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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MOIiNINO, JUNE pretty gift, he la keen at any kind of outdoor game. He Is enormously bored with the ceremony and ritual of royalty. Boredom Palls. ' 25, 1922, THE DREAM THAT CAME TOO TRUE By GEO ROE ADB He ffdgets about on hi feet when he called upon to make a speech ; he bluahea Ilka a schoeleirl when Sny solemn homage It paid to him; he eays heU" in an undertone .when bis boredom become Intolerable. 'But he Isnt In ths very least bored when there U something to laugh at something new to see, something with epics or risk hi It. He is a second lieutenant, the one- 1 Canary, a long Silence woud ensue, snd then the Nervous Wreck would cheer her that thly would be In by computing Gods Country w.thln four months. If they escaped Shipwreck, Sunstroke, and Bubonic Plague. W title parboiling themselves down tbs Red Sea It began to soak In on tbtm that, east of Sues, the Yank has about as much f ".I?. LBirthplace-bBobby Burn standing aa ths Ten Commandments. In a warUhA'.Vo.St1 ht While or Rivotl Rue de up the They could have endured s'eeping rasing about him which Is a very good touch across the rice paddies at the snowy cap Trough g and bathing with a damp Towel He Is breeay, fuH of pluck, out for a lark of and his Food kept over from the year Blodtt. would become het up every time. He is a human boy. And by Fuji, old boyhood Desire to sail across before. If their Fellow Voyagers had he is to every mother ot men tat England, the the made a to Blue slight fuss over them or evtnced Foreign Parts. every father of soldier eons. Just one of Those who saw Edwin mowing the some Interest In the wonders of North those latte, though by chance prince of Lawn 1tUe suspected that be waa being America. them, who fought through the Handers Inwardly eaten It waa somewhat disconcerting to meet by the Wanderlust. mud, keeping up aa best might be. though His Director, Seena, belonged British Subjects who never bad heard jt.f Managing their youth was cut down In sheaves. a Club' that waa trying to gat a aide- Springfield, and who, moved their Deck I ssw him out there many times. I to hold on the Art and Architecture of the Chaira every time they were given a saw him when hs first earns out. with Old World. had a smoldering AmbL-- 'Chance to bear about It. one star, or pip, en hit shoulder etrap. tlon to ride She Back homo, Edwin and Se'ena bad been a Camel In the Orient and i remember one day whm he sawVI bse-is then come home It all over a cer- Mountains arts ng from the Plain. At all and pul first battle. t wag an affair below tain proud Hen who had spent six weeks polnta beyond Greenwich, they were Simrines ILdge In 116, when our gun power In Europe. ply two unconaldered fragments ot Forwas very weak. before It became very One visit to Niagara Falls snd a glori-eu- s eign Substance. strons, and our metl, defensed only bye week of Saengerfeet at Cincinnati bad By the time they found themselves shrapnel, had to advance to the Oermaa Simply whet'ed her desire to take Bdwln in that vast bike-ove- n known as India trenches under high explosive. GET A TOPAZ RUBBER SPONGE Its ea-'n- Wales' Return Source of Keen Joy and Peace of JMind to Many Millions. Royal Traveler, Just Home From India, Wins High- GIBBS. Special Cable te Salt Lake Tribune. LONDON". June':. For a time, aa mentioned last week, there a perceptible pause bejween the act of our international drama - The (rent political players hate retired behind the scene, the curtain haa been run down. The great world public is gladr of a respite from the sensational melodrama An which too many crises happen to shake the nerves. This certainly is the mood of England. Few people take the Slightest Interest in the proceedings of The Hague conference, which comet aa aa anticlimax to Genoa. They are heartily glad there Is still another chance ef peace la Ireland. Fine weather, the hearty countryside, the fixed belief that they are pulling away from the evil days, buoys up the British with more optimism than I have known among them during the past two years. Thsy are getting the holiday spirit and don't want to be bothered with serious. problems, such as future wars or