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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15,' 1922. f Jjatt a!;t tmHI tvery Morale lat fifctnte by TrltNM PaUUilitns CoapT- TERMS or SIBOCKIPTION: la TUX. Rube, Nandi and WroaBnf . Hill? Mat nnlr, Dally lad Indai, aaa yeer Klaewker la U. 8. . Dally a ad kaday, per aoatk V" TrUese. year Important ally lb JriMine ia on aala la la tba IMiHad Sutra. Headers may aarjnaia a trot a la any elty br'tolaplwalnt Th Trllmao to a mrrnbM d - Draaa. Tba AeaerlatrS Breae to ticlnairalyaa-ttilato tba uaa lor lapnbUratlaa al all ra otbrrariaa dtapatrhaa cradltad.'ta It or aot a Itrd ha this pa par a ad atoe tba local new Sett il m u . frj ,Tll! a" erst, Missouri, has been- - nominated for the scat held by Representative Roach, a first termer, and has a good chance.' Four women in Pennsylvania want to' go to tho house. They are Mrs. Ellen Duane Davis, Democrat Helen Murphy, Socialist; Julia R. Hazard, Prohibitionist, and Jano E. Leonard, Democrat. Mrs, Adelina Otero Warren, Republican, New Mexico, has good prospects of election. A hsrd eampaignis being maJe by southern womanhood. The cuttfng of the figure is all being done by pneumatie chisels. An idea of the magnitude'bf the work may be gained from the statement that the thousand figures will reach along tha perpendicular granite cliff for a distance of 000 feet. An air compressor on the top of the mountain furnishes air for the operation of the tools. Tho work is done from a cable moved about the face of the cliff as the work Miu Borglum lays Out a progresses. section of work on the cliff and is followed by the workmen wh man the Chisels. The finishing pneumatio touches will be put 6n by Mr. Borglum. Tho- height of the cliff upon which the memorial is being carved is 787 feet. The largest of the Pyramids is 431 feet. The Bphing is sixty-fiv- e feet an&.sacrifUa-o- f Mrs. Lindsay Patterson, Republican, North Carolina, to capture tho seat ocwib)ibt hmia, cupied now by. Representative Stedman; Tba Tritiuna to a aarmbar of tba Democrat, the only Confederate soldier a t CitTBlatloa. Iafnrmatlaa eoocarala Tba in tho house. His district sent a Reanaa clrcolatlaa will bn aappllotl by I blear. publican to Washington before ho waa Bn man of Orrntatton. Century bid.. Tba S. I'. Beckwith Pplal A chosen. ara advert lain a mat. World bid, h THbnoa bid., Chlrao; Peat DiHtch bids, at. Loo la; Port bid. Detroit, Mir. I ? TURKEY, GREECE, SMYRNA. v ' high. Ma. M. C. bid., Kaoaaa City,Caaat The land about the foot of the mountnpraacntatlvo, Cm. Inc., Pacific The Greek government has instructed Incr bid . baa rranrlaro: Title latyraaca bid., has been dedicated as Confederate tain ism Amroiet; Seurlty Bldg., Hyttw its high commissioner at Constantinople e park. A small lake lends beauty to Forvlta bnmaua of Informatlaa of The ', are: 5 Kua Lamartloa, Pari. Franca. lM to sign an armistice with the Turks, the spot. Pall Mali. London, Enfland; 1 I'nter dm Llndao, Greece of Home. the Italy. Hotel. under, being Exwlalor necessity Berlin, Germany; CHAMBERLAINS BOGY. yielding. to ihe force of circumstances, TlpbM WfcMtch 190 When yea fall to at yaair Trltmaa talepboa 10 Austen Chamberlain in his Binning at the Athens explanation put it. At th city rlrculMkm ditrtest . w. M copy will Be wot yw by ofwy ham the Mudanis conference the Greek! speech paid a high and mighty Eutnvd it Uii pontofflrt It Bftlt Lilt City M' taattff. to sign along with the powers compliment to 4he British Labor party negotiating with the Kemalists. Now when he urged support of the coalition the step for - a separate armistice is government as a means, and perhaps b - Morl-nar- od THh-on- " V taken. Bunday, October 15, 1922. FEARLESS AND OUTSPOKEN. Brigadier General Dawes,- who the way to reduce expenditures is to reduce, recently had a run-with Lieutenant Colonel Boosevelt, assistant secretary of the navy, in Which the assistant secretary waa on the short end. General Dawee has positive conrictionron every subject in which he is interested and he does not mince worda when compelled to take the initiative. When young Roosevelt took issue with him" by letter he sent for and bluntly the assistant secretary Do you want to go to the mnt said. with ma before President Harding! Roosevelt didn t, and withdrew the letter. Another potty naval official was likewise rounded up and the same chance offered him. He weakened and - be-liv- General Dawes hatl" no more troublto . with the navy department over the budget. We need' men like General Dawee in our city, state and national governments, and we must have them if our affairs are to be economically administered and our taxes