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Show ( f IHE that hive com to Utah within th past few months, du to the competitive bidding for business here' by these two f Xttvr Monteg f InH roads. It is reasonable to assume that tslt Ufc Tribun PubltablRf Cwpif. ia' the future, with two powerful railTEfrUS Of SUBrtCRIPTIOMs ll ttE ItifiK mtatku4 fOoaif- - JJ road systems ia competition within the TXitly a4 Boty, on state, manufacturers, producers of. row jMUy tn4 ftondajr, on yur EiNwMn ia U, materials, g..well as other shippers, f1 Util ta4 Burfty, per aofttl ,... will prosper in even a greater degree. yeur Tribune, w IM Tribune U M Ml la wy iMporUnlri'y EXPERTS AND TAX INCREASES. la lh Halted flute, flee (leu Bar "'TI. areata la aar ettr bf telephoatnr bl oitle. As a correspondent points out, Utah sf the Aaeoelated TO. Tribun. 1 a meit I enFreea. The Aaeoelated Fre icl"lt;l met th tax 4 expert when a first titled to the oe for repubUeatloa ef all dtapatebe eredlted t It or aet other laa temporary tax commission wasjip-pointe-d ' hi tht paper, aad aloe the p;aItn!Kgfibanf ... feml-Reek- ')( erea-lte- tl JSAIj'i LAKE TRIBUNE, 10.300.000 marks monthly, statements show, lo addition, thershave been ex- penses incidental to accommodations and the like amounting to 5,250,000 mark each month. of the 'interallied The membership control commissions includes six Americans, ' 230 Belgians, 139 Italians and twenty-ei- x Japanese. The proportions are different in the ease of tbs reparations commission, to which there are attached fourteen, Americans, twelve Belgians, fifteen Englishmen, sixty-thre- e Frenchmen, seven Italians aad two native of Madagascar, t Th expense of this commission waasdt down in official statement as averaging 82.600.000 marks monthly. The commission restitution was stated to cost the German government 2.500.000 marks monthly. There are three Americans on the interallied eon commission and four on th missing research commission. At the time the figures were compiled th cost of- the maintenance of troops in occupied German territory paid. by Germany aggregated 519, 000,000 paper marks qionthly, divided between the powers as follows: France, - kerria. in 1912. It made a voluminous The Trlbooa I a nrambw ef th Awlltflnteaa Trio-uot- 'a which contained many of the The report, eoorernlnf of Clretilatloa. lnformatloa elrralattoa wWt-- b. atuaUedr . Recommendations . bM Chlrar put forward by the Burras of t'lrenlatloa. realnrr commission and its advisers. Th 8. C. Beckwith flpeelal Afracy. present l era adrertlaln arent. World bid. bid., The report was not adopted by the ltlbaae bid., Chief.; Poet Dwpatch Brysnt Mli'h.l Detroit. Loo Ford Bt. la; bldf., bld Kaaaaa Ct , Mo. M. C. Morreaae .A legislature, but it has been followed by Oe., tnc., Paelfle Ooaet repreaeatatlee, Eaaa a constant agitation ever since, ia ell laet hid , Baa Praaetaco; Title Inaaraae bid., Itea Anelea; fleeorltr bid., Beattie. of which the sslhs persons largely have of lnformatloa of Th TribfWeta bur Bn Lamartine, Pari. Trance, 1M been conspicuous. une are: Pall Hall, London, Bnjland; 1 toter deiiLlnd, to which curious our feet The 1UI. Home, Hotel. appeals Eieetalor Germ Berlin, aar; Correspondent is that the period of exTelephone Waaatoh MO, Wbea ro fail to et poor Trlbon falepboaa cessive taxation in Utah dates from cioc 10 111 Cltr elreulatioB department before aweeaer. br aent yen be will m. a the'year when the experts took a and eopp a. The per capita 331.000.- 000; Belgium, 62,000,000; Enim tend at the poatoffle at Balt Lak City aa hand in 'the situation. aacoad-clamatter. tax in 1902, a shown by figures com- gland, 73,000,000 aad America, publlifcod piled by the state board of equalization nndt recently published In The Tribune, was 9.81. It had increased 61 per cent over that amount its 1912, when 1922. October 6, It was 10.13, but by 1931 it had increased to 40.74, a percentage increase POlt THE SOUTHEBlf PACITIO. of 147 over 1912. The publio debt in the eam period, that is, substantially and club Commercial Th Salt Luka 1913 to 1921, had increased 143 from, Chamber of Commerce iias announced per cent, or from 37.77ier capita to South-er- a 98 per eapit, pCfiefnTTy it eonaluaioa that the One of the point stressed by the for Pacific Railroad company should mer commission was the assessment of and control it retain allowed to bo property at ,ita actual value, instead of management of the Central Pacific at part value, as had been the practice road. This decision wai reached by a for many year Largely through the twenty-fiv- e effort of of ten years the of consisting committee experts