International finance. By SIR PHILIP 1 Prince .Welcomed Home. The homecoming of the Prince of Wales Is one cause of cheerfulness and satisfaction to all classes in English ills. To foreigners It may seam absurd to say the return of the boy prince should bs a source of happiness aud peace of mind to millions of humble men and women In mean streets and small villages who hav never seen hhn. Yet I think It Is true that just this welcome back to the prince, who has been traveling In the far east, has uplifted the spirit of men going to city offices and woman potting their children to bed, young glrla tapping over all manner of men and typewriters, women of high and low degree. One may at scoff that as exactly the sentiment of the British people for royalty, or jeer at It as the sob Instinct of race. But 1 think there is more In it than that. The Prince of Wales by his name and title stands certainly for the old traditions of splendor, power, romance, which belonged for cettturles to British folk and can't be forgotten so long as they read the plays of Shakespeare, the chronicles of Froissart and the hero of old tales of tbeir history. Indias Turmoil Worries. Those traditions threatened lately. The prtnee himself, on that Jour my ef his to India and the east, has had iofaqe threats dangerous to his life and menacing to the empire.- - There were times lately whew ugly messages, or at leust'message containing hiqta Of sinister happenings, came from, U correspondents m Indian cities, so that People at home were afraid of "accidents! to that law who vent unarmed, except by the cheery smile, through cities In revolt. Reading between the lines, there was not a soul In England who did not realise that rebellion on a great scale In India was possible, that the loss of India would bd the beginning of the breaking up of the empire Itself. With Ireland demanding a republic, fighting murderously between north and couth, with England drained Irr. blood and treasure after the enormous 'devastating warfare, there was apprehension- that the old tradition of power which gathered round the name of of Walea in history might be the Prince paaalnc, like eo many other things In Oie of aftermath Armageddon. . Those thoughts, vague and unconscious In the popular mind, account a little for the algb of relief that comes front the British people because he came back again with-- . out, hurt and left behind him good-wiwherever he went in his Jaunty way. see-be- , d ll Wales Is Democratic. But more than that Is In the personal ma.qner whlcih cans, out vast crowds to greet him. He, in a particular way, Is our own boy. He represents those very dualities which all the world loves. He Is the very type of all those legions of English boys who went out to war kt France and Flanders, as he went with them. If tie were better then they he would not be liked half so well. If he were nobler he would not he so much in the home circle of peoples hearts. It might be good for the British empire H he were a brainy, studious youth like Queen Victorias prince consort, but rvo- body suspects Wales of being passionately devoted to Scholarship. Ho might be of an exalted spiritual type, earnestly engaged In the prayer that he may fulfill his high destiny and lead his people to a new light. But one look at the cheery face in street or movies Is enough to dispel any Idea like that. Ha la not Intensely spiritual; or In any way exalted. He Is always ready to glv place to a -- Recalled. wjy Trubyto Teeth....... CIA KV521a 53 Silver Fillings.. Teeth Cleaned EXAMINATION r Cl Ffl m Peets Floating jp tile Soap.. 6 A Ste e.rA-i,lwW- j: TSfUflh.. -- T1 Since then he Is older In year and knowledge! responsibilities have sharpened the lines on his face. He Is not always in ths merry mood of boyishness,s he has been touched by the great which he hsa already had to face. There Is steel In him, a well as a laughing spirit. He Is learning the quality of t command, as well as comradeship, have written about him because this boy, the Prince of Wales. Is to some extent typlc, the symbol of that English youth will be called upon to face the unknown future, not without many lurking perils In Its mystery, not without a challenge to the supremacy of the race, but full