kept within the bounds of reason. SAVED BT WIRELESS. Thus is completed the chapter of catastrophe for Greece. When the world war ended and tti treaty of Sevres was concluded, Greece found her territories enlarged, thanks to, the afterward disVenixelos, premier, graced and forced to Crete. Constantine wae recalled and In an ill advised moment Greece undertook a campaign in Asia Minor at the expense of the Jurk. What happened subsequently is a matter of recent and his tory. Greece emerges 'Stripped of her wartime gains, forced to care for count, less thousands of refugee nationals, returning to Greece to add to the perplexing problems created by an impoverished treasury, loss of territory, stagnation of industry and a demoralized social and- commercial system, Smyrna remains and will remain to the end of time a frightful example of bloody retribution.- - But if the Turk took fearful reprisal in Smyrna, the hands of the Greeks are not unstained by blood; in the period preceding the collapse of Greek military power in Asia Minor, the Turks were made to feel the weight of Greek hatred of their hereditary foe. The Grfk incursion wks a fatal mistake; it was accompanied by uncounted horrors unwarranted by any rules of civilized warfare if warfare ran be called "civilized. Eastern Thrace goes to the Turk; it was old Turk territory and the Tyrk regains it thanks to Grecian folly. Smyrna ia ia ruins, but it will not be avenged; for that matter neither will the Greek atrocities of earlier periods; perhaps the Turk thinks Smyrna is sufwell-know- - When there occur such disasters as that which'befell the City of Honolulu in the Pacific n few days ago, It is brought forcibly to mind that of all modern inventions, that of the wireless ficient telegraph is first ia importance in life reprisal As- for the Smyrna tragedy it is idle to talk of by any one nation; it is an in- saving. of Honolulu, taking fire in Wireless midocean, burned' swiftly. alarms were sent out, and even before the passengers and. crew, were compelled to leave the vessel assurances came from at least three different sources that help was hastening forward. Within the brief space oj three hours the news waa known 'oyer n vast section of the sea, and on laad as well, that n passenger-ladeship was in distress anu like to sink. Within half that time rescue ships were steaming to her assistance. The City o Honolulu carried 217 and crew. souls, counting passengers Every one of these was transshipped without mishap of any kind, and none was dho worse for his experience. But for the fart that the ehip which . first reached the City of Honolulu had only ono wireless operator on board and that the rules did not require him to be at his instruments until n certain hour, in this case the rescue of the. passengers and crew would have been accomplished in half the time which it actually did take. Truly, the rescue of the passengers of the City of Honolulu Is n great triumph for wireless telegraphy and no less a triumph for its inventor and those who perfected it. The Ci-t- . -- WOMEN AFTER HONORS. Peurteen women aspire to congress this, fall, four to the senate and ten to the house of representatives. Six ar Democrats, four Republicans, three Prohibitionist, and one a Socialist, . The Noe Partisan leagus has no woman candidate for the national legislative body, but has ous for governor of South Dakota, in Misa Alice Lorraine Daly. those seeking senate scat, Mrs. , ternational matter, and because it is of international concern nothing ia likely to be done. Months ago Great Britain, in conjunction with the tnited States, proposed to investigate Turkish atrocities, but France. and Italy, who first agreed, backed out.. As a matter of practical policy any action is now impossible. The only effective action would beto set about and punish the Turk sod this-- would mean another war. And that is something no chanThe cellory is willing to undertake. Mudania armistice was designed not to punish either Greek or Turk, but to stop the fighting between them. It This coiirageous Tory who Is happens that Greece is sufficiently pun- why. ished as matters stand. Far more so less a Tory than a leader who rises above partisanisms bares the weakthan the Turks. ness of the anti Oeorgeites. The only MOUNTAIN A MONUMENT. lams point in his Birmingham address is, as has been said, his overwrought The ancient Greeks and Egyptians, picture of the men who make up the great builders as they were, will no Labor party of Great Britain. longer occupy the place as leaders in GERMAN WEDDINGS, this respect when the monument to the Confederacy shall have been completed Marriage rates in Germany