OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE. TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 30, 1922. . f jfolt fal , fill f ilwiu IHPebtCMe Isaestl Lk Tribes thus la mall. Was. . or Wars 1st by Naaa4a aa Pall' a ad Beads?, aaa Dally ii4 lasdir, im Elaawhar la U. Dally io4 Suwliy, Pe Trlbw. toAl.ttakly Camf. auBaomnioMi W ! " 'JJ eoet. yw... tme Hty Tka Trlbuaa la aa aala la every In ports la tka laltad Btataa. Reeders aar efnee. tk)a T ally by telepbeetss aaaata la am bar of tka AaaoriataB Tka Trlbuaa la a Frees. Tka Asserts tsd Frees la aarlnalraly aawa at all tu tka aaa far npqbltcatto ered-- I Blapatakaa rradltad te It cf set atkanrtaa lacil aaa tka alaa tad la tkla papar. Boraaa Tka Tnbaaa la a aaaaibar af tka Trtk-saa- 'a at Clrmlatlba taformailaa eoeeeratni Tka Audi I tka kr ba win eepplled elreultiloa . Chics ge. Bqraau af rirfulalioo. Veqetlea bldf eeet-ora eole iSe R. I. Barkwlta Spealal Aecy Now Tarkl , advertising afact. World bldg Trlbuaa bid . Chlrafo; Foal Dlaoatch bid.. Bt. Lea la; Ford bid. Detroit. Mirk. Bryaat M. C. Morgeneen O kid.. Senses rllf. Me. CBaat roproaaatatlra. sawl a.. Tar . Parlftr Title 8 rridcrt: bldg.. Ur BMUlf bMf Hfurltf Jurc ft rifta office of lb Ari rKf. Fmtw. lAlpba tb j WtcJlh fl ft m DM. Tribune telepM to ym 10 o 1ty elrcoUltoa dptrtmeot befor and a rony will be tt, Ui atif pomofftco MEMORIAL you by at Oolt laa wattr aafay at DAY. Tribute to valor and sacrifice in be. half of a common cause is a charait.r istio peculiar 'to peoples who recognize one another mutuality of dependence on and, by common consent, in most of the elates over which floats the Stars and to the memStripes this day is sacred the made aupreme who ory of those The of name in the Liberty. aacnfiee buitorn was initially instituted as Decoration day for the strewing of Dowers on the graves of Union soldiers who fell 4n the civil war, and with the pasting of the years it lias been fittingly to include commemorative extended ceremonies for heroes who fought in later conflicts, and remembering, with offerings of flowers, all the departed whose virtues are enshrined within our duty, b higher devotion to our obliga- already here to a degree- far greater tion! and a more fervent determination than is assumed, at least In most popto keep inviolate the rights so dearly ular discussions of the subject of immwon. igration and related matters. The' foreigner in this country is more likely to ' REPARATIONS. persori, if he marry an American-borown race, does his not one of marry we have By the word reparation than he is to marry some foreigner not come to think only of weighty interna- of his own race. The fertility of the tional affairs, yet on the Kiviera the foreign-borwomen is greatly in excess word has another and more intimate of that of the native born. A significant biologic result of Americanization significance. to reduce the fertility of marriages. Under the powers self allocated to is woman dying beFor each native-bor- n themselves by the French and, for tween the agea of 20 and 24, the native that matter, by other nationals aa i born women aa a group produce index inches; private property may be realized j proximafely twenty-twfor foreign- th former-enemfigure corresponding upon if it belongs to born women is forty-five- . subjects, the proceeds of such tales goThe further the fusion process proing to swell the national 'bill marked ceeds from fresh immigrant stock, the reparations, and on the Riviera the lower becomes the vital index, that French government has been realizing is, the measure of a population s condito the full on properties belonging to tion which is given by the ratio of births to deaths within a g.ven time. Austrians and Germans. Pearl conclude: During the war, the procesa was to In general, unless forcibly pre murder jftaee ail villas and hotels under aeques vented which means finally peoide will in tration. With the coming of peacej8'1'1 sudden death-t- hat li er fF tKe eart!T"anTlTiFTulTne8s'ThefebT many ex enemy subjects obtained perwhich has habitually the highest vital mission to visit their properties on the index. ..The advocate of birth control Cote d Azur, when, to their dismay, a a solution of the problem- - of populathey discovered the local authorities tion should remember this and draw f irm ly in possession; it the logical conclusion that if, frgm The proprietors were inforn'fed