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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1923. 6 compljr with the provisions of the treaty. Thoughtful men began to realise that if the United State, were to exist as a nation there must be a with direct central government power in both internal and external affairs, able to carry on foreign negotiation! in the name of the nation, to create statutes operative upon all citizens of the states, to enforce these statutes, and, if necessary, to punish those who violated them. The first men to speak out plainly and decisively in this regard were Alexander Hamilton and James Bowdoin. The struggle for the creation and adoption of the Constitution of the I'nited States was a long and bitter on'; two hotly opposing parties arose, the Federalists, who favored the Constitution, and the who sought to have it rejected. It was not until June 21, ninth state, New 17SS, that the the ConstituHampshire, ratified tion, and, .arrorrlin,- - to, the terms of the instrument itself, tiv that event it went into force. itatutea and Ii I Stmt Maniac by of luu aaaoay, llf aa aad iiimai Daily mm t -- sOBacm.--.o- tmt, a. Mar. sat Matt aee Trie, ee eaw aa in ia ta lb Ceiled agaata ia atflra. aamuta fcie la. U.M aa v. a47, Weekly si ..fl.J 1 rear uIMMa. ellj mKaadara mipot aur to UWsaaaia mm at taa Aaaouat ta a Taa Aawrtatad Praaa la iaWljr la taa aaa tar icandaaUaa at U aave aispateaee cn-Iita II ar aot taa Ma credits ta taw paaar. mat al v laral am pabllsksd aarala, aT taa aadlt Taa Trlbaaa la ., antaf araaa at Omlattaa. iDorawtloa cee"-r- aa IV. Trlaaaa'a Ctreslatloa will ba aapiM 1 iYlbu. aoile aa kM.. Am ( Inn. c dTtrtlslas a1 Kgarial afaat. Wofld bWf . N" Cbtcsfo. Trlbaaa Mi.. Tart; Traat M(., It. Uwla: rord bWf.. Detroit. ; at. aiKk.; fto'Qt bldj . knui ntjr. lia. Caaat C. atergaaaaa a .. Ik . Pacific 8aa Fna kldf.. Eiaaiiarr timui..ll, data; Till, laaaraara bJdf .. Laa Anfrlaa; laa Main a. bid.. teattl. tUTarlty Kufalga at baraaaa Raa ar: FlU5 Mall. Prase; Ualar aa Uadaa. Hot. Roma. Trlbaaa Taa Parta, lafonaatloa of lawrtiaa. . Kaflaad; (itrmaar; Baeei-aa- Laedoa. 123 1 r Italy. I. latesaaa ftu fail tm Wauub mmt Tour bM Tribune, tata- - tha rlty drralatlea dpartmrat batora win aa a m. aad a cobj la a'rtark ya by Katand at Ilia poatoftWr I of Hilt Lata rlaaa rn.tl.-- '' MEXICO RECOGNIZED. Washington official announcement diplomatic rri ognilioif of the of - President Mirt government Ohregon is bracketed, with tho statement that all American interests in Mexico will be safeguarded under terms by which cordial relations are between the two naThe individual and property tion rights of American cit izemtjuid sub joins in Mexico are acknowledged" and will be respected. .Claims of "the"'nalibhaTs of "the TrnltcJ States and other eountrte against Mexico "are" To "be" considered and deal t with be appointed by commissioners to for that purpose. ' Accomplishment of the task to which the American and Mexican commissioners set themselves some months ago has been reached without impairing Mexican law or sur rendering any of the traditional American rights. The Carran.a constitution of 1917, held to fiseatory in many' of its provisions and the stumbling block thus far to recognition of Mexico remains as.it was written. Hut othe. Mexican laws have been found to cover the issues in dispute and the Ameri can people have the word of tho state department that under the agreement upon which recognition has been granted the property anil personal rights of Americans are guaranteed every rightful protection. Thus, President Obregon wins his long, persistent and steadfast fight .for official acknowledgment. The Washington announcement brings to an end a long and trying period. of and mis international'disagreenients which har. their understandings origin in events occurring long before Alvero Obregon strodo to power in the city of Mexico and gave the southern republic the first chance for peacofu development since IViaz wss overthrown and Mexico stood at the threshold of civil war and international complications. President Obregon 's administration to this tima has been marked by unusual tranquillity and promise, lie soon is to relinquish his post, following a general election. Doubt less he will quit the presidency all the more satisfied that under his regime Mexico enjoyed a larger share of peae- - than it had known since-thdavs of Porfirio, the dictator. of-- fttH Tuesday, September 1923 4. IT ALT AT FAULT. The Italians are evidently .taking advantage of the existing- chaotic ondition in Kufope to humble the Greeks and gTab territory to which claim. they hav no just or legal looks it world the of From this side and of old greed story, the. old, .like bat for land. At the closo of the -" to rab jfrsat" war Italy "attempted to make am'ero aaeagh territory Italian lake out of the Adriatic sea. Ia this she was not successful. She bow proposes to extend her boun aariea by force of arms. This they will undoubtedly be able to accomplish unless the great powers inter rene and pressure is brought to bear through the league of nations, the Oreek army and navy being inferior to the army and navy of Italy. Great Britain and France being at loggerheads over the occupation of the Ruhr, the Roman government thinks it sees a chance to add to tho landed Italy before tho possessions of tangle over the Rnhr is straightened ut. And the world is witnessing a methods Tevival of the which have cost so jjnany million lives. Italy should be boycotted by all the eivilizod nations of the earth until snch time ss she gives hp her imperialistic designs. - old-tim- e TREATY ANNTVERSABY. Yesterday was the 140th anniver-iarof the treaty jof Versailles (rYanee) concluded between the United States (then under ar tides of confederation) and Great Britain, formally and officially