recently Near Decatur, Georgia, there is being published by the Statistiache Rcichsamt fashioned a stupendous memorial to the show that there is a considerable incause of the south. The undertaking is crease over the figurea for 1913, the r nothing less than the transforming of last year. During 1920 the 1000 rate mountain into and a of population in Gercarved hugel per sculptored work of art of enormous many was almost twice tlfat of the presize. war year, and last year,' while there The mountain is of pure granite, a was noted leee inclination for matrimile from base, to summit, and is said the rate was still far above that mony, to be the largest solid rock in the of 1913. . world .It has bqco dedicated to the The birth rate, however, also fell people of this Liited States for the the war, and has not climbed during purpose of perpetually honoring the back to ite r year figure. A of the fund of memory Confederacy. The death rate, whieh was 15.8 ia $2,000,000 has becomd available. 1913, rose to 22 in 1915, but had An army of nearly lflOO men will be to 14.8 in 1921, a point eome-whdropped carved into the mountainside. Some of r below the rate. The exthe figures will be morx than fifty cess of births over deaths was 12.5 feet in height, in full relief, and 'the 1000 of population in 1913, and features of Lee, Jackson, Johnson and per the war the deaths exceeded the during others of tho Confederate leaders will birtha. be recognizable at a distance of threo Although marriage rates for 1919, 19211 and 1921 were considerably abovs The appearance of the work when ths yate for 1913, the. excess of birtha of be a natural ever deaths has not reached the that completed wilj ratio mountain across the surface of which existing before the war. the gray army is silently marching. The cutting of the memorial was v "LIMITED SERVICE ONLY." (Kenneth Rand, a young Tale graduate, begun last month and will be completed vainly trying to enlist In various probably in 1930. The first section irf after branehes of the army in 1917. was finally to be finished and unveiled in about accepted for Service Onlv In three years, and the second section the quarternfaater department at WashHe died there during the war and ington. probably In five' years. the manuscript of this poem was found, At the base of the mountain a huge after his death,' in the pocket of his uni- ball will be. eut as a memorial to' the form.) women of the Confederacy. The hall, I am not one of thos the god's decision 00 feet long, will stretch back into Has chosen for that highest gift of the solid granite of the mountains all and the the splendor base a distance of sixty feet. The roof Ths sacrifice, vision will be fifty feet high. The hall will To fight, and nobly fall. be turned over to the United DaughAnd yet I know what though tt be but ters of the Confederacy and will be 9 dreaming! Should the day hang 'on one last dea-- " used' as their meeting place, and will cerate hope, be used for keeping the documents and I I eouki lead - on reckless column mementoes of the Confederacy. streaming some slope. The hall, with its colonial facade, .Down of Death's own will typify the southern home of the To face the shadow-del- l Valley sixties. The eeulptural work of its With eves, unclouded and unlowered hadmliil?5bWBxSd0orf will 'perpetuatf for a Instant, on ecstatic rally the many beautiful stories of heroism Know, And then be cleanly dead. .die-har- d anti-Georg- e . pre-wa- pre-wa- believed to have n good chance of winning against Senator Kellogg, Republican. Jn New York state, Senator Calder, Republican, and Dr. Royal S. Copeland, Democrat, are opposed by Mrs. Ella A. toHtdlb. n W. C. T- - Ui worker, who is running on a dry ticket, , psyhael C. Robinson is running in Pennsylvania as a Prohibitionist for the late Senator Knox s seat. ' Mrs. Ben Hooper, Democrat, of Oshkosh, ia the candidate against Senator La Toilette in Wieconsin, the house, Miss Alice Robertson, Republican Oklahoma, is fighting for and has a good eliance. Representative Hastings, Democrat, is her ipponent. Jitrs. Winiired Mason Buck, Repub-Illinoiis seeking the scat left vacant by the death of beT YatheiTCon-- c gresenian William E. Mason. . Esther Kathleen OKeeffe is the Democratic candidate in Indiana against Repre-s- e n fattvo -Hickey. Mrs. I.uella St Clair Moss, Demo-1 t a old-lin- pre-wa- tf , investi-gation- the only means, of saving Great Britain menace of labor control from the It' is a fact that the British Labor party has beea waxing formidable, winning successes in repeated but nqt until Chamberlain informed his British friends in Birmingham to that effect had it been credited as