that for any reason whatever, he docs not therif would be a compulsory gale of all want the peopIewb have the highest tbeir possessions, and that out of the vital index to be the inheritors, ,he proceeds taxation and other charges nniRt be piepared to do something a having to do with the war years would good deal more violent than merely first be subtraeted. The balance re- to control birth rate of his own kind of maining from the sale would then b people, which is, in practical effect, handed over to As a about all that he has done so far. And reparations. special favor, owner? of property he must not forget that peoplo who would be permitted to retain gome of have a high vital index are apt as a their more cherished intimate belonggroup to be pretty good fighters, in a ings, but that would be all. technical military sense. ,Tho hard and fast rulo has been apthe gigantic Faring the fact in plied, it appears, despite the interven- American in human gene-ticexperiment tion of ambassadors and others highly that the native population is not placed. itself in competition with reproducing The latest sale, which took place at the amalgamating peoples, we need not a community called Beaulieu, had - 4o fear a consequent detenoTatron of our do with the beautiful villa of Biirouess The dominant clement descendant. Springen, an Englishwoman by birth will be a new one, for the biometrists and an Austrian subject by marriage. assure ns that there cannot be anything Lord Hardinge, the British ambassador pure race biologicallv in Paris, tried to intercede, but in vain. approaching stocks in this ountrv a century hence. At the sale there was a large attend(Quoting Pearl again, the kind of ance of bargain hunters, and the entire people who will survive and conduct contents of this born Knglisheoman s the affairs of the countrv, sny a couple villa down to the silver buckles off of centuries hence, when population her shoes were put up at auction. pressure will be intense, will not be Englishmen or Slavs or Italians, Rut AN AMERICAN RACE. s souls. Life is so much of a conflict, calling into action our material and sordid impulses, that the tendency to forget those who died for their ideals is more There need be no alarm respecting generally in evidence than it should be. the future of the peoples who live in Such days as these, when for a little America. Science has come to the ion while we live in the past and seek to elusion that, a century hence possiblv visualize our obligations to our heroic a little longer there will be no pore dead, are none too many. It detracts race stocks in this rountry, but the nothing from the responsibility of the population will be Americans who have hour to have borne in upon us the conadapted themselves best to the prob viction that existing rights, blessings lems of North Anierii a. In other and privileges are enjoyed because words, a new race, the American race, others whose lips are silent now did will, a hundred years from now, have their duty as they saw it and counted begun firmly to establish itself. The not the cost. Memorial day is in very of the Journal of the American editor truth a holy day for all who compreassociation discusses reient hend the sacred obligations of citizen-- ' Mediral ship, who are able to give sincere al- developments in this regard in an ex legiance to our flag. haustive article. It was more than threescore years Commenting on the findings of Rayago that the struggle for the preservamond Pearl of Johns Hopkins univer one ami indistion of our Union, as the result of an inquiry into the sitv trito end the with soluble, began, umph of the right, although the cost vitality of the peoples of America, the was rivers of blood and mountains of editor says that no group of citizens gold. .Some, only a few, of that vast has interest in the qualitv of greater army of the days of 61 to 65, yet j dwell under the banner they kept stain-- its population than does' the medical The physician is naturally less their beads are bowed, their steps profession. are faltering, but their hearts are as solicitous about the health, intelligence all around brave and true as when they faced the and eflici ncy of the leaden hail at Shiloh or marched with peoples of America, and inevitable the Sherman to the sea. But a decade more factors that control and modify theie and the Grand Army of the Republic aspects of