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SETTLE THE WITH " Mark Sullivan, the most famous of the Washington correspondents, thinks a split ia the Bepublieah party probable it President Harding continues to advocate representation of the United Statee on the international court, and there ia apparently Yet it good reason for the belief. must be acknowledged that a split would insure the election of a Democrat to the presidency in November, 1924. Three years ago Mr. Harding was elected by an overwhelming majority. A great variety of causes contributed to the result, the chief one being a desire upon the part'of, a number of groups of voters to discredit the administration of President Wilson. Th trick was turned and the Wilson administration has passed into history. Much water has flowed under the bridge since-192and new conditions have arisen. Some of the Republican, a great many of them in fhet, have modified their views regarding the league of nations aad are now ready to take up the cudgels for the international court, with the prospect of entering into a peace agreement with the nations of the- - wortd later on.'" All these voter will Tally to the support of President Harding. The question to be decided ie whether or no the irreconcilable group in the senate ean command a sufficient following to defeat Mr. Harding at the polls, with the fact before them that such defeat might mean a long period 8f eclipse for the "Republican party for some time to come. As to the acceptance by the senate of the international court proposal, it may be said that the recent action of former President Wilson in declaring against reservations may result in the United States being kept ont of the court. This is almost certain: to- - happendf thrDemoe cratie senators follow the leadership of the former president, unless the administration supporters are willing to vote for unqualified entry of tho United States, and the upshot of the whole mstter would be' a victory for the Johnson-LFollette group. The speechot of President Harding to be made before the assembling of congress on the first Monday of next December may change the situation very materially, but the outlook at the. present moment i not particuUnited we stand, larly heartening. divided we falL 0 ' INDIANS. Governor Mabey bM concurred in t)ie recommendation of United States Marshal Ward and officials' of San Juan eonnty that the unattached, nomad Indiana In southeastern Utah be placed on a suitable reservation in charge of a regular Indian agent, thus effecting a prompt and permanent solution of the problem. partially conEveryone even versant with the situation as it has existed for some years sees no other The Indiana equable way out. eannot continue to exist as in the past, inhabiting the nooks in the rocky canyons, which afford shelter, bat no opportunity for subsisting. Borne crope may be grown in places in this district preferred by the Indians as their home, as in Allen canyon, but the arable areas are strictly, limited aad of low fertility. The numbers of the Indiane are not decreasing' with any great rapidity, if at all, and they should not be allowed to perish, bven if they were ia such jeopardy. The next question ia, whore shall Juan county they be placed!-S- an ,ias been thi tribal borne of these Indians for several generations; and with their own desires, the present population would probor readily ably not be satisfied, manageable, if removed any considerable distance permanently, even if it were only to the adjacent reservation in Colorado, In fact, a first consideration would ecu to be to afford thepi the privilege of making at least their summer homes, and maintaining their cropping privileges, under proper supervision, in Allen canyon, where most ef them are now ledged, winter aad summer. Many Indians, and these most of all, have treaty privileges which permit certain liberties ef this nature, and it may be that their present habitat should not be completely wrested from them. Because of a number of other considerations, the selection of the headquarter for such a reservation, for year-lon- g occupancy for those needing it, end for intensive. utilization during the school ani agricultural years, seems naturally to fall in the Ban Juan river bottoms, narrow and limited as they are. The first settle-ments in the eonnty were made on these strip lands, aad much farming is still being done thereon by white settlers, here and there, from the Colorado state line to the valley at Bluff. It i hardly to be expected that a site could be found any place where some land- - reclamation waanotie-quired- , especially that of irrigation. The San Juan river shore lines offer many places for limited irrigation, and there are a few places, it is re ported, - where permanent irrigation works could be erected if funds were available, . And this brings thq. consideration of the subject up to the fact that the eld town of Bluff has ia the past several years been partly vacated, ita former occupants moving to the mesas toward Blanding and elsewhere. Several substantial stone houses, used as dwellings; stores and the like, are now said to be empty, and the