of promise If British youth plays up to Its chances, going ahead with courage, not afraid to change to the new Jdeaa, yet not forgetting the heritage ot the old past, with tta quality and charmay acter or adventure. Foreigners think this prince stuff hopelessly out understand of date, but they cannot England If thev dont aee In thla periodical homage of people to the leading boy a sentiment bound up with old roIntensified mance and history. by the character of that lsd who Is not extraordinary or endowed with unusual qualbut Is most liked because be Is ities. as ordinary, natural and Jollv as the best typo of bojr produced by British stock. pros-Jem- (Copyright, 1922, paper Syndlcata) by the McClure News- PRISONER IS RETURNED. Ipteisl t6 The Tribune. POCATELLO, Idaho, June 1. SherllT George Ma.bey returned last night from Skit Lake with Arthur Martin In custody. Martin was arrested in Balt Lake two weeks ago and la wanted bare taw connection with the murder of Frank Mace, who waa ohot to death In the Oregon Short Line yards last October. It is ths theory that Mace and Martin wdrd members of a gang which had been robbing bonks throughout the Intermountain country, end that Mace wns killed for fear that he would .squeal" on the remainder of the gang. DENTAL COMPANY 212 Main Street, Established --1903. DR. L. J. DULL, Manager. Open 8:30 a. m. to 7 p. m, . SUNDAYS, 10 to 2 FREE. Y EQUIPMENT. . art of prosthegig (replacing a lost part bj artificial means) eta only be mastered nr tong continued practieq and no RIGHT .KIND of The experience. At best,- - artificial teeth cannot compare with natural teeth, and it devolves upon the dentist specializing in prosthesis to at nearly approach perfection as skill, experience, and the material will permit. ' Colgate $ Big Bath 3 for 25c Soap Soap A Shower Bath la Any Tub Maaiafie for 25c (l Elisabeth Ardens Rose Bath Salts Sr......JSc year. K5SS.;.. Tollet $1.75 $3.00 Melba L vM a Toilet Japan they liked the heat of and beat It All the wy around the Olobe, via Singapore. To herse.f for the Grand Tour, she prepare took twelve lessons In French and read Jip on the Taj Mahal. She had to wait patiently until Edwin was threatened with a Nervous Break-DowAt Vast the Happy Day arrived when the Specialist told him he must make his choice between a long Sea Voyage and a slow ride to the Family Lot. Edwin had secured a Passport which ldentlfed him as a male white Pet son, entitled to all Ahe Courtesies and Privileges usually extended to an American Cltisen holding a Passport. When they tottered down the after six days on the playful North Atlantic, their only Comfort was derived from the knowledge that, aa eoon aa they had rested up. they could write home and quote the Second Officer as it was the roughest Passage he aaylnr had ever Known. After spending a few days In London, try ng to get warm, they moved on to Paris, which they remfftsbered long afterward on account of Napoieons Tomb and the price of Strawberries. They employed a Quids who knew all the Shops. If Selena happened to admire a Trinket or some outre Confection with Lace slathered on It, a perfumed Apache In a frock coat would take Edwin Into a Side Room, give him the sleeve across and bite a piece out of h.s ths Wind-PipLetter of Credit. Three weeks after saying good-by- s to Griddle Cakes they were tn Naples, which they had seen pictured on so many Calendars Looking back across the Centuries they recalled. the Clerks standing In the Doorways and the friends of the Bridge Club. It was sweet to remember that the world not made up of cadging y r Head Walters. Their only chance of catching even on the Imperial Suite at It Bucks a Day was to make the Folks back at the Whlatllng Post think they were playing and dancing the Tarantella, Guitars whatever that la Next week we see them in Egypt, still s, and offering anyaddressing thing within Reason for a good Cup of Coffee. Somehow, sitting !n the dusky Tomb didnt seem to help their Nostalgia. Not that they would own up to being Home-SicNo. Indeed! They-k- ept writing back that they enjqyed every Minute spent aftiong the Cemeteriee and Rulna or sailing up the Nile, and Edwin holding up wonderfully, for tn Invalid. of them spoke of the Only, when either Children, or Corned-Bee- f Hash, or the by the hand ent-rel- -- Pout-Cord- k. toauics Bath Oxygen 'PAIjrLES3 Extractions CDs ; Gold Crowns and Bridge Work.,... 