our civilization enter into the will' be a sacred and imperishable problems to the solution of whuh the As the nation today honors medical sciences and hygienic arts are memory. those who gave their lives that it expected to contribute. If the United Males ,s n trutn a might continue to live, it pays reverent homage to the thin ranks of the vet- great melting pot wherein the most di erans, even the youngest of whom are verse races are being fused and amalnow near the camping ground where gamated, what rort of a human product Reveille of is the coming generations likely to bet Taps will precede the Is it advantageous from the biologic the resurrection. No other nation of the world ever standpoint to permit the human evolumade as rapid material and intellectual tion in our nation to proceed as in the advancement as did our own since the last jntiiry, or does the accumulated conclusion of the conflict that arrayed experience analyzed from an impartial the North aga.uvt the South. The scientific standpoint dietnte a deparAngel of Peace brooded over all the ture from oi r traditional policies) These are some of the questions land, our wealth and resources multi plied manyfold, and it was not uutil that arise fromt a study of an investi1898;" when an emasculated and totter--in- gation of the vitality peoples of monarchy sought to interfere with America which Raymond pearl of the Americas right in other lands, that school of hyg ene and public health at the sword of Columbia was again un- the Johns Hopkins university has made sheathed for a brief period, and fortu for the Society of American Peoples of nately only a few of her sons were New York," he continues From his called upon to shed their blood upon her biostatist tea! analysis it appears most altar. probable that the United States, as it Then, sixteen years later, a mentally now is really limited, has passed its unbalam ed monarch had a dream of period of most rapid population, unless world conquest, and, obsessed bv the some factor tha has not operated heredivine right of kings idea, precipi- tofore comes into play. The iraximnm tated the bloodiest and most terrible population attainable in the course of struggle in the history of civilization. the next two hundred yea-- s is luelv to ITsmerjr of that conflict for the preser- approach twice our present numbers. vation of democracy is as clear today Two hundred million of persons will as at the momentous hour of the sign- require about 260, QUO, MOO, 000 (glories' ing of the armistice, for the world still per annum. staggers under it burden of debt and As Pearl point out, unless our food countless thousands of Karth s best and habits radically change and man be-bravest died for humanitys sake. ' comes able to live on less than the cur- Scarcely a family is there in all our rently accepted standards of daily food land that had no member in the service fuel, the limitations of our agriculture and,' while Americas loss in hfe was and the difficulties of inevitable imporeomgaratively light, the Gold Star tation of one half our requisite food mothers form a mighty host. Our boys, units will bring the pressure of popuwho, beyond all question saved the lation on the means of subsistence to cause of liberty, sleep, many of them, bear ia .ays that the great grandchilia uBkaown graven or rest beneath the dren- of our people of today are likely aea. t But in the hearts of those who to realize emphatically. bad q them farewell, their memory is reWith respect to the kind of populavered, sad the blooms east upon the tion to be expected in America at (he wavestoday for those who have no timswhetmeaDovercfowdlng' miy be monument to mark their tomb are as looked for, Pearl has offered eome insacred as .the flowers that are placed teresting speculations based on statistical facts regarding the racial change by granite shaft and mausoleum. Form and ceremony can in no wise now going en among us. It is an outstanding fact, he states, eFT those who have done their work. T, f Ar helpful only foreigner rather they inspire! thqt the if tivimr to clearer consciousness of apeedilvfnaa affective! v with the stock Americans of that tv pp which has shown the greatest adaptability to the problems which life in this part of North America lia presented. PREY ON AMERICANS. The Tribune docs not lay claim to being the first or the only uewspaper which predicted an early