approaching a strength Ime periling thcyvoalition, Tory and Liberal vote, even if that vote were cast solidly against the labor Crew. Chamberlain stressed the fearful results of a labor government; he enumerated direct action, something borrowed .from the bolshevists of Russia a capital levy, and other similar radical proposals But Chamberlain, even though he represented the Labor party as afactor to be reckoned with only in terms of united opposition, merely repeats what Lloyd George had said before him; for the prime minister, on has represented the some occasions, Labor party as a bolshevist organization against which the country must take a firm stand. More recently the prime minister has appreciated that this is a somewhat risky attitude to take and he has modified his characterization of th,e Labor party and its leaders. And with reason, for repeatedly tho British Labor party has repudiated communism and sovietism. And that repudiation is declared anew in the wrathful replies made to Chamberlain by Labor party leaders, following the Birmingham outburst. Moreover, highly reputable and acknowledged leaders In the economic and financial world . havrf advocated the Labor party proposal for a capital levy as the only effective means through whieh to deal with the nhtions fearful .war debt. In his argument supporting the coalition governments Near East policy, Mr. Chamberlain says more to much better effect. And he can plead for support of the coalition as m leader of the Conservatives with the knowledge that the opponents of the governments Near East program would have it whatever it might have been. The Tories are seized with the mantis and they are running hither and thither in search ?n issue on which to hang their opposition. They are having a difficult time in locating it. Chamberlain tells ' ahell-tortur- -- - Current Comment Womm$ Incomes By Frederic J. Hssktn. WASHINGTON. D. C.. Oct. 12. More than hair a million single. women in the United States. paid income tax In 1920 and many of them paid on income of fabulous aise. Tha precise number is 0),IS0, and the aggregate of their incomes reached the astounding total of IUS4.M,T2T, t These are all In the ctase which statistician of society would 'class ordinarily as "depsndent females; that is, they at not rich wives nor heads of families. For the full total of women taxpayers the others must be added. Women heads of famIUes. that Is, widows with children or daughters supporting parents; paid tax to the number of 132,m, and their scare-g- at net income amounted to $3SS.SU,$0. In oases where wives have estates or earnings separate from their husbands they frequently make separata returns. Thosa doing so In 1920 numbered 77.951, and their aggregate Income was 9524, These Lgure reveal that tha 940.404, Ingle women were the richest of all by many millions. All of the fair sex combined paid taxes to the government on net Incomes aggregating 92,141. 1W, M, but the wives and widows together only showed Ss -much Income as the girls. The year 1920 te the latest for which Income statistlce are available. The government In Issuing these statistics Is' compelled to put Haem in such form that the Identity of the rich recipients of the great Income is not revealed. Under the law. Incoma tax returns are deeply, confidential Nevertheless, the statistics can ba studied to bring Interesting facts to light. They Indicate that ths richest woman ln the United States, or at least ths woman who received the greatest net income, was Ingle. The statistics do not reveal whether she was snd beautiful, or a forbidding old young mala. What they do la reveal that she had an income somewhere between 92.000.000 and 99.000.000 a not mean that she year. This doe merely was worth between 12,000.000 end 12.000,000; but that each year added that vast fortune to her estate. The next richest are two women who are married, but who maks returns eap- arate from thatr husbands. Purposely, the figures are combined n that ths Income of each cannot bs ascertained, but each of them hae an Income eomswhere between l,0t0,0o6 and tl.500,000 a year. In the same olass le a single woman. The next In line are two women classified se heads of families; which mean either widows with children, or daughters supporting parents, brothers, sister or other relatives These two ladies each recelva Income of from to of a million dollars a year. WHO ARE THEY? Now come a fascinating group. There fifteen single women In one classification each of whom has from half to of a million dolars a year, with no one to support and., apparently, not a care In the world. Who are they? The printed column of statistics reveals