special some of whom are still with ns, representative citizens, after they ego, the legislature of 1918 undertook to achad hold a aerie of hearings ia which complish thia It was promised at th arguments were presented by repre- time that levies would come down to sentatives of both the Union Pacific correspond with the increase in valuaand Bouthera Pacifio. A detailed re- tion. Levies were somewhat reduced port by the Traffic bureau, employed for a time, but the situation has been by the club, wa an important factor sadly confused and unsatisfactory ever ia the decision. since. This controversy over control of the As it stands now, all property has Central Pacific has been in progress been increased in valumtion. Some of for several months, aince the United it has been brought to a full 100 per States inpreme court, ia a suit brought cent or more. Tbs point which most under the Sherman antitrust act, of concerns the taxpayer is that the levies, . derei the separation of tbo Southern temporarily somewhat reduced, are now Pacific and the Central Pacific. This back to points as high as or higher than action had been pending in the supreme prior to 1915, which with the greatly court for several years aad did not increased valuations has brought the take into consideration tbs transporta- per capita tax .up to 47 per eent more tion bet passed long after the Suit had than it was in 1912. In addition to all been instituted, and which, in effect, this, the taxpayer must curry tha cost . gives the interstate commerce commis- of a bonded indebtedness which sion1 the authority to nullify provi- amounts to 92 . per capita. sions of the antitrust act, inasmuch as It should be borne in mind that these that body is authorised to group to- figures represent per capita increases gether competing lines when ia the and, therefore, take into aeeount the public interest to do so. increased population of the state. Th Commercial club committee bah Tho above comparisons are especially worked patiently over a considerable at this time, when another interesting period and obviously its conclusions ar commission is making similar recomLast oe, tan entitled to respect and ncoop mendations and, like the first ne . week the commercial organisations of promising that if its program ia adopted Utah county went on record is favor- taxpayer will get relief. Taxpaying Southern Pacific control. ers have about all this sort of relief Th principal reasons for these ex- since 1918 that they esa stand. pression of opinion ere set forth in the resolution adopted by the Edit Lake ENGLAND INDEPENDENT. Commercial club. One of them is a deAccording to Dr. C. IL Landsr, a sire to prevent the domination bt this tat by any tingle transportation member of the British fuel research ngeney. The Union Pacifio already oc- board, Great Britain could produce cupies aa advantageous position ia this enough oil for Its navy and merchant territory, and it ia feared that, ahould coal, If neone road control all of the outlet to marine from the Pacific coast, the growth and de- cessity arose. Production of oil from Englands velopment of the intermouatsin country would, be greatly retarded. While it is home resources, naturally, is extremely not belief that the present officials to the Country, since aa alof the Union Pacific, understanding Important most substitution of oil for complete the needs of Utah as they do, would coal baa taken place in the navy and use their and unjustly arrogantly power, there is, nevertheless, a feeling is being gradually adopted in tha mer-chamarine. Although coal, peat and . that in the future a leas friendly policy be made to yiddllquid fuel, can shale eueeessor. be their might adopted by The business men of 6alt Lake aad coal alone can be regarded as a possible other citiea and towna of the etate de- source from which sufficient quantisire competition In the markets of ties could be produced by practical Utek between the east and the west. methods, says Dr. Lander. A ton of avenge bituminous coal This is regarded as of supreme importance by the Salt Lake Commercial will yield fourteen gallons of fnel oil, clubs committee. Upon this point th or about 0 per cent by weight, of the resolution adopted at Wednesdays row material used. For every 1,000,000 Tbs Southern Pacific tons of oil produced, 18,000,000 tons of meeting says: system, being independent of any rail- coal would have to be produced. This road east of Utah, is concerned with will also yield about 11,000,000 tona of building up eoast markets for Utah coke and 56,000,000,000 cubic feet of products and in encouraging the pur- rich hydrocarbon