and vigorous protest on the part of American tour ists extortionate that in increasing numbers and strength should be heard from among those who fairly fought their way aboard steamships for European ports. Germany, it is authentically reportactive in fleecing ed, is farticularlv Americans. Graft and extortion seem - newly-arrive- It was inevitable s to have been developed bv shopkeepers and hotel keepers into an indti-tr- v there. Tourists also have to puv an oppressive export tax. No doubt, it is solely the fault of the tourists themselves that tiny are being mulcted on every hand They have encouraged it. The York World remarks with tourist that travel back to prewar pioportions and with America ns rowd'ng European ic sorts it would be al..ng too nun h of human nature 'o expect landlords and amusement purvevors to neglect the op portunitv for a harvest. If these American, are bring ptuFted thev mav expect little at home. The traveling American like to plsv the part tf a spen and n.it ti rallv pnuh a iop rxpenip Theoretical!-- , envs tli- - World, the American arc welcome as disburses of unlimited rav niomv and ns visitor pros id ng the golden fleece to shear. How far below the surface the welcome extends is a t ion. ,W TAPS. ir g 1 against in, Europe prices Hr, o,t frfeod- - Rlnct heart nmht l.'Kot out' Toe shadow 'ai Acres !'ie s lenl camutPK ground Kins out the bugle call, In mournful (ademc i me bi.eze Soft In the wai Ing lgM. 'T s echoed through the whin-,r- g trers The wild er . ia-- out' t (jooi-ngh- t' n gill od f end. hut not Kevond the sz-irdome Thv kind soul in gladsome Onod-- Hath There Thev Fo os Thai ti t.ne found Its welcome homegV at the jovous revet! e grtet thee with good morn the deepen-nhado ta,. mav not eee down ghts out (Joed right ' f (. Hew to the Line, let tie quip fall ' where they may. By Frederic J. Haakin. NEW YORK. May 27. Would you pay for one little book? This the price recently paid at the Anderson galleries here in New York for one little volume of Will Rhakespeevre't complete works, with Chandler portrait, dated 1623. M was a first edition, of course. In remarkably good condition, considering Its vaet age. and considered by the gratified purchaser to be a great bargain. as first editions go. Here ts something well worth remembering the next time you feel imposed upon at having to pay $2.50 (or tha latest You product of your lavorite author. never can tell in a few jeers his works more. Some may be worth a great deal of Joseph Conrad's slrtady bring as much as $65 per copv, while a first edition of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass" r cently fold for f25t. But first editions, like sH other antique, grow more value hie as they get older. An author has to be deuid a ion time before hi vvl'l bring as much as $lvOu book aplocs, and few of the books published of axe capable surviving nowadays through several centuries. Not that some of them are not of lasting mer.t. but the are made are materials of whkh tht too fragile re d The ETTza ti oma f'-i- i te ranr re" xw on strong. Unci, paper, made bv .and from in whole cases and remains iag,firm todey.maxiyThe bhakespeare volume and mentioned above, for instance. Is In as perfeit condition as It was tn the seventeenth ner.iurj, except for a front jxase, where an expert eye can detent a break In the watermark of the otd paper, showing tbat it has been mended "A good ma of the old books have to be lira tored " explained A Bade of the Anderson galleries, ns he pointeded out to us lh almost imperceptible fiaw in the volume. There precious Shakespeare are. of course, expel la who specialise nt Some of the booka this ietoring won. lutvo been waohed and ironed, tn which cae it is alwais apparent. Mxnj have been IrtuaLlv mined in the bg English libraries where tney remained for and now have without prope to ho extensively repaired "Others fell into toe hands of careful collectors send have been paseed down in We nan visually surprtsinglj fine trim tell from the owner's label in the fiont of a book Just what to expect. To mention one example, books from the library of the late Robert Hoe, which up until 1911 was the largest private library' in this oountrj, are a wavs In good shape. Mr. lioe evidently took elaborate pains with them. Then we have several volumes her from are George TV. Islington's 'Hbrarv. wrbtrh Washin aMonlshinglv good condition