lands about them under much Us intensive utilization than formerly, with irrigation systems depreciating. An effort was made some time ago to have the government jmreha.se at least B part of the town of Bluff, as an Indian agencyj farm, and school, for these same Indians, the suggestion being made by the holders of thi property. The actual consummation ef such deal cannot be directly recommended here, because "th owners of the old Bluff 'homqr sites may attach a sentimental value to them, aad the government may bo impressed with the fact that the place have been abandoned as of little worth. There are several property owners in Bluff who are doing fairly well in agricultural and livestock pursuits, aad who have no intention of moving away; to say nothing of the prospective and problematical value of the townsite, in ease the San Juan oil fields attain great development. be Nevertheless, there would seem-tno formidable obstacle in the wjy ef establishing these San Juan, Ij Jiins in the neighborhood of Bluff, or here along the river. And for f a deep-eeate- 1 . . t KNOW TOUR STATE. fcolorado commercial organizations are not content with having received 142,000,000 from tourists in 1922, and a campaign la being conducted among hotel clerks, railroad employees and other persons whose business brings them in contact with the tourist, for a hotter acquaintance with Colorado advantages for the tourist. Hers is the situation: The tourist are oa hand, perhapa on the way to some other point; hey have come tp see and to enjoy, and are willing to abide awhilo if there is sufficient to interest them. What has the state or tho particular locality to' offer! The tourist asks this question of the first person he meets. If that first person knows, and ean speak with loyalty and first-hanexperience, the tourists sojourn is prolonged, and the tourist istome to tho state is increased. Tho realty board of a eertain California city has sponsored a Know Your Own City day. It Is a good move. How many 8alt Lakers, in need of increased business perhaps, re prepared promptly to add to the tourists enjoyment, and his length of days in the city, by programming his stop here from personal experience! It is not always sufficient to refer YhAYnquirer to some commercial or tourist organization; the inquirer may be a personal friend. It ia not all selfishness, but a most worthy form of altruism in a very (feat many circumstances, to be able to add to the depth of satisfaction and breadth of enjoyment of the tourist's vacation trip. And there is no argument qni so eloquent against a prolonged sojourn as to learn that the attractions are of so little interest that the one addressed has no personal knowledge of them. d authoritatively program outlined, by every school in the ta oa th third Friday ia April of each year. The deeultory observance of Arbor day heretofore has Resulted in much activity, much planting, bat viewed through the perspective of years it boa resulted also in a complete failure ia many respect. The authorities are not only advofor shade, cating tree selection beauty and other pleasing aspects, bnt they are endeavoring to la a measure at least, the clutter and group of trees, shrubs and vine that were native to tho locality, and which may form a basis for study and instruction in the classrooms, such aa was afforded bnt not so utilized, in an earlier day, oa the same premises perhaps. Indiana is only setting an example. There is a very much greater need for suh a program of tree planting in Utah. Full many a public meeting-house or churchyard is barren of foliage; school grounds and smU municipal parks in the urban districts will not average much better In' thi respect; and the average eountry cemetery is but a field of glistening slabs, offering little more natural! beauty in summer than in f inter. There i nRoosevelt group of trees in the naturally barren statehons yard at Bismarck, North Dakota, and there are monumental tree and most groups - of trees dedicated worthily to local citizens and others in a great many public and semiprivate grounds throughout the ceun-try- . For these, an admiring posterity now returns thanks annually, if not perpetually. Why not more sneh monuments! It requires but the love, fox a tree ta make it east a friendly prospect across a community for many years to come, ia of tho one who daily honor planted it. planting NEW KIND OF WATER Sir J. J. Thomson of Cambridge, England, the discoverer of the electron, recently declared that a new kind of water, unknown in nature, may be created in the laboratory. Water is made up of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. The English scientist and many of hi followers are trying to determine how these atoms are arranged. In recent years a theory of the struo-turof water ha been worked ont that allows the arrangement of the atoms symmetrically in hydrogen several way. This i not entirely n arsatisfactory, because such rangement should make water nonpolar in its action toward light, while in reality water lets light through it more easily in one way than another. Now Professor Thomson suggests that the atoms of ordinary water are in the