gas, so that if a satchase of supplies for Utah from western isfactory process of will foster carbonizatioh should prove feasible, th sources, and in a Scheme of rates to achieve this pur-po- 35,000,000 tons of coal used annually against a similar scheme of rates in Great Britain for domestic purposes between Utah and eastern points which would produce about 2,100,000 tons of other lines most initiate md maintain oil, more- - than the peace requirements of the British navy, and yet leave a toibuild up eastern traffic. enormous fhe Union Paeifie, the pioneer quantity of manufactured fuel which it would beeome necessary to the1 served has railway, pie of the intermonntain country for induce domestic consumers to use in Je than half a century, and it will place of coal. oqiinue to serve them in the years to eoifceXUnder the present able and ef- GERMANY PROTESTS CHARGES, has ficient management great ...progress . . , Heavy overhead chargee incident to . , rrili, - - home-mine- d te self-intere- trans-coinent- ... For the months up to BMmber, 1920, the aggregate coat wm 8,500,000,000 marks. The sum of 1.109.000.- 000 marks - of this total is charged to the account of the American troops, 1,200,000,000 to France, 1.000.- 000.000 even to England, to Belgium and 10,000,000 to Italy. The. approximate cost monthly of tha American army of occupation was estimated at 42,000,000 mark twenty-ei- x 184,-000,0- AUSTRIA GIVEN HELP. Help ia at hand for Austria, dismembered remnant of a one proud and powerful empire. The league of nation is to be thanked for the assistance which promises to open a brighter future tot the patch of territory Vienna and now 'dignified by the name of nation. The Austrian chancellor aad representatives of Great Britain, France and Italy have signed protocol making effective the league of nations plan to save the Austrian state. A largo, long-tim- e loan, on generous term, will be made to Austria, the government in Vienna to issue bonds, the three powers named and guaranteeing payment of interest. Austria will offer as security for interest payments her customs receipt aad her tobaceo monopoly. She also agrees to undertake reforms necessary to balance her budget. The government will accept supervision in the spplieation of these reforms by a commissioner Of the .league .of nations, whose authorization will be necessary before the Austrian treasury proceeds to realize on loans guaranteed by the powers; it abandons all rights to issus papsr money or negotiate loans, and accepts supervision by a commission to be composed of sepresentatives of each nation guaranteeing a portion of the loan. The guarantor countries, on their part, agree that they will respect the territorial Integrity, independence and sovereignty of Austria and will seek no special or exclusive financial or economic advantages which might compromise Austrian right Thus the appeal of the Austrians to the league of nations has met with the highest degree of success and the way is opened to at least an almost Immediate partial recovery from the financial and economie disasters which have engulfed this dwarfed and cripThe post-wa- r pled state. story of Austria is one of national tragedy. The replacing of that state upon a firmer financial and economic basis will help to 'promote the of Europe. te Czecho-Slo-vaki- well-bein- a g BERUN ANH MOSCOW. Count von Brockdorff Bantzau, who refused to sign the Versailles treaty, is ennonneed as the German ambassador to Moscow. Though this appointment has been rumored for some time, it is announced simultaneously with the receipt of a shower of diplomatio notes from Moscow over the near eastern situation, which shows that Moscow is trying for political success by encouraging Turkey. This appointment may be taken to indioate even closer diplomatic relations between Moscow and Berlin thiyi have existed since the signing of the T RapallO treaty." It Will revive talk about a hew triple alliance that of Germany, Russia and Turkey in which Germany will be the silent, Bussia the vociferous,' and Turkey the active partner. The little entente and the Balkan eountriea are troubled because they believe Russia is trying to force a Balkan LTNCH, Ky Oct. I. The tot ef the eoal miner may be learned br seeing him he at work and Seeing how wife seeing bit home and his dren. Reading about what he earns is not altogether enlightening. In a typical Kentucky coal mine the miner earns his bread and everything that goes with It. Yet he enjoys a sense of freedom. He may go where he likes and b assured of good wages, and the labor' turnover in Kentucky mines, large and small, large