nothing. Ars they actresses? Are they stars of the movies? Are they only daughters of fond, deceased parents? There are ftfteen of them somewhere in the United States- - Tou may be run over by one's automob.le. There seems to be no lark of millionaires among the women. In this group, that Is. a das of women who hare approximately $1,000,000, the single ladles again predominate. Millionaires usually have Incomes of about 1100,000 a year. There are 181 of thee single women who have such Incomes. Wives making sepa-ratreturn .rank next. They number 174. The way In which a family cuts down one's opportulntles to amass a fortune Is strongly exemplified In the fact that there are only fifty women heads of families who can lay claim to the millionaire clux Here Is a curious fact which the income statistics reveal The term millionaire. has become a popular one In the United State. It has a certain glamor. Apparently both men and women have striven particularly hard to attain this classification. They have bent every effort to reach It, and. having done so, have not been 0 eager to go higher. This I revealed bv the fact that the number Of millionaires are out of all proportion to the Income cless either Immediately below or Immediately above. This would indicate that the mtllon mark has become a standard. Take the single girls, for Instance.. n In the class Just There are under the million mark, 181 In the milIn the next lion class snd only fifty-eigwive higher claxa In the group of elxty-elgare there making separate return!, In tha submlllton class, 174 in the in the million class, and only fifty-on- a next higher class. The same le true of the heads of families. There are twenty in the submlllton class, fifty In the million class, and otily eleven In .the next class above. The rule Is even more marked In the case of men. In the submilLon class there are 6(2 men; In the million class, 1272, and in the next higher rises only 246. These are married men. ' The s ngle men chow 119 In the submllllon class, 296 In the million class and only seventy-eigIn the next olass. This Ik the striking In thst tha as te --every other gradaincome classes, jnr In about tha same tion of Incomer-ri- se ratio.. All exoept that million mark! most the Probably fascinating fart about tha income of single women is that the great bulk of tkoee having Inoomes are In the stenographer das. Th s la a new economic development of the utmost Intsrest. Only a few years ago there was no such class of money-earneat all. They are a new social phenomenon In not The do world. etatlstlca the classify closely, but a shrewd guess occupation can be made from the else of the Income. Without exception, the most numeroux class' of feminine texpeyers are single women with net Inoomes ranging from 91000 to 21000 year. It seems obvious pri- that these are the stenographer andoffices vate secretaries that decorate the of modern buxines and help make the wheels go round. - FLAPPER INCOMES. ' It la the flapper case! And these statistic would arpear to furnish, what all the moralist hv been looking for; the economic or o( htfr Justification for the flapper. The figures show that the flapthan per stenographer makes more money any other class of woqien. . In !92u. 242.9(8 of throe flapper stenographers paid Income tax. Their aggregate Income amounted to 947S,840.10!lT-near- ly half a billion dol'ars, or enough to pay the Interest on the allied debt. That a good many of these assist In th support nt families 10 ihe extent that, as tho heads of families they ara classed Is shown by the fact that thev are the moat numerou of that group of women. There were 79.448 In the same general Income class who made returns aa heads of families; doubtless supporting parents or younger brothers and sisters. The fact making separate that among th wives returns this 'also la th largest Income class It taken as an Indication of th number Of young married women large who have kept their stenographic Jobs and continue to run their own financial affair. Thor wer 10 14? In this class and thev had an aggregate Income of , , three-quarte- rs one-ha- lf three-quart- er 2- - three-quarte- Answers to Questions. rs e, - sixty-seve- ht ht ht -- rs Tf4E SPADE IN THE HOLY LAND. (From the London Tlmea) " Judahs to keep a near Archaeology to the Oreek as possible, was, it may be remembered, the title which ths gTeat Jewish htatonan, Josep.