form of a twisted eube, giving only one symmetrical grouping of the hydrogen atoms. This arrangement theoretically would have propertioe that would fit the sort that we use and drink every day. The new or bllotropie form of water would have the form of an ordinary eube. The new form aad ordinary water .would be related somewhat like diamond and ordinary black carbon, which are both carbon. It is believed that the new kind of water is perhaps experimentally realizable by the aid of a strong catalyst, or a substance that helps a chemical operation but does not actually enter into it. If it is found, it will have a large amount of energy and low stability, and, unlike ordinary water, it will conduct electricity fairly well. e " pos-eibl- e a HARVEY MAT RESIGN. George Harvey, United State ambassador to the eourt of St. James, i expected home in the course of a few weeks to help lay plans for th renomination of President Hardihg. It is hinted that Harvey will resign some time next winter in order to take part in the campaign next year. He might be of-- some use as a . wire puller, but if the president is to make use of the big stick in ordef to force a showdown in the senate oa the international eourt proposition, Harvey, being an irreconcilable of the most pronounced and vindietire type, would be more than useless as a guide, philosopher and friend to Mr. Harding while the fight with the senators is on. H would also prove a drawback during the campaign on aceonnt of kis opposition to any kind of a league or planting. association of nations. He may have This editorial does not concern itbeen helpful during the campaign of self directly with the foresters three years ago, but just now he is claim that 91 per cent of the nation's in disrepute and has no influence timber is in the Pacific northwest,, whatsoever. Moreover, he is a but with the related condition of a Democrat. deficient or a defective planting of trees about so many public premises MEMORY TEST and homes, particularly in urban localities. 1. What Is a phrontixtery? A place Once upon a time the homesteader for thinking and study. !. What articles of universal uae in the middle states chopped an were rejected and ridiculed when rlrat introduced Fork a, umbrella", opening in the virgin forest for his ooal, co&chea and Forks were house; then through necessity and Invented in Italy, glows, introduced In Enthe reign of Elisabeth. neglect the forest opening widened gland aduring few would use them. Only took gradually until at last the prairie eixty yeare to establish them. It Peoseemed to come up to his very door. ple preferred using their fingers and knife. Coal waa cursed for the The woodlota here and there are but asmoke and called a "poison.' Umragged remnants of the native for- brellas and glovei were considered effeminate. est so ruthlessly wasted. 3. W hat deadly poison exists In The little old sehoolhouse of many comets Of whet are comets made? Cyanogen, the radios of p resale acid, a mans boyhood stood in the edge of often occurs in comet. Comets are a forest or near a swarms of rock surrounded by extensive We know that atmospheres. pasturctand. Th picture ia a delight they contain hydrocarbon gases, soda to the memory. But the abandon- and Iron. men cling to the bases ment of the district schools to a of 4. Why do active or semiqiiiescent volcanos large extent, and the establishment for their homes? Volcanic ash makes fertile noil, and lures of the extensive township schools, exceedingly farmers to plant things in It for the has brought a regret at the passing greater gains they will receive 6. When did the .eteanwhip Great of the old school environment. Eastern first arrive m New York Comes now a state law, in Indiana, harbor How long did it iakg to make England? June 17, or instance, compelling a tre- - the voyage from Ie0. A little more thaa eleven days. tree grove-trimme- d , '4 Measuring Automobile Efficiency By ITederl 3. Hasktn. ' WASHINGTON. D. C., April 14 little while a strange looking automobile la seen upon the atresia of this city. A long aluminum stovepipe effect rises from the running board on on aide and ends in a of a pipe with metal wings at one end. Thla top piece swings with with the wind in wather-van- e fashion. The car Is further distinguished by an aluminum ease on the floor ef the back seat, and when the car stands Still the cane can be Been to contain a complicated apparatus. A little metal camera like a child a toy stove rests on tb floor of the machine by the driver. A smell switchboard at hla hand connects with various wire and levers veg Ones when thi hicle traveled through the hills of West Virginia to be displayed at a scientific convention, the rumor waa circulated that the government had device to scent out (tills produced curb When th car pull up to it anywhere about the capital streets never falls to attract a crowd. Wide-eye- d email boys study the slack wires running from the tall pipe and eagerly' ask the driver, "la It radio, mister? Older people look at- - the license tag on the front and note that It Is marked "Teat Car, Bureau of Standards. And that explains the mystery. The car represents one