ones especially, shows that he does go when he Ukea. And he likes often to o. Why so. Inasmuch at he does not better himself by going? For the same reason that a domestic servant, weary of washing another womans dishes, moves on to a Job no better In a vain attempt to get away from dull routine. It Is necessary for a tall man to bend almost double la tho tunnels which lead to the rooms In which miners work. Th tunnels are in darkness and it is necessary to be careful not to 'touch an electric wire overhead which runs tbo mine trolley cars. Miners get used to tho stooping position and grow contemptuous of the live wire. On strong man grew y to hurt him, and in - a spirit of bravado took hold of It. Tho- wtrg did not slay him, but left him alive, as if to teach him lesson. It visited uponhlm for life the grim Jest of an unseen Titan. Almost fabulous stories ar told of th possible, and occasionally actual, earnings of miner when coal Is high, but th average earnings of a miner may be learned, If anywhere, from the ledgers of a mining corporation. The company emminers dont ployees dont tell. Th know, apparently. A man who doe hard manuel labor In an Isolated room opening upon a tunnel which runs a half mile to daylight on a mountainside ought to be well paid. A man whooe hair doe not stand on and when he removes ooal Which has bsen left in tha form of ptllars, tin the vein has been robbed, ana sees the. mountain settle In front of him and doe the opening that has been mads, has the admiration of anyone. Few desire to witness that feature of mining. Occasionally an error of Judgment in that work, or an error a to th stability of a slab of slat In the roof of report In a room, results ta a thrro-lin- e the press that a miner was killed, and leaves a widow and numerous children weeping In a eottage in a ooal camp. HAZARD OF MINI NO. There ar other causes of occasional fatalities, but th statistics of mining donot show that the occupation Is estremeIt is pointed out that tho ly hazardous. miner is exposed to no extremes of teman atperature. Hi work is done In mosphere not unlike that of Mammoth cave, so well are modern mines ventilattemed, and In an unchanging ccllar-llk- e perature. After a short daye work the miner Is free to enjoy life In Lynch or Jenkins In such a climate as health seekers go far to enjoy. Lynch has nearly as high an elevation as Rockbridge Alum Springs In Virginia, or the hotels In and about Asheville, N. C. All of th conveniences and most of the luxuries of Ilfs In a first-clacity are provided. Th miner's reo Idence is near everything his wife wants in the way of. table or household supss Necessary expense of Hving Is plies. not high. The rapidity with which money Is spent by miners and their families Indicates welfare above that of a majority of skilled laborer, Including those engaged In occupations such as bridge carpentry and outside painting on city building which ar as hazardous as mining. Ths miner who has com out of th mins covered with coal dust, caked on by perspiration, goes to a bathhouse which compares favorably with - that of the T. M. c A. in Washington- or New York. Afterward he may ba seen playing Millards or attending a picture show, attired like a business man, or idling on the street In khskl according to his bent But his wife and his children nearly always are well dressed, and nothing Is too good or too costly for tho family UMe. The elaborate system of welfare work In tho model mining camps is Indeed Inspiring, but the labor turnover indicates that it inspires ths Student of Industrial relationships more than It does she miner. He takas tt all as a matter of course. He seems about as happy In the less well equipped. camps. Ht drifts from one to another often with seeming aimlessness. Some observer claim that In the Kentucky coal fields men are more listless where they are best housed, best reason The fed, and best amused. ascribed Is that the miners In the great coal camps feel no sort of allegiance to the soli, no matter how Jong their residence at a given camp, while miners in many of the smaller operations have a love of home uploh keeps them thers. BOMB MINERS MAY OWN HOMES. Visitors ar impressed especially with conditions and ths apparent th loyalty of the miners at Stearns, a tlm her and coal operation which has its administration buildings on the Cincinnati Bouthern railroad near tha Tennessee line. Here th miners artflven, under stipulated conditions, opportunity to acquire surface rights to land. Thoy may build their cottage and own them and live In them In the style to which Kentucky mountaineers are accustomed. The result Is