2. 52 0 55 55 WORK GUARANTEED AND Yob ran spend more money, , inperior dental service. but you cannot buy w i Talcam 23c Mary Garden Talcum Powder. ...20c nEr OvC ... vOC Make Walkinj a Pleasure Folryfoot Bunion Plaster $1.00 $1.50 Falryfoot Foot Tolt Water Powder Coty'a Lor'gan let Water Toi- Blue Jay Foot Powder $3.50 $6.75 Blue Jay Foot Soap Harriet Hubbard Ayera Vtolette Pot- ale Toilet Waters Blue Jay Foot Relief .... Blue Jay Corn $1.25 $1.75 $3.50 Planters . . . Hill's Corn Puller It Allen Ease Vtalls Foot Powder Freesone for Corn ...... Isn9t a Vacation Without a :J Oor-nlc- Nothing like it. They were led up to highly odorous Bazaars conducted by lineal Descendants of the 40 Thieves. In the dusty Cattle Often, while Cars and looking out at the parched Plains, they would think of the shaded Front Porch, only S minutes from Barclays Drug Store, where they sold Ice Cream Soda. Moaning feebly, they Would return to the Italicised Guide Book. The Chow consisted largely of Curry and Rice, the medicinal flavor of which was further accentuated by Butter brought In Tins all the way from Sweden. Each day they would purchase a Newsand paper about the else of a search eager.y for American News. Once In a while they would learn that Congress had met or another Colored Person had been burned at the Stake. It cheered them Immensely to know that the Land of the Free was still squirming. Tear after year In the months of March and April they continued on their tedious Way through the burning Tropics, They spent weary Agee along the avenues of white look ng at Counties millions of Brunettes tn fluttering Nighties. hungry The Invalid s one desire wee to get home and take a regmar Bath before be ing laid out. Ho Kong pleased them exceedingly because they learned, by consulting Mr. Mercator" s Projection, that they were on the Home Stretch, and, with Luck In their favor, might live to eee another Piece of Huckleberry Pie. Japan they liked the best of all. At Yokohama they received a bundle of Dailies only sx weeks old, giving furi Particulars of a Wedding end telling who waa about to run for Mayor. As soon aa they were on the Pacific end headed fur a refined Vaudeville Show, they began to recover the brave Spirit of Travel and blow about what they had seen. Before touching at Honolulu they were real enthusiastic about India. They advised ths Listener who had not been all the Way around, to be sure and take In Penang and Johore and, .f necessary, they would give him Letters of Introduction. They said K had been a Wonderful ExYea, Indeed. And broadening. perience Very. Then Edwin would wander to the end of front the Shift and want to climb out on the Bowsprit so aa to be In San Fran ahead of anybody else. Two hours after lauding, Edwin saw a Porter-Hous- e Steak and bunt Into tears. They sped eastward by tbs first Train, still busy w.th the little Red Books, tor they knew they would have to answer a lot of Questions Shall wo own up and tell them the Awful Truth? asked Selena "Not on your Esoteric Buddhism, Edwin. We never will be rewarded for our Sufferings unless we convince the Neighbors that we had a run for our Money It woe a troubled Nightmare, In Spots, but when I lecture In the Church Parlor I am going to burn (foes Sticks and variety of Bunk made famous rull every Sir Edwin Arnold and. LatcadM , , Hearn. On the following Tuesday, Selena ap- -, w peared at the Club th her Mandarin Coat end the long Hindoo s. 8he ! had them frozen In their Chairs. MORAL: Be It ever so Hard to Take, there Is no Place like away from Homo. Bed-Spre- Lime-KUn- r- - Take a kodak witli you. ' Kodak adds ,to the fun and keeps it in pictures. Be sure your vacation plana include a kodak. We have the one you want, and the Jilms an4 accessories as well. This is th? place t' coroe for the Eastman line of photographic all autographic from .Kodak goods. Brownies $2.C0 and up. ' ; $6.30 up. MAIL US YOUR FILMS Try us for bettsr Finishing the Print on Veiox. and Service. We Make Kodsk Portrait Attachment An For the elose-up- e extra lens that slips over your camera lens and makea