ington wa a great collector for his day and took excellent care of hi hooks so d.d those who later acquired them ' AMERICANS ARE COLLECTORS. Americans have ahvwvs dienlayed an in collest.ng rare books, uniisuni inte-eaccord rig to Mr. Bade, aithoegh thev have not tern given nun h credit for it. There were bof k catalogues as far back of these earlv as 1S.51 Fi irtunate'-mancollectors took a. patriotic interest in the States and of L'nited the development to carefully lollented ail material relating its histor c growth. Thus there is a scattered data historical of valuable deal atmut the various private libraries of the be courtrv, which some daywlll ordoubtless otherwise turned over to universities made available to the public. In one case a wealthy American collic-tn- r financed the preparation of a comvarious tribes of plete hlstorv of all the Several of the finAmerican Indians ished volumes, ontainlng minutely exait by historical details and accompanied laige numbers of remarkable photographic Antile to were iccently brought plates, derson galleries and placed on exhibit Thev will have to be sold because unfordied before tunately the wealthy collector the monumental work was completvd. same interest and his heirs have not the The library of In supporting It Which is an extenslvq buver at Is said to be thee rare inbook auctions. interested obtaining the material. If you gentle reader, By the vvat should suddenly come across anv sneiant wav in a garyour historical data packed ret or cellar, don t give it to the ashman, but look it over carefully and then con-to sult a book expert. It mav turn out like 'our great-aun- t he extremelv valuable s old bureau, which you foolishlyo man. onlv late-tsecondhand sold to the discover that it was a true oroduct of the brothers Adam. Not long ago a nan sent in to The Anderson galleries a few historical pamphlets handed down bv his grandfather, estimating their worth at $;,. In the auction vvhlcjj occurred a few davs later, tliev brought JHhO The subwas the early deject of the pamphlets velopment of the Ameitran west. RARE BOOKS COMING HERE. volThe majority of the umes which are handled bv the Anderson galleries however, come from European, instead of American, private libraries. true since the Ibis has been especially worlds the greatest (iiadiiallv war reasures In the English language book as the lesult n this country, comtrg of the dwindling fortunes of the English No man can enjov luxury while nohllitv he Is h.ingrv so. In spite of their es familv falitmns. the of Rrithsh booklovers and the acorn of Th-v-i- 1 m I - ecn-tur- -- st g-- eat con-gres- s. , high-price- d a- -e her-i-he- d n IN FLANDERS FIELDS We salute you, penmen of Paul! O Wo lessxr penmen of tbeee We salute Stephana. latter days: the first fru.ts of Achala, Cortnth cultured, , butcounting all naught when the vis on runt; Penman of the Peloponnetue who wroto for Paul tho greatest thing tn all the vsor.dl And we salute Titua of the Isles of Crete, and p raise Euroclydon that blew the ehip of Paul out of its course, but wafted Paul to thee and Christ and Crete. 'Twas from thy pen tbat trooped et Paui'e behest ' the old integrities to guide a virgin church. W salute Tychicui, penman of tho prison where Nero cha ned the prime ambassador of Christ; O noble youth of Rome, forsak ng a portfolio to write the lingual love of one whose hands were palsied by the chain' We salute EpaphrodttUS' of Coloeaae fame, and the Macedonian amanuenses from the mighty Lucus, Aehiacus, and Fortunatua; For when the Great Cause called for ! penmen having naught hut slaves whose minds were also bound you did respond, forsaking Attic art and high careers in stately verse, to write for Paul and flood an Empire w.th tne story of a Man who loved the world, and died upon a cross. ABORIGINE. Conan, there's eimplv got to 4e a and pitch-for- k and Imp and everything Honest, Conan, If you let poison pen writers into Heaven you re going to elm-iilspoil the place for everybody elae. WE KNEW HIS BROTHER OTTO. Dear SirYesterday a man by the name of D. Drown, living at Gray' Lhke, III, was In the office where I am emRather appropriate, eh, what? ployed, QUEEN MARY. OH, THIS WILL BE HEAVEN FOR HER! Dear R. FI. I,.: S.r Arthur ha some definite and rather comforting Information regarding the celestial spheres. But he omitted a few essentials. Here is my broadcast on Heaven: There