that a great proportion of the miners here are natives. Their log cabins peep from the pines In various situations so picturesque that they look like they had been built for movlo camera to shoot ' They ar wholly without th conveniences which make a miner's home In a modern camp much like an In Chicago or New York. apartment Vi Ives of miners her pack water from In the spring," native vernacular, feed in a pen and keep chickens. They pigs know the hardship of strenuous labor, but seemingly they have no desire to move, and thelf ftin share their looai - attachment. In Floyd county, Jn the Big Bandy valley, native miners predominate. There are no camps In this region that could be called show place of Kentucky coal fields.. Rut native mlners. reeentn g tha Intrusion of foreigners, are Inclined to remain In on place. So greatly do they resent th present of outsiders that lm porting labor into this field may cause In times clashes. bloody of large coal orders thers Is difficulty In getting enough labor, as th natlv population Is not dense. In .the model camp a miner owns nothing but hla household good. That Is-rule he acquires at tha company store after arrival Often he tells it and leaves It when h mores. Nothing binds him t the plaeo, Impedes him if its wishes to move. He goes like S on furnished room city lodger, leaving to take a similar one in another street At Hlmlervllle, on Tug river In Martin county, Across ths stream from Kermit, West Vtrgtnta, there Is a settlement of miners which attracts considerable at a Not-hieg reluctant to take port- - in the over the control of the Cen tm Paeifie and put themselves in the pollion of antagonizing an expreased witt of the Union Pacifio, which they hapid long known and, in 'the main, lik well. The issue was forced upon thep, howeveriBl personal considera- tiois were not allowed to stand in the wajr of a just - decision. A business matter has been decided ia a bnsineas-likj- l manner. There has been no display of paneor no- bitterness. Should the intpstate commerce commission accept tha. reasoning of the Commercial club committee, which, wo believe, repre- sws the businese yiews of ..ths. people of the community, ,the Union Pacific wii have lost' nothing, for it has' no moral claim to the Central Pacific, wkpe the Southern Pacific, remaining in Ownership and control of the Central Pacific, will be left in pbsition th be jm important contender for the busi-o- f this state. fEven the blindest of men can perceivjp the advantages vrtj .. - -- of a number of entente commissions to supervise the execution by Germany .of th stipulations of that Convention have bean' vigorously protested by Germany One of the rulings of tho reparations ?r --example. wa . that--alofficial and attache of the entente commissions wars to be paid by the German government, not on the basis of th German salary and mark, but on the basis of their home pay in the equivalent of marks. Thus, tha salary of a French division general, which had been 33,000 francs lest year, had to ba paid in about 2,000,000 marks, .while a British general was rated at 4,000,000. The general who nets as president of one of . the commissions received 6550 marks monthly; a colonel 34,500 marks, and a private soldier was paid 9600 marks monthly. The grand total of the salaries of the, commissions which Germany has been meeting since the armistice. has been x ,, ' FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 6, 1922: Prague it is reported all are united with the purpose of maintaining peace, but c&nnot guarantee it if Turkey succeeds in getting a common frontier from' Bulgaria. tention because, It represent th first The recent unrest in Bulgaria is In cooperative mining to be the work of soviet agent experiment , The HlmlervlII Is a small wb are ' those tir WsSt Vlf- one compared withoperation across or Tug river, in Kentucky, in the Balkans now serve their ends. flnla, a of Martin Hlmler, well No active war preparations have been known Inproject America and In Rurop as a made in the little entente countries, Hungarian Journalist ehd welfare worker for hla fellow Hungarians her and elsewhere. Mr. Hlmler, th owner and though some - shifting of Jugo-SIaa New publisher of Maryar Banslsp, troops toward the Thracian border has York for Hungarians, conbefli made 'and Rumanian reinforce- ceived newspaper th Idea of a coal mine worked ments have been noted in Bessarabia. by wag earners who would own tbs mins jointly, partlolpsts In ths dividends, and own thslr homes.