-xuegay to his principal work; but when he wrote he had no means of anticipating the new and specialised meaning in which a much later age would come to use tha word, Kor it may be eald tfcat wo are all archaeologist now, and the name of archaeoloe gy-has the' power 'to stimulate-thWhat this moat sluggish Imagination. nsw associate qf history is doing, and intends to do, under ths happy auspice of tatem&tionai cooperation. hj Palestine will have been gathered from a special two articles. The writer correspondent to reha several promising excavation port, by the Americans, for Instance, at Belsan, and by our own Palestine - ex ploration idnd at Ascalon where, appily, ths work has had to bs suspended for want of means, and he show generally what a fertile field awaits the spade in many parts of the country. But foz, popular Interest no announcement will have surpassed that of the project for opening up the eit of the ancient city of Jerusalem, which la known a the City of David. Not even the sit of of Troy, nor that of the Mycexia Agamemnon, on both of whloh romance has been startlingly converted Into realism, can compete In wealth of familiar which, association with the ten acre as we are told, are now to be Investigated. They lie Just outride 1h exist-to ing Walls of Jerusalem, Immediatelycomthe south, but they lie within the pose of the older wall. They Include prac of the tically the whole of the stronghold who were there before-Davi- d jebusttes, in com and thought "David cannot build hither; the paJac ofof David,tentto."cedar which Htram, king Tyre, trees and carpenter and masons, and In ail probability the tomb, of a later of Judah. Thf endate,' of the kings will watch thee extire civilised world with attention. cavations They seem to The discovbe excellently . planned. eries will be carefully safeguarded, and It Is proposed that the uncovered sit s a historical feahall be, preserved ture of Jerusalem. May it be an omen of perpetual peace for the future of earliest time 'Of city which from-th- e Its history has been the battleground of snd empires dynasties, many races, creeds, and deserves, if any elty deserve, which world that central position In the Is accorded to it, not wholly mystically In ths medleyed map of ths Hereford That archaeologists should geographer. now be aM to resume their labors in so Important a field as the Holy Land, and under such promising condition a Indicates, should at our correspondent least be a source of patriotic satisfaction tn .this country.' England ha a long and honorable connection with Palestine the exploration, and it is to be hopedtbat fund, which count among the names of of Kitchener, that servants Illustrious Its will be provided with that Support which our prestige need. W would oomrnend our correspondent', appeal on behalf of the Interrupted diggings at Ascalon a an object well worthy of home patronage. , -- TURKS VICTIMS. (From the Portland Oregonian.)United Though the government of the In TurStates stands sloof from the war will not key. the people of this oountry Innocent stand aloof from the helpless, victims. Humanity calls us to feed, olothe and heal the hundreds of thousands of Oreek and Armenian who have fled from the fury of the Turks and are huddled on the quay of Smyrna or on the mainland and islands of Greece, winat hand, and this fugitive host ter must be supported until new homes can ba provided for them, where they can support themselves Those who find these subject race of acquainTurkey unattractive on close to evoke tance and not of a character that they 8mpathy should mad has Turkish what tyranny largely, them. Th Armenian were on the main to Asia Europe, and road from central tramevery Invading horde for eenturiea Th Greeks pled on them in Us march. subto be wer 'first ths of Asia Minor dued when the Turks advanced toward They hay remained the Mediterranean. Industrious under grinding exaction snd have been true to "their race and creed when they might have won rtche and If they have high fat km by apostasy.on their opprestaken- bloody reprisal sors when opportunity offered, what wonhas In civilisation der? Their progress been arrested for five centuries or more by th rule of barbarian, and they make a repulsive picture in raga hunger and th disease as they plead for help, but race advancement made by those of their their who have been emancipated prove. capacity when freedom give them Opportunity. The name America ha become eynony. moua with humanity. No motive of na ttonal policy restrain us from rescuingIt the human wreckage of war. planting In new home under free institutions In Greece and giving it a new start in life. by th That Is the work undertaken east American Red Cross an-- ths nearAmerrelief fund, aniVthe great heart of them to u ica should prompt to; give generously. "Woman, beheld. tWrin. ' Behold. Xll. "Father forgive them, Tthy Mother. ; A My God. Aiv not what they do. "I why hast