of the government's experiment one of those experiments that look rather freakish and unimportant. and that end by showing how time and energy nd millions jot dollars . i v can be saved. The bureau of standards test ear Is the result of a scientific attempt to measure automobile efficiency under ordinary" road conditions., That the average driver, or even the expert driver, dees not begin to get n full return In efficiency from hie car has Gasoline Is long been recognised. wasted and the car ia allowed to wear out unneceeoarlly early because little details of adjustment are neglected. The gasoline wastage Is especially Important In view of the diminishing gasoline supply. The bureau of standards automotive experts some time ago tackled this n problem In the government laboratories, where conditions were controlled and a high degree of precision could be reached. But the laboratory conditions were almost too IdeaL They were not sufficiently true to Ilf for practical, teste, the scientists found. So they rigged out n ordinary automobile with apparatus designed and constructed by themselves and took their traveling laboratory out on bumpy and smooth roads, at high and low speeds, on slippery, rainy streets, through traffic and snowdrifts, REPORT SOON TO BE MADE. For nearly a year a little group of automotive experts have worked on the single problem of developing their apparatus to a point where It will make --sufficiently accurate records of engine and car performance under William 8. James, road conditions. chief of the section, says that In another month they expect to have finished that part of the work and to go on to make further testa with the apFrom these final testa, conparatus will be drawn and reports clusions Issued. So far, no reports. have been made public. Mr. Jamei explains that three groups of measurements are made bv the apparatus on tha test car: It measures: energy Input, cr the welrht of fuel and air entering the engine. Second, It measures energy output, which Is, n effect, the thrust of the car. The third group of measurements contains those factors which Identify conditions under which the such as temperature engine operate of water, oil, and air. The test s opera tus ean lie set up In any car, Mr. James explains. He hae had It attached, first to a medium weight car, then to a heavy oar, gnd now to a very light model. By throwing a single switch, the Is set glng. The entire apparatus driver makes whatever ex oeri ments he likes with driving methods, paying no attention to the recording devlcea When he stop the car, the results are all automatically recorded for him. and he has only to compare records and draw hla conclusions. The record of sixteen different factors of enrina and car performance la made in the case In the back of the car. A long roll of paper Is fastened In this case so that the paper runs Over the from one spool to another. fist surface whe-- e the paper passes between the spools, records are made by sixteen pens, each pet recording one factor and all working simultaneously. The resulting record of an hour and a half test Is a roll of paper about a foot wide and forty vards long with sixteen pen drawn lines of different more or less parallel colors running length of the along the entire neper. According to the varying constancy of the cars performance some I'nes are almost of the colored straight, others run In low curves and show" erratic atilt others peaks and erosa-eetl- queer-lookin- PHOTO-.- ., afer. That depend oa what 4 ia wrong. GOOD CHANCC FOR LONG LIFE. Whkt A Constant Reader write: are tha chances of a woman of it, mother of two children, of living a long life, with a valvular leak? 'T have had my heart examined by a specialist and he tell me 1 have If I follow nothing to worry about out hi Instructions, which I do, and 1 try to taka Intelligent car of myself. , "Otherwise I am healthy, never sick or aibng, and lots of pep. REPLY. If you will follow direction closely you Bhould live to a ripe old age. . You might live to vote for one of even your children for president, though that one be a girt. V, DROA0 shoe may help. for P. J. writes: "Are there cure ' bunions?" , REPLY. Yea. cases. cures bad Operation Wearing broad toed shoes and using pads to straighten- and separate th toe cures some mild cases. - USED BOTTLE TOO LONG. Mrs. J. II. 8. writes- - 3. Will you kindly nth-ol-tell me what I should feed my o d son. who Is convalescing from the flu? He eem hungry most of the time and calls for his bottle. Fh'ould I give it' to him every three hours Instead of hla customary four, and what can I feed him beside? I have been giving him malted milk n Measuring gtsoline consumption Is not only the most difficult feature of the tsata. bnt le regarded ta the most ImImportant feature. The girowing port a nee of gasoline economy Is cans. to bureaus put Ing various government forth speolal effort to prenare for th future. It la only a question of a few years before substitutes for gasolins will have to be used extensively to eke out the diminishing supply. Aa yet. however, no substitute that can be made and sold aa cheaply as gasoline ia at present has been