- - HlmlervlII Js a ICHO. , Hungarian community of ssvsral hundred, Of sweot companions, mine, for choice, set down In ths hills In which th hr Eloho of lh Oulcet Voire McCoys fought their bloody Who carol rounds and alee with ms feuds, and across a tiny river, from the In which stats me. And thoroughly agrees with ths fight between miners and opera tor attracted national attsn And though she takes the final word, tlon. f Ae ladies will. Ive never heard Hlmlervllle may be tha means of proHer claim undue priority an Illustration of ths possibili viding Cv prate without authority. ties of th cooperative idea srMd to mining, but It is pot at aU llkslv that the hills th minx its success would affect greatly th olr- Jitionr Observe a custom- pleasant eumstances of coal digging In th Kenwhich, methink All flappers should he broken to tucky and th West Virginia .field. JTh enba Peaka when ejHiken to. Coal barons, as the operators ar called, ATUmr Guutnnu to Ufe. will ranting to bo ths larga ooerator ed fementing-troubley-ax-trotrb- -- le v PROBABLY EARACHE. (From ths Rice Lake. WIs, Chronotype) Eugene Holman is having trouble with a sore foot and is under the doctor s cars. At present they ar unabl to decide what N- - B. K. th trouble is. LET JUSTICE BE THOUOH DONE. TKe Long Wait at Burlington. Included In my list of acquaintance la a gentleman who promotes sporting events. Originally he promoted footraces, later he conducted balloon ascensions and parachuta drops at county, fairs and car-of nivals. Still later, keeping abreast the march of progress, he turned aviator himself and bought an early model airplane with which, in th period when flying was mor of anovelty than it Is at present, he gave exhibitions aloft- Th members of s Catholic congregation In a suburb of New York City were striving to raise funds for a new rectory. In pursuance of this ambition they rented an old driving park and gave a fair which lasted for an entire week. For the crowning attraction on th final aftor-noo- n my friend was engaged to make a flight Now, th weather was lowering and the winds wer capricious. Feeling a himself natural reluctanca aloft under such circumstances ths performer had reoourse to Sa expedient he had employed on similar occasions in other parts of the country. He sparred THE HEAVENS FALL. H. L: In th Lin o Type for September 30, I waa scandalized to the unwarranted insult to our gallant Allies during ths Orsat War. conveyed In ths interpretation of th Initials A. IB. F. aa "After England Failed." Amy on even approximating nuiusn Intelligence knowa that thoee Initial really Implied CHEJL "After Everyone Failed." THE DUNE HILLS. The drowsy hills of Puneland, They stand against th sky; Ten thousand joyous summer Hays wooed and passed them by, Their forms ar white and wasted. Their look is set and old. Th wraith Of perished, age Has wrapped them la It fold. Improper watering than, from any other The lak is soft with laughter. single oauest F. R. Tha sir is sweet In song. A. A report recently tesued by th PurTho sky Is bright with promise. due university agricultural experiment The earth is warm and young. station ear's that this is true. It recomHut Oh! the hills of Duneland, mends the following: Water thoroughly Th only world they know and then allow th soil to dry out until Was sunk In gLaotal illenc It is only well moistened (Just before U Ten thousand years ago. Crumbles and cracks), before watering W. P. BURNS. again. .Water your plants when they need It and do not go by th calendar. SO8 YOU COULDN'T GET YOUR It may be twice a week or once a day, NICKEL BACK. depending on th temperature and hubell Th L.: IL of the air In .the room and th telephone R. Bay around ms. midity also and Vigor of th plant. Each pot rings. I wrap a Turk towel dsrn to th rocs and will rsquiro Its own particular amount of roh for th Turks, Never allow plants In Jardinieres thing JustI a it peal off lu fourth. water. and bowls to stand In water fot any length anticipate. Hello, lOdST Is this Ses a voice, Edgewater of Urn. In addition to th regular waterBeg L "No, you hav th wrong numing, plants will respond to frequent cleaning. Put them in th bathtub, kltahen ber.' Ses th voice, "Well, whatlnhsl dldjn sink or collar during tha winter, or out . answer for, thenT of doors during th summer, and wash off tha laavsa. Largs leaved planta llke Now 1 ask you as gentleman an& what is a snappy rubber plants and palms, may be rubbed eolumn conductor, oomsback for that? with water and a spong or soft rag This removes th dirt and groaso which clogs the breathing pore of th leaves. During TO MICKEY. tho summer it I aa excellent plan to put tha plant out during tha light ralna If thoughts wer only songs, dear. Throughout th live long day Q. Hoar much air do w breaths In a My melodies would speed tq you dayT M. R, To help you on your way. A. Tho average person Inhales about If dreams were only songs, dear. 1600 gallons of air every twenty-fou- r As night winds softly sigh hours. Min would go forth to comfort. You. 0. 