Thou forsaken Me? "Father, into It ia finished. thirst. commend 1 My aplnt. , Thy handi nf (Any reader can get th answer to inforquestion by writing Th ATribune Haakln. Dimation Bureau. Frederic rector, Washington, D. C. This offer apTh bureau plies strictly to Information. eahnot give advice on legal, medical aad It doe not attempt to financial matter settle domeetto trouble, nog to unaertax exhaustive research on any subject Writ your question plainly and brjefly. Give full name and address and Incloas two cents in stamps for return postaxe. AU replies sre sent direct to ths mquirsr.J God, . to Q. How many different species of. Insect are there in th National museum? J. F. N. A. Ne data more recent than June, At 1919, are available on thla subject that time there wer 91.929 species of InInsects represented in th division of serts, New National museum. The total amounted to number of specimens - Q. What are popular games tn Latin America? M. W. V. A. Basketball Is being Introduded Into a number of the countri- - of Latin America, whtla petota, a aort of handbell game, le also very popular. Chess is one of th great indoor national gamea while card playing le popular with ail classes of ths population. 2,125,122. the-me- Q. What ts thq curvature of th earth per mile? L. W. K. A. The naval observatory says that curvature of the the measure of th earth is approximately eight inches per mUa, i to to . How much land is Included la Golden Gate park? C. H. R. Q. .WTist Is n miner's Inch? C. A. 8. A. This park, whloh ia located ia Saa A. Miner's inch Is tha Quantity that will flow In one minute through the ver- Francisco,' occupies 1012 acre tical standard orifice having a section of on square Inch and a head of six and 6TUDY HOURS IN' A SORORITY HOUSE Inchea above th center of the "Hence w derive thto theory f flow of on end orifice. - Thl means "Hair-ne- ts are not selling well Th lf cublo feet per minute. "When I said that you really war her measurement of th miner' Inch yartea he In different districts, bu this is th gen"Said that you weren't quite so swell. eral measurement Mauve and the sleeves ar In henna d has really some "The Q. What waa th original spelling of as we got In th den right; "Just the word "Succotash? C. O. E. "Dumbbell turned otr all the lights. A. Th Puritan writer who first deHence we derive thto theory scribed this, dish a being seethed like "For th women's building, you know" bean ape Vied Its Indian name "Suk- "Hon art her eyes were all bleary," Both th principle of the "Tipped over right In th enow! auttahhaah.Its nsm are borrowed from "Took her roommate to the Folllsl th native Ind.ans. Hence we derive thto theory to s "Wear that old pink one of DoUIe'a, Q. Whet Is an sasy method of making never notice It, dearie. r "Heli dill pickles? G. A. V. "She said you told her he told, me? A. Pack freah cucumbers In ston Jar, "Who 1 the cute one hi front? playing between each layer a thin layer oi "What If he did try to hold me dill plant. Grape or :herrv leave may "We have to put on a stunt. be mixed with the dill. Pour over them we derive thl theory "Hence '. a brine mad of $ gallon erf water and 1 "Where ar your Fine Arts notes? cup salt Cover, weight, and let aianj look kll teaftr "I my eyes mads. three or four weeks "Ths cutest men In fur coats! to to to "Prof said he surely would pass me. Q. When did kings first begin to use "She needn't look quit 0 eneery. th plural Wouldn't have gone If hed asked me! A. Thla custom began with King John "Hence w derive this theory of England, in 1199. The French and Michigan Gargoyle., German sovereigns adopted th custom . about 1200. 9 , LUNCHEON. WOMANS A AT Louise X think ons is as good s anQ. How long after an Inveatlon has been in us can a patent be filed! other. J1 B. Julia Tou think all dressmakers are 'A. An application for tiattnl.Tnsy be equal? "Heavens, no! 1 thought you Life. filed legally within two years after an wsr talking about religions. . Invention ha been In use. . LONO VISIT. Q. What ia th derivation of th word Bill, the burglar, tried to crack "tariff ? toJ. 2. safe protected through the back; Arablo "ta'rtfa." A A. It from th The voltage wasnt alow. meahlng a notification or Invtntory, from And Bills gone where the burglars gfc "arafa to know. to to to Practical Electrics, Q. What were the seven sayings of ACCIDENT. JITNEY Christ bn the cross? M. E. 8. A. There to a great difference in the A nickel in. a trolley slot records of th four Gospels as to the Attracted Abraham Scott! sayings of Christ upon the croas. Th lie tried to hook it with a wire. seven noted In the different Gospels are: And now hs's Joined th heavenly choir. Radio New. "Today shalt thou be with Me tn Para- Q. one-ha- lf one-ha- co-e- "wT se 1 STRONG OR MILD? (From th Ft. Louis That woman character In on of Dickens books who sold that she wanted her drawed mtkl but drawed malt liquor in the tale, said to hav cegtar." is not.. lived beyond the century mark.