found. Eventually tha price of gasoline will probably rise to a point at which alcohol will be a practical fuel equIvalenL But even alcohol can scarcely be supplied in sufficient quantities to meet the national need. It hr estimated that eh area the else of the state of Utah would hava to be put under cultivation In order to raise enough plants to supply alcohol to run tho country's motors. Considering this, conservation of gasoline Is a matter for each Individual motorist to take serlouay. Mr. James explains that the weakest point In driving, so far aa gasoline consumption la concerned. Is In the Intake evstem. Drivers fall to see that the carburetor Is correctly adjusted, even though gasoline mileage can be Increased or decreased 30 to SO per cent mefey by adjustment or lack of adjustment of the carburetor. The bureau of standard hopes to be able to show not only how drtv-r- a can run their car more efficiently, but also how improvements ran be made in The bureau's meatypes of engines. mors surement are far complete then any that have ever before been atare finished, the tests tempted. When the country will have standard of are both automotive performance that practical and scientific. NEW TYFE OF ROADS. The district engineer of the bureau of publlo roads for Texas tells of newly approved public - road building projects which provide foe the e construction of road wave for the full length letting construction of the other half of the road wa4 until tba county's' financial high-typ- you kindly explain what the Caesarian operation Is? Also, if It Is safer?" REPLY. 'Caesarian operation Is a method of of child by means of a the delivery section through tha abdominal wall. child are normal, and If the mother normal labor la much safer. If either mother or child le abnormal, Caesarian operation may be th second. half-wid- th Hew to the Lio. let O quip fan where the? any. CAESARIAN OPERATION. Mr. J. B. B. writes' "Will . GRAPHED. Every feature of performance la registered by the pens excent the gasoline flow, which li recorded photocamera on the graphically by theOaaoltne flow haa floor of the car. difficult factor of all been the most The to measure. Mr. James save other meaeurementa he describes as simple. lively "rompers The precision of laboratory teats-canever be honed for In tests conducted under srtual.mad conditions. to be valuable a test must be But Mr. James says accurate. th bureaus flow meter has been that developed to ike point where tt can measure and record a flow of gsa when en engine la Idling at a curb and using only two or threa drops a By Dr. W. A. Eraat 4 RED CRO CONTINUE HEALTH WORK. A eommltte to which th American Red Cnee referred th question of Red Ooa health work in pence time has recently reported. They advise th Red Cross to continue doing health work. The Judgment of this eommltte ia should have that the Red Cro membership of 10,000,000 to 30,000.000 and that giving health service to ttl membership ia good method. If not the best method, of getting and holding an large a membership. If 10 to 30 per cent of the entire population can be Joined together In Interested membership, tb possibilities for good are great. The eommltte recommended that tha Red Cross adopt n 'definite health program and stick to IL Tbeas are tba articles of that program: 1. The organisation of classe in bom hygiene and care of th sick. 2. Organisation of classea la nutri, tion. 1. Organisation of daises In first aid and life saving. 4. Th health phase of th Junior Red Cross program, such as 4a) The development of "personal health habits; b Participation In a school health - - - program; In community (c) Participation health programs. t. The enrollment of properly qualified nurses under the division of nursing service. . The organised development, of public health nurses In rural snd semlrural districts through the activity of the division !ot public health nursing. 7. Assistance In th development and standardisation In tha training of public health nurses through loan, scholarships, subsidiaries and the like. I. Th development of machinery for the coordination at one central point of lira work of various local health agencies. . Cooperation on a national scale nawith such organisations as th tional health council for the purpose of furthering tb coordination of pub-U- o health activities. members, are the classes tn home hygiene and car of th tlak- - th lifeclasses savin nutrition. In first aid and ing and In personal good health. The first thre of these activities must be conducted aa elaaswork. Home hygiene and car of the sick Is more an art than a science. It la taught by demonstration, example and doing Th same far better than by lecture. statement le. In great- - measure, true of Instruction In nutrition. First aid a and life raving Is fundamentally It calls matter of demonstration above all, for training of the hands. The need for training In health habits la great. That can b done by lectures, by the use of printed matter and by demonstration. -- FLOW A Line o Type or Two . Tb parts ef thla program which, ll la expected, win appeal to prospective efficiency-conservatio- 1923. How to Keep Well LONELY . JBrery angles. GASOLINE 17, and gradually working it up to all cows milk. Should I continue the malted mtlk for a while until he builds up hla strength somewhat? 