0-With tsndrest lullaby. ALEQ RA , Q. What Is a vacuum tub used for In a radio set? S. E. W.I a A. A vacuum tub Ah! But Thoy ay You tpankod g?aa tub exgrid hausted of air and having a filament Because It Stepped on a Roe. I and plat tnsld for rectifying tho IncomNaughty, Naughty head for current waves direct Into Dear R. H. L.: Ton got this guy ing hie phones. wrong that whipped and put to bodhave grlszly whipping dad. I know, for I out Q. How many Immigrants wer adtho crying that tender heart. O for see tho durqb mitted to th United State during th loud! 1 can't stand to brute suffer. It was tha mournful wall pash year? W. T. L. A. Th labor department aay that of tho Oyastlcutu lamenting the loss of the numduring tha fiscal year her first born that drove m to drink. ber of Immigrants admitted to this ooun-tr- y punishing my They called m cruel for in was 43,333. tho face of Jack rabbit when he spat why a coyote. They couldn't understand tun "Old Hundred" 1. How didxth I whipped my canary for pecking out th T. C. get such a name? was eye of a gristly. And even now back In known In th fifIt A. Th Dreadful say melody of Bights they this City la cruel and unusual for me to chastise teenth century. In England tt was used version of th Hundredth at make Kethe's faces for my gold fish when they AU Peopl that on sarth do the cat. Cant you see that JulctU Psalm, and the Hundredth called was dwell," done as' sympathetic guys? Tuns. The word old was added when tha Psalter waa revised. TO AN ORCHID. I - . But-aterf- ly 1321-12- Lovely orchid; pal, exotlo flower Your petal cool and passionless; you seem To bolong to twilight gardens, where th moon's cold roy ' Leave sleeping, lev and youthful droams. What lies concealed within your folded secret passion hidden Is thrVsom there? But no so pur and cool and lovely. You could not know th pain that Love must bear. Keep fast th pale, cool bstuty that is yours; Nor to th sun's awakening rays a kiss Bestow; for with Love's promises Com only pain and uttsr weariness. for tlm In the hope that darkness would come and so save him from taking th risk. He tinkered with hla engine. H fiddled with th plane. He unscrewed this bolt and be screwed up that one. The assembled crowd, Which was target th delay. Finally grew Impatient over th parish priest,- - who was acting as master of ceremonies, felt It incumbent Upon himself to urge that the hired entertainer make good on his contract. H approached the aeronaut and to him he said: "My son. can't you go ahead and give us ths exhibition 'you promised us and tor which w already have paid you In advance? These peopl have already been waiting more than an hour and a halt for you to go up." , theres a "Father," said my friend, bunch of folk out In Burlington, Iowa, that have been waiting ihorsn eighteen months for mo to go up." (Copyright, 1322, by the McNaught Inc.) fyn-dlcat- cup chopped cooked meat, H teaspoonfuiW paprika, 1 tublespoonful capers, 3 teaspoonfuls salt. (Soften gelatin In cold water. Dissolve in boiling meat Mock and add salC Set In cold place, and. when All the other Jellyitke beat thoroughly. Ingredients and set In a cold place to harden. ' Q. I T y Oobb married? F. R N. famous star of the Detroit A. Th Tigers is married and has five children. st. BEST SELLERS IN SOUTH BEND. Among Records: "Whcf Baby Ar You, Dear?" Among Books: Booth Tarklngtona ' from Indiana,'' "Th Osntleroan NAIVA. A HABIT WITH MANY PEOPLE. Dear R. H. L.: Why. oh, why is this, and please get me some snappy for It. Every place and every tlm I refuse sugar In my coffe soma cutup says, O, shes sweet enough already," Some one com to my aid! Pleas O. KAYE. ITS R. H. I Answers to Questions- (Any reader can get the answer to enf-Trtnm triform qdssUoif by writing Tim tlon bureau, Frederic 3. Haskin, director, Washington, D. C. This offer applies information. Ths bureau oan- strictly toadvice on legal, medical, and fl not giv , It doss not attempt to Fit icial maUei-nof to Undersouls domestic! troubles, on any subject take exhaustive research Writ your question plainly and briefly. and enand name address, Give full close two cents tn stamp for return post-OAtt' repl!ee ar sent direct to ths inquirer.) q. xp what religious denomination does Henry Allen of Kansas belong? A. O. C. A. Governor Henry J. Allen of Knhss belongs to th First Msthodtst church