cloee-ufIn sharp focus st short range, without Hz affecting the length of the exposure or the, 7I vv operation of the camera. AI( sixes s, ed Ear-Ring- (Copyright. I 22, the Ben Syndicate, Inc.) NOMINATIONS FILED. POCATHLU). Idaho, June It. Among the recent nominations filed for the county ticket, subject to the primaries, by ore the following; William A. Hyde, ineumbenL for probate Judge, and Ned McCracken of Pocatello, for commissioner of the Second district laboratories, skilled dental mechanics and the unrestricted aee I the beat material known to the profession. gold 1 specified for all erowns and bridge work. Genuine Trubyte Teeth and expert workmanship art guaranteed in Uaion Pri, vUb Sfelba Lov'Me Talcum XuC Powder Hud nuts Violet Seq ri C Talcum Powder ......... AOten Sprays $1.00 $2.00 Bashi-Basou- I HONEST PRICES Gas 53 with $1.00 $1.85 $3.50 25c 50c $1.00 .., $1.50 to $5.00 L e 1P XOv Hudnuta Three Flowers Talcum... vwh eKnt-esus- n Knickerbocker Theirs The sight of a Temple threw Edwin into a Relapse, but he would have given e 1000 for one look at the galvanised of the Court House. Bock among the Corn Fields, Cousin Elia pictured them as riding a caparisoned Elephant up to the mai b.e latece of the Uaekwar of Baroda, where Edwin would flash his Passport and then the distinguished Guests would be eaiaamed to the Peacock Throne. awe-strick- Nitrons-Ozi- d WftUpr" Boat-Card- s, k, e, alL they were benumbed and submissive and had settled lno a Routine. They would arrive In a New Town, fly to the Hotel, unpack, go out and buy come bock to their colored the Dump (usually called the Grand Hotel Vlotorta), address Cards to a.I the Names on the list, then pack up, pay the Overehargee, and ride to the Railway Station, accompanied by a small regiment of who were looking tor n. Gang-Plan- $1.00 Water . . Hudnuta Y14U !? sad KNICKERBOCKER Toilet Waters Kiss Quickly all set 1TT tx and Colored borders Cooling Talcums Hlllroee Velvet Talcum hunut imy dsefmf. Tomb, 39c weight. You bathe in clean, running Water- - he only January way. It quick. Latti for Sana 65c SCc Bath First qualify, good hv SSmwotIss. B.iqiM Mumiw th vilf ilratt hne. th. ? P Three fn A't in -- 7)rT iHZ Rub-Dow- n With th odor of freshly picked flowers. Your favorite Is sure to be found In our comprehensive showing. We mention a few; Hudnut'e Mavis Toilet Water Flower Tol-- r w let Water. . w I Pier -- Shampoo 60c $1.10 $2.25 PLATES, CROWNS BRIDGEWORK Plate. Buttermilk 3 for 25c Ess-Jat- ft ( Union Dentist are experienced in their work. They have the aid or fully equipped private 110 as- Royal Palm 4 for 25c Soap They add the final touch ot luxuriousnesa to your bath. CA Hudnute Violet JCr Sec Bath 8aiu..vV PIOV Harriet Hubbard Ayere Bath A Cr Salts, eeeorted UOV odors ITU Eau De Cologne Bath Salta i PROSTHETIC DENTISTRY TAB-LET- S The Instant Lather Soap'. 6 for 49c Jap Rose, BATH SALTS Kings Injury Disturbs Rim. Future Viewed Seriously. Casfor 45 c JEROEKB BATH Large size ; sorted odora 3 yw n.n Vety best et of Soap v Ver-mell- When the king came out the Second time, the prince went on Meselnes ridge, which was Just captured, and when the Germans started their usual inornlng hate, the prince was wandering around a patch of earth which was unpleasantly within their line of fire. He didnt atop, he didnt show by the flicker of ah eyelid that thla shellfire disturbed his peace of mind; he prodded sround for relics ot German occupation. Thera was a day at the front when he was deeply disturbed. If was when the king was thrown from his horse, which slipped In the greasy mud of a Flanders field during a review of the guards. 1 was standing immediately oppoeite the king when he fell under the horse, snd when he was picked up by general Who ran to him, he looked badly hurt, as Indsed be was. saw him carried away In on ambulance next day like, an ordinary casual, and there were only a few who knew how very 111 he was for a little while. The young Prince of Wales, who saw ths shadow of the crown creeping upon him, was desperately anxious. He was no mere Joy rider at the front He or onlooker at other mens service held a job with the guards, given hiih In tlie quartermaster's department, and did It very well. I heard lylm once ordering supplies He always had a Joke for his (ellow officers, and one day toward the end of the war, when dmasttes were fall tug like a park of carda, he came down to 'breakfast In the guards mess with the cheery remark: "Well, gentlemen, crowns are cheap today." 