2. How. soon ean I take him out? "3. Bhould I wait until tha cough i all gone?" REPLT. 1. While it Is all right to give a child milk and malted milk ae an exclusive diet during 4h course of an acute disease, that la not a proper exclusive diet for convalescence No child should be on the bottle. The diet of n child that age thould consist of .milk, cereal, bread, vegetables and frulL A child that age should have three full mess a four-hoday and two light meals a dav. That business ta for babies. However. three meals and two snacks bep. m. does not tween 4 a. m and scheddepart much from a four-houle. At that age It Is not necessary to dilute rows mtlk. If malted milk la used you ran decrease the allowance of cereal and bread ' My Favorite Stories By ZB YIN B. CORK Bjr NOT A HIT, BUT A CRASH. A .popular playwright prosperous now, but struggling once claims to ba HOUSES, Lonely bouse en lonely road th central figure of the champion That leads to nowhere neatb a hald-luc- k experience. leaden sky; 1 had written a dozen or more Tour roofs are swathed in mist a plzye," be zayi," and oil of them died heavy load Finally on of my brainpiank-eye- d you gaze, while romance children lived to zee production on paaaee by. one door ferther down the Broadway, street from'the theater where we W pass you by th winged train to play stood a ravings bank, speeds on and In that savings hank was deposThrough sodden woods and ocr sul- ited th last two hundred' dollars 1 len streams; had in this world. , Past flying posts each on a second "Well, we hod our opening night. gone The crowd seemed enthusiastic, fairly A second nearer to tho goal of though I policed that the critics presdream. ent managed to restrain themselves and remain calm. The next Faster, fleet train, and lear them far when I had read the notices morning In th behind peper, none of them being particularly Fly toward tha futur with It hld- -' complimentary, I decided stroll to den goal. down th theater to see how tickets Vanish sad houses, with .your dim were to second for the sellingnights eye blind Aa 1 turned th corner Nor lay your treacherous fingers on performance. Into Broadway I almost dropped from souL VEE VEE. my Joy and aatonlahmenL A line of watting persons extended along the block A Rqply to Dandsrlns's end midway Into the block below. naira. Aa I wormed my way toward th boa L My husbands greatest attrac- office I met the house manager. I a mole right on the tip of hi clasped his hand warmly, expecting tion noas. It haa hypnotised me so that him to congratulate me. - Instead, he tn all my year of married life I don't looked at me sadly. know yet whether hie eyes ars blue or Well, I babbled, Tt looks Ilka a brown. 1 can't get any farther than hit, doesn't It? that mole. Hit thunder! he said morosely. 2. He differs from other men In producer rams round behind th that every morning ha gives me tTke stag lost night after you left and twenty-fiv- e cents, beside regular ex- - posted notice. Tour show dose at for myself. Out of this the end of the .week. rnae money, look just look at an those up snd buy all my clothes. But, 3. No. he doesnt go to lodge nr pebple!' J gasped. Arent they trying club when h gdes out at nlghL He to buy tickets? J tells me th truth hs studies botany re not customers,, he said. They' the Marigold Gardens. They're depositors. Th saving bank at a place called 4. Tea, 1 stlH have youth and pep busted this morning! and fair kxs. I am fair, fat and alongside fortv, and still Jump on his lap and (CopyrlghL 1223. by th McNsughi tweak hla ears. He loves IL playfully Syndicate, Inc.) S. 1 have never spooned with other men. Thev let me alone, although no doubt they secretly admire me. no sum for 123, arid after this th Most (. rertalnly 1 would not get a of seeds wiU be discondivorce! There are too many waiting distribution tinued. to grab my darling. . 7. A wedding march makes me nerQ. Are carnets hair brushes really vous and Jumpy and curious I dont mad of camels hair? E. B. U know why , pSETCE-- brush ir a trad A, Camsls-TiahrGEORGE IS GOOD. BUT BITTER. expression. 8uch brushes are usually made of Russian squirrel hair, which ROOT BILL, AH! so nearly simulates cemela hair that My Dear Mr. Lrttle: Why all the experts are often unable to detect th grief and worry about tha Identity of difference. the varioua contributors to the Line? 4 4 4 i Let them rave about Bitterroot Bill, allow them to praise Delrdre. permit Q. How long would it take a clock D. N. them to laud "The King of the Black to tick a billion times?-1-!-, A. To tick a billion th clock would Isle, but for my part I think George tick for 11,715 Carroll, whoever he la, haa it ever on year. 4 a them all. JOHN JOSEPH ARMITAGE. Is What Q. qmdlcallimt-- J. A. B. A. "Syndicalism I a form of revoCANT STAND THERE, SOLDIER. lutionary labor unionism. Th term Is To Steamer:Bey, boy, your "Jinderived from tha French word "syndl-ca- t. of fours" gling curb" end "column meaning a labor union. Syndimade me throb today a I sat tn my calism is opposed to the four walls and a ceiling. And then I trade unionism on tha on hand and went to the office to finish making th to political socialism On the other. It dummy for that doggoned house organ aim at direct control over all Indusand gave th girl a growl, and its trie by organised bodies of worker. 