago, but Chicago haa a long lead In relating or th Tiger written? murders. No city has everything. supervision of public business to pensions, to patent for inventions, and bounty land, to public lands and GOVERNMENTS AND POLITIC The Imperturbable fieclety Editor. exercises certain pow. also . He survey ANSWER. V (From th Cincinnati Enquirer.) rs and duties In relation to the ter1. What Is the government of Brazil? Never ha society welcomed a more ritories of the United States A republic. radiant vision than yesterday debutant of Columbia uf-. Haa the District L Where 1 th executive power In Standing erect and tall beside her mother, also fria?What her blonde tresses fsintly ondule Ilk an Bweden lodged? In the king,In who of th is th state religion Cathomatters aureole that seemed to reproduce the possesses legislative power Roman Republic of ParagusvT tsCwaWT golden lights of her gown, her arms full of political administration, or lic. Ail othww 5. Wbat is th minimum age of a mem ef violet orchids, she was exquisite aa the d fabulous daughter of Crista. effect. diploHer gown added to this ethereal try, such as Holland, which has aa well as Answers, to Questions. matic relation with Germany obto In order November. States, United with the cut of thi country for "The red oak leaves Its flaming bough (Any reader can get the answer te any tain a passport countries. to th Owing Mexico or other Without my window pan$ question by writing the Tribune Informaretion Bureau, Frederic J. Haskln, Director, fact that the United States hawith Th fallen leaves hold mad carouse jot Gerrelations sumed diplomatic Across the open plain; Washington, lx U. This offer applies no German representative there la In careless wise th lake laughs back strictly to information. The bureaaandcan-fi- many. apply. to whom yon could not give advice on legal, medical The sun's glow; nancial matter The wind whirls by as on th track It does not attempt to the-sifoe. Of seme Q What Noth significance of settle domestic troubles, nor to undertsk on any subJertwdVMt Victory medal? research exhaustive gtn - your p to. JtC Ptaimt on, old tree, your gaudy huquestion plainly and briefly. Grt inclose t Is but th hectic fire full name and address, an A. Th war 'department rays that the You wear ere winter comes to you cents In stamps for return postage. All six Stars on th soldiers Victory medal And strips your gay attire. replica are sent direct to the inquirer.) do not have any special significance.to Dance leaves, laugh lake, your time of They are simply placed there In order glee Q. Did th Leviathan carry cows to balance tho rest of tho design and to Will pass too quickly by; soldiers? the for milk fresh provide make tho whole artistic. Wind, you alone can feel with me N. F, And give me sigh for sigh. the most Ct What A. 'The 'navy department says state produce that, J- - K. while some of the transports did carry gold? Thus runs my verse of long ago, did cow for (his purpose, the Leviathan state that A. The bureau of mine For then November meant not while it was in the service of this California lead in th production of gold. A shallow and conventional woe, oountry. In 1818 that state produced 140,758 troy , But now what deop content! Ounces of gold, valued at $17,880.0u$. A lamp-l- it room, a glowing fire, Do shoot their Q. porcupines really A dear, familiar book; W. 8. quill at enemies? Tho one of whom I never tire Q. What Is s "referendum"? To share the A. Th quills of a porcupine are loosei l. M. ly inserted in the skin and may, on bo. A. By referendum la. meant an voter to ex- tibtxrttf .'artgcafA-&$p. tWfcb.ip given-toWhere Junior idly strums a clrmustanco which may have given rigs press through medium Ot' the A lilting sir; tho dull perfume to th purely fabulous statement that the their approval or rejection Of S law , animal possessed the power of actually passed Of late chrysanthemums; by a legislative body. 8ueh homely Joys, yet tor my part, ejecting its quills like arrows or darts 1 hold them fondly dear. at an enemy. Q. Please give a recipe for pie mad And welcome, with a happy heart, M. T. IRIS. The twllignt of the year! Q. Where is Dannemora prison and of dried pumpkin. A. One oup of dried pumpkin, what class of 'prisoners ar confined M. Q. Attention of students in fits new school there? eup of sugar, on tablespoon of corn teaspoon cinicon A, Dsnnemora of journalism is called to the fact, reis located at starch, two sgg pi lf cup namon. three oup of water, by the Leon, Iowa. Reporter, that Dannemora. N.- Y.. up in the mountain ported tealf a Tate citizen of 'Pleasanton bad been near Lake Champlain. The criminal In- of syrup, oa eup of milk, are confined there, spoon of ginger, a pinch of salt. Soak Buffering from senility caused from old sane and hour cook . pumpkin In water twenty-foage." Q. What five vice presidents later be- and put through colander. Beat the egg with mixed add came sugar syrup, western of middle pumpkin, C. M. The natural history I. president? man has no better professor than KdA A. Eight vie presidents later became spices, and then milk. This recipe make tws The Arf presidents John Adams, Thomas Jefferlarge pie Howe, and )le latest book, (Alfred A. son, Martin Van Buren, John Tyler, Milthology of Another Town Q. What waa the date ef the tornado is packed with entertaining lard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson; Chester Knopf), thumb-na- il sketches. Home are several A, Arthur and Theodore Roosevelt. that destroyed Brinkley, Ark.l ' J. L, C, . page in length, others