6 for 45c Q f--y aI Tuesday Petit Parisian Bath up a little hill called Shernenberg, which was crowded with generals watching ths sttaok under the shadow of an old windmill. AS a simple lieutenant he saluted all those high officers, who Just .nodded back to him; but I thoughfuien. end think now. It would have mads a good picture; for Edward, Prince ef Walea was stamping on ground where ones stood another Prince of Wale, five hundred years before, and not far from the ground where Henry FalstafTs Prince of Wales advanced to the battle of AgincourL On 8t, Crispin s day Afterwards I saw the prince in queer placet, where It .was not at all safe to be. He used to motor around with. S bunoh of young guards officers and leave his car under shelter of a bit of ruin then go walking Into places taped out," as wo called it, by the German gunners - no health resorts. One day as we walked Into the dirty ruin called one of ths unhollest spots on the British front, a high explosive shell came along and blew hie chauffeurs head off. That didnt stop his adventures In shell fire. Orders from home came, but he played truant many times for ths frontline stunt THE OLD RELIABLE HONEST WORK paz in tub or ahower. DELIGHTFUL! Regular $1.23 Value. Monday -- Event er Respect of His People. Historic The prince came V so soft, so cleansing will not IdeaFfor babys bath. YVith To- you can produce a thick, creamy lather in a jiffy. Use it half the pleasure of a bath irritate the tenderest skin. Men and Affairs at Washington By R. T. S. (Copyright, 1912, by 8alt Lake Tribune ) . Mrs. Peter WASHINGTON. June Oleson may not win the Minnesota senatorial toga this fall, but already she har achieved what may easily be considered the political triumph of the year. In her forthcoming fight against Senator Frank B. Kellogg, the Republican nominee, she has been tendered the active gentlesupport of these distinguished men- James M. Cox, William G. McAdoo, William Jennings Brian. If there he no triumph In bringing these three gentlemen together under the ami banner, what, then, indeed, in triumph? In Cox, McAdoo snd Bryan you have all the conflicting eements In Democracy. In them you hav the contender for the leadership In the next presidenwill tial campaign, and among them youflimnot find enough love to disturb so sy a thing as a radio wave. If Jimmie Cox says a thing is white, Mr, McAdoo Insists It Is black, snd Mr. Bryan tells the world that both are forever and eternally wrong That tb.M three gentlemen ot diamet-be rically opposing views ever could and brought to an Indorsement of one the earn candidate for office Is llttl short of a miracle. And there are those unusual alignment who believe th oresages something out of the ordinary If all three should Invade Minnesota this fall In the interest of Mr. Oleson they would certainly make the welkin ring. who Naturally there e these killjoyschance say Mrs. Oleson will have a better but the If she conducts ber fight alone, moral becking of the all. an asset after to be Is trio Mrs. Oleson Is best remembered In Washington for th notable speech she made al the Jefferson day dinner her. Goyemer) Cox, Mr. McAdoo and Mr BryNi all beard her on that occasion and all were won to her. The militant campaign that the bundle ef energy known as Anns Dickie Oleson will make In Minnesota between now snd election will constitute one of the great political features of the year, snd it w'lf he interesting to ee how the Republican organisation wlU meet this entirely unusual attack. e-- LICENSED TO MARRY. . POCATELLO. Idaho. Jure A marof Secretary of riage license was Issued yesterday to Sitting en either side noon Dominick Masene and Brum at' the an. Derrioo, State Hughes Thursday both of Pocatello. nlversary luncheon of Oversea Writers, I A- actress. During the war Mr. and Mrs, Payne were living outside London. In fact, their villa at Maidenhead was quite a gathering place for American those In the profe&alon and out. Mrs.