4 4 4 mostly Steamer's fault. I wonder If he has to sit inside and paste up Q. What Is th difference between dummies, too, and does he growl at flotsam and Jetsam? D. C. the help and then' feel properly con- -, A. Flotsam refers to port ef trite for the rest of th day. Say, the wrack of a ship and that cargo which Steamer, did you ever pass the k. o. continues to float; 4s that part Jetsam over near that megaphone, and It waa which sink and remain under water. dusk and you didn't recognise him. 4 , and waa he a hard boiled k. o., and long be wheat been uaed he didnt like little soldier men whq tn Q,th How world T. A. . J. failed to know who he waa? , A. According to J. Arthur ThompOWEN, v son, was wheat grown by Neolithic man, and some authorities have put MORE ANENT POETS AND LOVK. th date ef the first wheat harvest at We two shall die and crumble into between 16,009 and 10,090 years ego. dust ai And men will soon forget tha lines Q. From what I radium extractweve penned. C. J. A. ed? But ever maid shall love and man shall A. Radium Is extracted from cerlust at pitchblende consisting Adown the countless ages to the end; tain kinds M. and of uranium oxide. largely Far love and lust must needs endure Kim. Curie, who mad the experiment. for aye, And ever in their wake shall mortals prate Oft of some saddened Bapphrde luck-le- a fate Who loved not wisely and era cast away; And evrr shell the comely Dido's lot Of faithieas lover, welcome death, be to.d Though names be new, and other herds will mold and we thalj The tales to words, know It noL ( We two shall die, SL Yves, and turn to dust. Yet ever maid shall love and man shall Olust. ' ed 1 - ' - old-ti- Y y OUR CHILDREN JU4 FstrL J MAKING STEPCHILDREN, Littl Mrs. Cary fluttered by lookdriven and ing tnorf hurried and , fragile then ever. "There she goes." groaned Aunt Martha. "That women ia killing ber-e- lf to no purpose. "Whats the trouble with her? She look said sympathetic very 111, Aunt Louise. "Whats the trouble with her? Shes bringing up a family to become stepchildren. That's what she's doing." ".Nonsense. Eh adores her children. Theyre her own. What do mean?" you "Of eoureo they are her ewa- - children and wa all know that she adores them. Every mother doe. But eh a roing to make her stepchildren or my name Isn't Martha. 8 be ha tour fin, healthy children, hut not on of them knows how to help hlmto-to a teaspoon." "Clair Is flftebn and her mother combs her hair and button her clothe Just a though ah were three. Non of tha four la permitted to cut hi corn meat t table. Tom la nine, but hi mother takes him to school and brines him home again. H hate IL" "Load week In that terrible downpour she went te meet him andto the skin. As a result she caught n bed cold, hut she said i it couldnt be helped. "She doe all their sewing and most of It by hand, because- eh N hate to see machine Work oa their clothes. Last week when the could scarcely held up her head she wee embroidering a letter on the oldest boy's sweeter. I asked her If they didn't com ready to sow on Snd she eld yes, but she bated the looks ef them. "Each child has a special dleL One eat his" eggs boiled soft, one must have them fried, one eat his only In an omelette. She cooks each one hie own sort every morning. I'm not J: king It's a fact. That's when I told her that she was raising stepchildren. Of course she was angry, but somebody must ray something. She' wearily herself out doing for the children whnt rather do for themthey would much selves and lor- - each other. But- abe . wont lot them. "On of these days she will He down and die and then what to he don children? with th herlpleo Homebody most be found to take charge of them. The father can't do IL That's what I told her anyway. Hope It did some good. If you are on of th mother who. live for try to live the children them Wouldn't It be well to stop end think just what you nr doing and where you are getting? The children do not car about their food and their clothe and their oorofort as much aa you think they do. Your being with them as long aa possible mean much more to them. Cut down the drudgery, out down the trimmings, save your self for the neceesltlea, for they era few end simple after ell, and so lengthen and broaden the years you may spend with tb Children. They are few enough. Too soon they up and away. (CopyrlghL 1923. by th Bell 8yn- dleate, , Inc.) f - - 4- - collected from eight tons of pitchblende about half a teaspoonful a m I li Ion time more rxdl- ant that uranium, . which was named radium. Q. How many people or engaged In mining? T. A. Y. A. There era 1,090.223 people engaged In th extraction of mlnerala 4 4 4 Q. ' Whose was the first funergl held In the White House? D. H. A. President William Henry Har- rison's was the first. ' Can You Sell Life Insurance?. IF DE8DEMONA. S- Can You Teach Others To Sell? COLLEGIATE TECHNIQUE. The Chaperon at the Dance. The music starts. Youve got the chaperon. Of course she will want to dance Deftly Ignore her request by shrieking above the roar, "Let's go snd hae some frappe." I nearly Frapp? ah will say. died of Indigestion the last tlms f Offer her a glass of frappe drank It 8he wiT repeat her suggestion that you dance. Step on her feet and aay, "Have you ever thought of reducing to music, before?" 