will be no fat women who talk baby talk, nor thin men who outline business propositions In pencil on the back of envelopes; no prunewhtp nor pono dentists who sing litical speechei, anas as thev probe for nerves; no chairmen of social committees, nor crowded elevators. There will be lots of dirty-face- d little boys, parsley, rain on the roof, face powder that ready sticks Telephone conversations will be limited to half a minute. There will be only one alarm clock; it will be broken. Robert Louis Stevenson w.ll write more end Harold Bell Wright wtll write less. Oh, much less. Elllnor Glyn wont write at all. Men will weer one color shirts and lavender ties. And I will be very short, have curly hair and a dimple and know how to spell. Ohv Hell with fire apd brimstone - GEN'O.. CERTAINLY. I You wonder when Ill tire of you; I fret about your being true. We fuss, and weep, and never That it s a silly thing to do. think 11. And that, in fact, it really does Not matter very much, because. Tomorrow or some other day We both be tired of us DOROTHY DOW. 11 R H L. Answers to Questions. " r (Any reader can get the answer to sny quest'on bv writ'ng The Tribune Information Bureau, Frederick .1. Haskin. D C. This offer Washington, to information. The buapplies stri'-tlreau cannot give advice on legal, medical and financial matters It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on anv subject. Write vour question plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and inclose two cents in stamps for return All repl.es are sent direct to postage the Inquirer.) What is the name of the exh Q of horsemanship and roping which takes place in Wyoming each year? C. F H. A. This meet is heid in Cheyenne and is i ailed Cheyenne fiontler days It w.ll he held this year during the last week In July. How long will it take a 1 lac bush to bloom which was sarted from a small lection abroad are reluctantly putting , L J. E. one I have hev sprout them lip foi auction. A. The bureau of plant industry savs 1 ue pr res now being consolation that a Iliac bush mav bloom anv time bv Vmenca n collectors are from a great as those of- from two years to ten after planting. ihiee to six times wxr Is no accounting for Its behavior There fered before the who Is one n th.s respect. r Rosentach or N. vv York t tieBritish ale. of tne hugest buver at When was there an issue of three-ren- t Q po.nts o it another lOtisohng facor star-T- s to he showing the picture of a lo'!n bringing these rare volumes la no real E F "there t luted States" he savs comotive I v ask A. orld soho'.ariv oil. The say department postoffice loss to the an that the' blue three-ren- t stamp iesue of where is a raritv more access. ble. in not old fashan of where 1?69 had tne rngTav.ng I nglishman s private lhrarv, even great scholars can alwavs g t .t, or ioned locomotive rcat of one of our the lOlle-tioMr Huntington I as United 8 atea get How did th Q. Vrnirnan ol'cetors annoume that he m'ends to leave his Wake 'stand? R C. Q ee ao simes- - to and on'v o icslm.it art Teu wo ' v- - tnlv-ersl-t ia-- tear t he on works notable (Vah-forri- .a pithi-she- which Surelv, cop! 1 a quire than ihu is rn'Hh natter foi booklovers ex-,nno one where hoiks i 'e ivc these .inline inte-pte- them vears end to vears end At anv i ite, the rarities are coming here whether :it w.ll be of benefit to in the past two years, the wn-- it or li most of He catlv editions of Shakespeare seem to have left England in the 'tan Is Earlv editions of nf Xmeruriu collecors A REMARKABLE , eee What la the largest gland in the body? E. X.. M. A. The liver Is classed as a gland and exceeds all other In a ze. Q. eee TRILOGY 1 eee d. eee MEMORY TESTS So this Memorial day, Above their moldurlne olay We rise to call them blest 1 What is on of the most common in. the summer their .eternal ret. ju species of plover .found in Their mortal part heroic bled o'er seas; fields of th Great lakes region? Their spirits light 'the Immortal verities! 