- - Ltsie Carter whs much ln demifid In LuC Ion ' , for benefits of various sorts. At last there came a time hrben a benefit was being arranged for some war charity under the auspices ot the American correspondents. Mrs. Leslie Carter received an Invitation to recite or give an entire act from one of her plays. The invitation included the name of the patrons of the affair, including Edward Price Bell, Doyen of the American correspondents; Robert M. Collins, and various others. That evening Lou was showing, (he . Inv.tatlon about the Savoy grfil. know most of these fellows, Bell and Bobby Collins, and the others, he said, "but 'Im damned It i ever heard of this . the new and somewhat exclusive newstwo paper club of Waahlngtun, were other honored guests. They were Messrs Edward Bell and Edward Bell. All the the lunchecviera with the exception Of those who saw service In London during the war were much confused at the situation. Who Is the handsome gentleman st th left of the secretary?" they asked, "the one with the Shantung suit and the fearsome black mustache, eh, who Is he? Initiated, "Why." replied one of th "that Is Ed Bell, who used to be tn London." "And who Is the slender, serious young man at the right of the secretary? Whv, that Is Ed Bell, who used to be In London." "Oh, no; you told me about Bel a moment ago. I dont mean the handsome man In the Shantung suit with ths fearsome mustache; 1 mean the slender one. Ed Bell, of London. "Well, then, tell me again, who Is the handsome than In the Shantung suit and black mustache?" Ed Bell, whoused to be In London." By thl time diplomatic relattona between questioner and Informant were about at an end, and even the smiling face of the secretary ecented trouble In the air. The mystery having proceeded far enough, a general note of explanation was sent about the tables explaining that the handsome gU tn the Shantung suit, with the fearsome black mustache, was Edward Bell, who used to be senreury ef the American embassy tn London and It is was later charge at Toklo, whe-- e. the Shantung presumed, suit, for It was he who handed the American arms conference Invitation to the Japanese foreign minister and tt was at the Washington conference that the Shantung lasue was settled. The slender, serious faced gentleman at the secretarys right was Edward Brice Bell, dean of American newspaper men In Europe, who for twenty-tw- o years hes represented the Chicago Daily News in London. . vte-qg- ed The English refer to Edward Price Bell as Doyen, rather than dean of the American correspondent, snd thereby hangi s tale of the Savoy lounge at the expenne of one Lou Payne, In private! life the husband of Mr. Leslie Carter, the noted ,t - I fellow Doyen. t The ferocious barracuda, or tiger f the sea." which startled the country the past week by a fatal attack upon a girl bather at Tamp, Fla., Is bo stranger fishermen ot the Florida to the deep-se- a coast. President Harding, who rarely missed a visit to Florida each whiter before he became the chlef executive, knows the barracuda about as well as any man In Washington, with the possible excepCoroe of the National tion of Jack Geographic society, whe else haa made In tlorlda Waters. many expeditions President Harding has outfought ard landed several barracuda on his various trips. The tackle that he used In dealirg with the tiger would hold an ordinary mule on on of Its worst rampages. with an ugly underSlender, shatp-qoeeshot Jaw, the barracuda has. the swiftness of an arrow and the strength of a On the fishing trip he made panther. south of Miami Just before his Inauguration Mr. Harding landed some wonderf il them measuring fi.) y specimens, some of eight feet long. - He aso caught two achievement. fishing railfiah, a real There Is an exclusive club tn Palm Lea. h known as ths Sallflsh club, snd cmy those who have landed one of these evad denisena of the deep at sive i eligible. MISSIONARIES ON VISIT. f t Special to ths Tribune. PLEASANT GROVE, June ?4 Emmet R. Hayes, son of Mr. snd Mrs. W. J. Hayet, snd Ruoecl B Swenson, a"t - f Bishop snd Mrs. S L. Swenson. r vT Salt Lake fries be' r d for missions on June 2g Mr Hi , v labor In the northern state n headquarters ot Cbbaao. b t son will go to the Swiss and Oer.u.a n L. high-finne- 1 1 u- |