are brief para9 i as; What Q. must A. Th weather bureau records show German a graph. proceedings BEN BRADFORD. citizen tuke whe has not been In this that a severe tornado visited that place Ben Bradford, known to bo a little gay, country six years and wishes a passport on March 5, 1908, about 7:10 p. m. The say the first time he kissed a woman to Mexico? from southwest to F, e. T. storm crossed the cityforty-ninother than hi wife he felt a sneaking A. A man In tho United States e who northeast. persons,' as he did when he first began buying ot ia a citizen of Germany will have to ap- wounding 800killing ana causing damage estiMontgomery Ward ft Co. But Ben graduply to tho consul of some foreign coun mated at 8000,000. ally became hardened, and many aay he wow trades with 8 ears. Roe buck, ton. CENTURY AMERICAN NINETEENTH LITERATURE. 1. Who was th author ot "Th Leather Stocking Tale"? tor 2. What widely read hook - boy did Jacob Abbott write? Carvel "Richard 1. By whom wag , s, falr-halre- half-heart- x fast-fleei- thoidir ingle-noo- k; oppor-AMf- y, . one-ha- one-ha- lf lf one-ha- one-ha- half-witt- ur ' BANDY MPHERBON. Sandy McPherson, th barber, say he charges five dollar for shaving a dead man because he ia compelled to throw But how do w away th raaor be know ho throws the razor away? v WALT WILLIAMS. Will Marsh went Into Walt Williams' grocery and bought a sack of apple Walt not only helped Bill eat them, hut ,ua invited everyone who cam In to hav an apple out of Bill's sack. Walt has been the victim of taster for years, and was getting even. MICHAEL RAFFERTY. Michael Rafferty, who lives in Chicago, la visiting hia sister, Mr Maggie Keilev. Mr. Rafferty finds It dull here, as there are only women in the home where he I visiting. Thy say Mr. Rafferty's yawn, as he sits on th porch Of hi (later' homo in th evening, la something artlstle a an expression of being bored. One lamps' by tha advertisements tht the' Fokines- - are to dance Beethoven' sonata. The bootch-kootc"Moonshine as it wer h, Intoxicating Food. (From the London Chronicle.) Turnips may muddle us. Beetroots may fuddle our blood. Cakes act like stout In u. Toffee puls gout in us, Drunkenness dwells in the "spud." Tips! Almost the Last Call On En graved H oliday Greeting Cards : The number of orders", for engraved holiday greeting carda is already double what it haa been other years. More and more people are adopting, this meajisof sending their Christmas and New. Year wishes. - If you want your name engraved on personally aelected Greeting Cards, and want them in proper season, you Bhould not delay your orders; place them with us At once. After December first will b.e too late. Pess ar perftfllous, Having insidious ne ge hidden within. Runs, working busily. Make us walk dizzily. Crumpet ar itronger than gin. ' Trowels confuses us. , Marmalade boose u. . Drunkenness everywhere ait Drinking a curse, And eating ia wore W shall all hav to Hveoa our wits. We are especially proud of this years new cards ; engraved in from four to eight colors ; neat, exquisite, handsome designs. Wide range of prices. Come in today, STATIONERS On of Efrem Zimbalists New York friends was telling u recently that th first time h saw the violinist's name on tho boardings h read it, "Efrem, f FRUITERS Office Equlppers BINDERS Zlm-balis- No Wonder! (From th Wellington, Oi. Enterprise) Mr Lana Calkin having fallen downstairs while after egg in her barn, hurting one of her feet, has Aoid her cow to Mr Viol 62-6- 6 At 4h Sign ef th Arrow West 2nd South, Rhone Wasatch 380, Freundt. "Editor Goes to Warmer Place." Monmouth Review.. Pshaw, no! Ho moved from Manltou to Colorado Spring GYPSY KING OF COLONIAL DAYS. An Interesting, If unprincipled. English character who paid a flitting visit to America In day now long past, was 11 Bamfykle Moor hailed from the tiny place of Blckley, in Devonshire, and was th eon of the rector. He broke loose at an early sge, and, becoming quit out ot hand, he ran sway, joining tho At that ttm th were gypsle a law unto themselves; they gypsies begged and thieved, they bludgeoned and burnt, they frequented the waste place and wr a very real, terror to the country peopl Step by step Bamfylde roe In thetr esteem till after no great length of time h beqam their king. i Convicted of vagrancy, Moor was shipped off to Maryland as a convict. He soon managed to escape from that colony, and falling In with friendly Indian they removed the metal band which was the badge of crime from hie nook. Afterward a he passed himself off as Quaker and managed to got back ( England. Detroit New WHERff BOARD 1$ CHEAP. In theaetday of high that somewhere it la pos- It is refreshing prices to learn sible to get one'a dally bread and tla at a low figure. Th place U China T tugchew. In th province of There in the mission achool Shantung. a girl may hav tore meals a day for $18 a year. The menu sound atrang te the school girl of I he western world, but to th Chi-tiatudent It is highly satlafactory. Bteamed corn bread and raw turnips that hav been kept In brin and then chopped quit fin compoe th regulation breakfast almost all th year. For dinner there (a usually millet rooked dry ilk rice, and ome hot vegetable. Twice a week th vegetable 1 cooked with fat pork Instead of in bean oil, aa uaual. Supper I th am a breakfast. Perhaps half a dosen limes a year, however, they relehratt with mime more luxurious fare 4'hrl-tlu- n fiilrtic Monitor , 1 r FOR THANKSGIVING A Puritan Ham Baked A Genuine Appetizer ' and A Home Product Aic Your Dealer , |