111 now She say, "Warm, Isnt' It?" You say "no." Thla will be about all. BERNARD OF KNQX. (1) Threw Em Up at tha Calling and Print All That Stick. (2) A Me. chine Called the Captlonetter. (3) We Needed th Stempa. do you systematise your fl) How work I. e.: how do you determine whether or not a contrlb. . le worthy of the Line Who write the headings on the ( contributions? I think they are really a wonderfully clever. Inclosed fmd stamped and sdlrsssed MULLENDOT. for reply. envelope LINE legal reserve company, very large capital and surplus, wants Organizer for its SALT LAKE CITY OFFICE Will pay good salary and liberal com mission to the right man. There' is no buncomb about this advertisement. It means exadly what it says. If you think you are the man for the job and want a real chance to better yourself, write us. All inquiries will he treated in stri& OLD confidence. ADDRESS INSURANCE ' CAKE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE. THEY LIKE TO WATCH SOMETHING THAT COUNTS ONLY , UP TO 12. Youre going away: It may be weeks and it iuay be forever, but Rhl- - for before you go- pleas ' tell me -some- Thething awfully- Important. In an edit: rial this week atd. S per cent of England's population is unemployed. If this condition existed tn th United Btates it would 2. Now. mean 2P.000.009 persona out of work." No. , The census of 1020 said the populaFive tion of the U. 8. we 110,000.000. I cent of that l oh. well, what resources warrant completion. The per s are th to why Is, want say road for Idea Is that a If clock the they always wsaehing the full length Is preferable to a better than dont know figures snv roadway for- half Its length F. 4 GURE. that? Is soundness beyond questionand its e ing. GOOD-BY- ! The p!sn has been employed by other our contrlbs do; state and with satisfactory results, tt They need a rest, from me and you. ta said, snd a test of It In Texas may Ye. Vang., dear, assure extension of counts road sys- So come along, lets hit the trail hill snd vale oer far will render them And wander tems to a point that as transportation To where we will not work a lit a more adequate to a brick. dodge have never roads And servants. Permanent are not desirable, of course, but as In Carolina, Vangle mine. no be darned II never last, line; unit of a projected whole that will There render good service until the whole Therell be non there our soul to vex. can be constructed they may meet a No Agnes C. nor Mamma X., need In Tessa aa they have met it And In those hll a by sunshine kissed elsewhere. Uvea not a single plagiarist. Methods used in road building are But simple folk, who though forlorn with corn. decidedly Interesting, and some of Do ob! suchIncunning things them are strikingly original. In Utah, With, them happiness well dwell. R. M. L. for Instance, In th Salt lake City You, Vangle dear, and Jurisdiction, a method le being employed which exceeds xli ethers In Answers to Questions .novelty. Low roadbeds are being filed in with discarded tin cans and answer t (Anv reader can get the ashes to. a depth of some thre feet. The Tribune The mass of rubbish la leveled and any question by writing Frederic J. Hop-ki- n Bureau, fifteen-ton information s then meshed flat with l. C. This Director, Washington. steam roller. This foundation Is covto Information strictly offer applies ered with screened gravel, which bureau cannot give advice on packs more readily on this kind of Thp medical end financial matters. It surface then on dirt. By thla method attempt to settle domestic of road building Halt lake City has does not nor exhaustive redeemed a swampy section, and Some troubles, on to undertake Writ any subject. your of the novel roads are being used research and Give full briefly. for the third season. An extra pur- questionandplainly inclose tws address and name a means In was served that of pose sent m stamps for return postage. rubbish is sfforded. utilising new ideas are proof that th Ail replies are sent -direct to the inThese , possibilities In roed building nr quirer.) many and that up to this time they Q, la It still possible lo get free have been but lightly touched. FoolB. C. G. ish experimentation would waste Urn government seed A. The appropriation for 1921 carand money. But practical experimen12? ts ion it very much in order. Dallas ried A sum for seeds for tgr but the approprialloa of 123 carried (Texas) Journal. WK-bo- yi WE-bov- half-wid- th full-wtd- th - -- -- helf-wkl- th That Smart Appearance You is made or rained by your shoes. will always have it if you select Stetson . ' and they cost less by toe year. ' , - Stetson Shoes and Oxfords for Men and Women Who Care le-s- vr cBBfiffiSfo 22 West 2nd. So. - MaR Orders- - I&VIICE V ' |