of . Wichita. q. is It true that mors plants die from demand lent operation probable that there next thirty years fewer example like Bteams of homo ownership by miners, and mors model camp like Lynch, .where th company owns because capital. wtU be large seems It within th everything. Mining coal Is at best bard labor. Nothing could make It attractive to some men, but an adage of th mining country It one a miner always a miner." Th exception to th rule ia the naUvo or Kentucky mountaineer who not .infrequently gives up comparative weiith to return to hla log cabin and th Indslsnt f the hllla lit But-frag- lst 3; (1709-1781- 2, SAP AND SALT I By BERT M09ES A good undertaker Is on who Las duced patience to a science. X re- AU things com to those who go out and fetch them tn. X X Did you ever notice how cheap yon con buy things you dont want? It hr not what yon get. but what yon Q. Can real diamond be made? L. S. expect to get, that makes life worth A.' The geological survey says that dia- whUe. mond were made by Mol seen by th sudden chilling of molten Iron containing Being kind Is much more to your credit dissolved carbon. They have also been than merely being respectable. made by Mother process Involving simultaneous action of high temperature and Congress gets Its bad reputation bepressure. Diamonds are not made extencause of tha bad men In IL th men sively as ths large atones are imperfect. not seaming to hav much to good say. Hss Heck says: Troubles aint helped Q. Can meat be Jellied? F. R. none by carryin 'em on your face.'' A. We submit th following redps: box gelatin, 14 cup cold water, 1 tablelemon juice. 1 cup orearn (Copyright, 1922, by Preml4 Syndicate, spoonful Inc.) (whipped), I cup boiling meat stock, 1 t- Money to Loan NO COMMISSION NO DELAY NO EASTERN COMPANY NO THIRD PARTY NO ATTORNEYS PEE . LOWER RATES MANY OPTIONS We want to serve all who wish to borrow money upon real estate- - &Trust Ca Tracy Loan to Bom the Public Organized UNDER FEDERAL AND STATE SUPERVISION avlng Earn 4 Per Cent Real Estate .Mortgages a Higher Bata of Interest for Country Home water required no 'running WINNER .SANITARY CLOSET Thia does away with tha outdoor toilet, aad without plumbing ajqjensB. - Ton Install 'it yourself Complete, $12.50 Guaranteed to ha absolutely reliable , by tha Will Rees Plumbing Co. 164 Regent 8L , I. Of th useful metals, which wsr la earliest us by ancient civilisation? Copper and tin. Thee formed th bronse ol th bronse age about 1S00 B. C. Irot did not oom Into uss until many centuries later. - A Who is Carrie .Chapman Gett? and looturar, who bam tsetured la almost every country In tha world. Organizer of Iowa Woman Suffrage assince then In service sociation, 1830-9of National American Woman Suffrage association, of which she has several times been president. JWorked. for suffrage in successful campaigns in nearly ah the woman suffrag states. 3. Where are th Kurile islands? Whsj ar their Inhabitants called? A twenty-ei- x Islands pff east Asia, extending from Yeso In Japan to Kamchatka. Tho people ar called Alnoe; they ar dark and hairy. 4. Who is known aa Ths Groat Moralist? Dr. Bamuel Johnson, famous Eng), lish lexicographer and writer t. What 1s th site of the District oi Columbia? How bounded? Sixty square miles. By th stat of Maryland on all sides except the south, which is bounded by tho Potomac river. 1 n jr . com-hac- George Beban spoke of the lovely ladles of th stiver screen as the "Beautiful . : and Dumb Miss Lois Wilson, a celebrated movie "The motion said: of Hollywood, queen people are an Intelligent and highpictur brow lot of peopla. And lisped dear little Viola Dana, on of this intelligent and highbrow lot of people is a big pises of Georgs Beban oheese!" tailin' I'm yuh! Highbrow! Y MEMORY JESTS ZENOBLA. Old Doc. . Jim WhK Hall says madness has increased on hundred per cent since the Volstead law went Into effect. becBut, Doc, don't moot of 'em get mad beean't find a bootlegger or ause-they cause the druggist gets UP Stage and says theyll hY to get a proscription? KINDA LOWED WED HEAR FROM THIS PLACE. Richard Henry: Those birds from th land of fawst horses and beautiful women sure think a lot of their hum place. But aay, did you over spend a ? fall day In th hsart of good old Iowa You drive out into the country and see the radiant colors of nature blended In all their And at sunset, the sun goes beauty. down In a red flame that Illumines th cornfields with an ever changing glow of oolors. And as th sun roes out o sight and the twilight deepens we see the full Boy this is moon rise out of th IMA HICK. 4 grand country. e, ' Was. 2428. V - |