- - In fact, w lose trace of her king before she hod But Mrs. reached that distant mllepoat. Sarah C. Canan, who ha Just died at the advanced ago of 104 years, had insisted on having her coffee very She drank two cup 0 very strong. three dally meal. strong coffee at each of There ia something to be Paid for strong I used at all. Th coffee when coffee berrv then gives much more of its- stimefulation and no more of lt deterrent conBut to avoid fects on digestion. it may be well to hasten In troversy a clay saying that Mr. Oanan "smoked and that this pipe almost continually." more than her account for longevity may n cups of strong coffee a the foul th fall we of day. But here whomay will Insist On th antltobacconieta clav destructive effects of nicotine Th even and pipe must be our Met resource, then w might be disloyal to tha Mis- n souri meerschaum but for th fact that Missouri has had. and tlll has centenarians for whom th altar of worship of. 'My Lady Nicotine has been a corncob pipe. Mrs. Canan was born t Indianapolis, the bomo of the Indiana school In literature. a fact whicheavmay explain her us from conflict length of day and with any of the anticults or isms. That never frayed the nerves of erhool has others. And the fact of have as .people .1 a sas-J(t t nwtV to rnnv Ws wIstTttwtl to all the credit foe Mrs. Canon's long and useful Fife. Solve the problem of fuel by installing; the scientific g CaloriC Pipel Gives you summer warmth (70 degrees guaranteed) in fuel Dills yitafi. every room in coldest weather-c- uts high-pric- The CaloriC is the original half-doze- g pipeless furnace patent. No. 1,346,801. This exclusive CaloriC feature makes pipeless heating sue' cessful and imitators date not copy it. The CaloriC heats homes of 18 rooms or less through one register. Costs less than stoves to beat same space. No expensive installations, no plumbing no pipes to freeze. triple-casin- FUftNACI HEAT FOR 3 eviinr ,f t.) - ed fuei-eavin- x. V" Pjh jf Made by largest manufacturer of warm-a- ir furnaces in world, Over 125,000 users, many ia this community. . GRANITE HARDWARE St LUMBER CO. Exclurty 1084 Distributors East 21st South Hyland 210 SMSSIS V well-know- v EL Tf MEMORY TESTS Yoiir Eyes Do More Than Earn Your Living Your eyes earn your liting but they do more. They are more than the windows of the soulMj they are the doors through, which nature sends her messages to the mind; they are the portals through which enter the messages of lif ritself. Tho'tJ'c source of comfort," of inspiration, of happiness. Without them snd their marvelous function of sight man loses his most precious physical possession. v . ' a aDtPirOCCLCCCED. Z)r Z).C James TTlgr. II E.2ND SOUTH - WALKER BANK BLDGL I SALT LAKE X CITY - - - ' " s .HEtP'THE 1. How many of Napoleon's marshals arose from the ranks? Of ths twenty-si- x marshals of ths empire, eighteen started oa private. The majority Volunteered In th revolutionary armies, though eeveral wer privates --before the The mot noted marshals revolution. 920,294,207. from .the ranks were: Ney, Maseena, Idinnes, Murat, Boult and Bernadotta, EXPLAINED. Tha latter was the only permanent king origin. "I wonder, Jinks, why every epitaph of2. revolutionary What ia the pativ habitat of barbegins with Her lie?' ? Sweet potato? Bgypt, Broomoorn ley? "I dunno. unless mayo they uaed to East and West Indie. buiy a lot of fishermen and lawyers and Abyssinia.-bot"Paa-alo- n 2. What foreign producer mad just got Into tha habit." Exchange. and "Deception,"? limit Lubitsch, London was 4. When the bridge built DAMAGE and what to its size? The first ston Ambitious Author Hurrah! Fiv do1209 and built was completed In; bridge llar for mv latest story I a of house row with forming Who from? . Thi st Friend street. On It stood the chapel of St. W rlter Ths express company. . They Th present Thomas of Canterbury. lost tt. Kaneas A. Brown Bun. bridge, about 100 feet farther up th wa Rennie and John by designed river, - . , UNBIASED JUDGMENT. 928 built bv hla scxna in 59 89 feet above th width Mr. Buidso (to usher) Say, is this feet, feet, . river. griod play? . I think -- it's very 4 Who wer Usher Why. Henry VHIs wives? Catherine, Ann Boleyn, Jane Seymour, goodMr. Buldlge (to wife) There, mother, Ann of Clevea, Catherine Howard and Catherine Bare I told you it wse a good play, Life. t? 1 they-kno- w 1 3 .7 |