2. Do hoop snake exist? $. On what date did the United State , Toll! Toll! break off diplomatic relations with GerA proud and solemn knell; many? Bach soul 4. What are five synonyms for the word Acclaim with reverential bell; accelerate? With iron tongues unroll . Jn mankind's eare, B. What was the fate of tha Cunard Adovrn the years, steamship Laconia? rune these dead may no For whom was the state of Penn- The Inspiring more tell! sylvania named? Herman Montague Dormer, Memorial 7. Who was the author of the followday, 1921. ing llnea Methought I saw a hieroglyphic bat Climb o'er the surface of a eltpehod hat. And then to increase the tumult of the ekte. A damned files? potato o'er the whirlwind th French How government commemorate the hundredth anniversary of the Independence of the United State? In fire9. How are colors produced works 10. What popular blonde of other vears In moving pictures was fondly known as "Dlmpiea"? Antwar to Yesterday's Questions. 1 The Who was Emilio Agulnaldo? leader of the Filipino rebellion against the United Statea He was captured by March 23. Genoral Frederick Funston 1. did J 1399. 2. What were the three noted sentiyears mental song hits of twenty-flv- i ago "Sweet Marie," "Say Au Revotr but "Abaence Makes the Heart Not Good-bv,- " Grow Fonder." 8. How do plant breathe By-- means of pores, or stomata, leading Into the cell of their leaves. Each stomatum has at its mouth guard cells. When the weather Is good the cells are turgid and hold the pore open, but when there la drought they are the first to collapse, shutting the mouth and preventing the moisture from escaping. plant's 4. What Is cuneiform writing? The wedged ahaped characters used by. the Babylonians, the word being taken from the Latin word "euneua," a wedge, 6. Jusf what are the meanings of the tea terms Young Hyson." Imperial, snd "Oolong"? The "Imperial" tea derives Its name from the fact that it is similar In appearance to the specially prepared tea used by the imperial households and the wealthier clans of people In China. "Young Hyson" is derived from meanthe Chinese words ing early spring, this tea being picked earlv tn the spring The term "Oolong" Is derived from the Chinese word green dragon." meaning for the 6. What are five synonvms word access? Approach, adit, course, entrance and avenue. 7 What Is the distance by sea from San Francisco to Apia? Four thousand one hundred and sixty nautical miles. 8 What ia the literal meaning of the Italian wordv spaghetti and vermicelli? vermiclhi, Si aahetti. little shoestr.ngs. little worms 9. I the new king of Egypt of roval blood What la his name? He ia he descendant of an Albanian peasant. His Fuad I. name 10 What was Rodolph Valentinos first "The Big Little Person." with Mae Murray. 8ETTING UP LATE. Yes. I got plenty of setting up exercise in the army." 'And you are an adept," bawled dad from the head of the stair. "Its 12.30 now. young man." ludge to ," I A The bureau of insular. affairs save that Wake Island w'as discovered and surveved by Commander 1S3S-4-Wilkes In his and was exploring expedition of the name formally taken possesson of of t ie United F'tates by Commodore FL D. Taussig in DSD What are the largest weighing Q J. G scales or machines A The mathine at Waervl.et arsenal, ised for weighing guns, has a tapacitv The largest railroad of 300.000- pounds. or track scales are suapendel platform ale In the West Albanv yards of th New- York Central railroad. These hav a capacity of 825 tons. - f - BY THREE DIFFERENT POETS. The first of these 'hree pocmi wa , nsyccvted to an enl.sted medical man of Montreal, Canada, at the time of the battle of Ypre. bv the siyht of the of Belgium. The second was written a an answer to the firt by the state librarian of Ohio. The third was composed by a priest of Lennox, a small place in Lincoln county. South Dakota. I. THE CALL (1915). 6 In Flanders fields the poppies blow, Between the cros.es row on row. That mark our place; and in th. shy The larks, still bravely singing f '. Scare heard amid the guns below We are the dead. Short tlavs ago W lived, felt dawn, aw sunset glow, Iaived and were loved, and now we l.e In FIsnrters fields. THE PLEDGE th. cannon boom light the gloom. nle up above, like eagles, fly The fiery, destroyers of the ekv . With stains the earth wherein you Is redder than the poppy bloom In Flanders fieida. qu.rl ' x X X N 11 on, ye brave The shrieking shell. Tbs quaking trench, the start. ed ye.l, The furv of til battle hell Shall wake vou not. for is well. 8 for all If well. our flaming torch aloft we bear. With burn ng heart an oath we ssftr To keen the faith, to fght it through. To crush th foe or sleep with you. In Flanders fields. CHAS. B. QALBREATH. w 11 Take up our with the foe' To you from falling hands we throw The torch Be vour to hold It high! If ys break faith with us who dls We shall not sleep where poppies grow In nelds. LT. COL. JOHN D. M'CREA. III. THE FULFILLMENT (1918). In Flanders fields the poppies bloom Above your lowly, hallowed tomb. II In F".nd.-- s fields And fitful flashes V s ; That your brave deed may never d.e. The torch of freedom lifted high Shell shin wh.r yon lie. No more In Flanders field will grow The rrooees, endless row on row. For crushed and conquered lies the foe. We kept the faltn, weve seen it through. Our myriad brave le dead with you In Flanders fields. fc-.- v. vour rsst Our task done; Th. tvmn of armies boom of gun And funoua cry of savage Hub Are allent now. The vlitorv'a won Peace to Your souls! Th victory a won. In Ftandars fields. THE REV. J. A. WILLIAMS.' Sweat b . r A - v -r - What! Did we send Our stalwart sons Paid he.p to lend Greed's mvrmidora? Did we defend How does the number of sardines Ajwinst the Hune canned In California compart with the Some baser end That knighthood shuns? output of Maine? C. P. A. The bureau of fisheries says that Today are weeping km bereft. in 1921 th Maine pack of sardines was With euch poor solace cheated, left? 1,350.631 cases, valued at $3,0,916, while the California pack was 410,587 cases, If so. valued at $2,146, 446. Bow down the head; Bend low. meant by Sicilian vespers? Q. What And fresh tears ehed: A. 8. Oh, wo! A. On March 30. 128?. th French In Less for the dead Sicily were massacred bv the Sicilians. They flow The s'gnal was the sound.ng of the Than those base-brev eeper bell. Who doomed thetn for aught leasar gam rescue for a world in pain! Than Q. Is moat of the rubber wild or cultivated? W. C. Nay. nav, A. About 83 per cent of the rubber It Is not true' used comes from plantation areas The Nona may world production of crude rubber ha InBid vs rue creased more than five fold In the last That day twenty years. The amount of wild or When freedom's residue native rubber has declined considerably, Through sacrificial clav Inwhile that of cultivated trees has to power grew! creased from a smalt amount to 300,000 OerAgain these, our offsprings hal.owed . tons a year. remain. W'e bless them for redemption's bitter Q. Who founded Ahe Friends' church? pains. E. M A. This sect was founded bv George Then ring Foxe, the English relig.onlst, who lived The muffled bells from 1621 to 1690. That ring Calm to the breast tnat swells Q. How can sealing wax be made at At slander's uttering home? K. C. B. Strike dumb the tongue that te.ls A. Melting together equal parts of So vile a thing shoemaker's wax and resin produces an As that her children's llv e Columb a acceptable wax. Thl should be done In Bell' ' to prevent We, their a pan over hot water survivors, know these were scorching. her gift That prostrate Liberty again her brow might lift! Q. Where Is the largest cemetery In Q J. H. T the United Slates A Pine I .awn on Long Island. X. Y.. timial author Moc THE PENMEN OF PAUL. $15 000 -e I. A Line o Type or Two Boom in First Editions' OUR SOLDIER DEAD. has an area ef 2000 acre, and la probably Com toll largest cemetery In the country. ' For th dead;. a river a navigable Q. When in J Not for their aoul atream? J. R. E. That hat not fled! I A. Th courts say that those rivers Chant' dole must be regarded as public navigable For him who said rivere In law which are navigable In Death's toll fact in and our nations' dread And are fact, navigable they when they are used, or are auecepttble Were paid for a poor and aelfish fear condiof being used. In their ordinary And not for mankind before freedom's tions as highways for commerce. bier! th Yon will enjoy the satisfying flavor of Fierce s Pork and Beana. The nourishing goodness they contain and the ease with which you prepare them makes them Ideal for campers. SsaMq kUteliCsnnlniGok Why She Changed: 1 bare always ved tbe cheaper baking powder, supposing them just aa good aa Royal but I invested in a can of Royal Baking Powder and now find all my baking so much improved tbat I will use no other kind.1 MissCLB. ROYAL Baking Powder Absolutely Pure Contains No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste Somdfar Ntre Rmyci Cook Book f's FREE. Royal Baking Pew. dero,l 26 WiliiamStN w Y ork Blood Humors Affect the whole system and- cause most diseases and ailments. inate them by taking Elim- Hoods Sarsaparilla The successful blood purifier |