the American War of ending As a the Revolution. matter of fact, actual hostilities had eeased with the surrender of Corn wallis at Yorktown, October 13, 1781, and notice of cessation of the struggle and the victory of the colonies had been formally published in April of 1783, but the process of reaching agreement on all the terms f the treaty was exceedingly slow, aad it was not until September 3, 1783, that the signatures of the high were contracting parties finally affixed. The signatories to this historic doenment were: David Hartley, for Great Britain; John Adams, Benja rnin Franklin and John Hay, in the order named, for tie United Statea The extent of the period that elapsed between the ceasing on the part of Great Britain to endeavor further to control the colonies and. the conclusion of the treaty is due to two prime causes: means of l communication werj primitive aad alow, and the colonics themselves, despite their decisive and unquestioned victory, were without a central government that could give an adequate coherency and the essential unity of action. At the conclusion of tho war the states themselves were free, no raised any question as to that, but the inefficiency of their form of federal government was evident in almost every attempt to function as a nation. Washington himself characterized the confedera-Uas "little more than the shadow Without the substance," and bv Mason of its want of power it soon became condemned or neglected bv any strong men who rhould have been its ehief supporters. The outlook was indeed dark. The confederation 's treasury was empty, M waa burdened with a foreign debt of $8,000,000, domestic obligations of 30,000,000, and had a paper cor rency of nearly $90,000,000 which no one wonld accept. The congress whose predecessors had Incurred the Various and grave obligations had bo power to provide for discharging hem, it eould only make s to the states and urge them to provide their share toward tho expenses of the government. ' Evon after the signing of the treaty at Versailles, many of the articles in the treaty were set at naught by some of th states, which passed laws in direct conflict with the provisions of the - convention, asd congress wai Tunable to do more than exhort them to annul these , offi-eia- -- V by the exhibition, such as banking, investment, building, insurance and manufacturing, By way of rebuttal of the time- honered tradition as to women's in ability to understand machinery, it is interesting to note that a survey of the patent office at Washington show's among the inventions and dis eoveries'attributed to women an internal combustion engine also a block signal system. At the Missouri River power plant, which generates electricity for the Kansas City Railway company, a girl graduate of the mechanical department of the University of Illinois is employed. Miss" Clare Niccplet tips the scales, at ninety five pounds,- and among the huge turbines whte she works in overalls it is remarked that she "uses waste as deftly as a powder puff. ' ' One of the leading hotels in New ork employs a young woman as direct a," her job being to keep the name of the hotel in the This she ar public eye continually. range by sending notices to the society columns of the newspapers whenever celebrities register at the hotel. Likewise, she endeavors to "so-calle- drumup mi-nt wetTdang uud fothe .estXBlijhj: trade t parties, receptions taa working persons in the country one The figures are given is a woman. in a department of labor bulletin and indicate somewhat the extent to which women have become a factor in a sphere formerly occupied for the most part by the male sex. Tho last decade shows marked inroads by the women in the trade and professions formerly restricted to men. numbers of increasing women appear enrolled as apiarists, poultry raisers, dairy farmers, gardeners, florists, fruitgrowers and nursery eulturists, own ers and managers of timber plants;.! operators, officials and managers of mines; mechanical engineers, electrical engineers, civil engineers and surveyors, architects, designers and draftsmen apprentices; engravers, chauffeurs and dentist.. Women doctors have become a matter of course; women law vers scarcely less so. and women in the ministry, according to the census report, increased from 6Sj in 1910 to 178.5 in IOL'0. The Society of Friends has, like the Salvation Army, stood for sex equality from the beginning, and in the United States at least forty sects receive women freely into the pulpits. Recently a conference of the reformed wing of Jewish rabbis passed a resolution allowing women to be ordained on equa terms with men. The Women's Activities exhibition, held last Septemb under the auspices of tho New York League of Business and Professional W omen, showed the number of new avenues continually-openinIt was. not remarkable to find a growing movement among women to own and manage such individual businesses as small specialty shops, book shops, tea rooms, beauty parlors and shops for the sale of confectionery, handmade jewelry, handicrafts . of. all sorts; but it was surprising to note the less, usual occupations indicated Btoek-raisor- By Dr. W. A. By Red eric J. Haakin. WASHINGTON, Sept. 1. With fathe first voring weather conditions trial flights of the United Statea navy's new air monster, the ZR-- 1, will be made this moKth, and if the ho pea of the builder are realised and tha plana of the operators do not go aiwry these flights will b extended gfttdually, until within a few months every Important center in the United Htaiea will have been visited. The people in all section of the country will thus be given an opportunity of seeing the first rigid airship of its type ever toallt in America. Ijiter a flight to the north pole regions may e undertaken. Much a venture is under consideration and tentative plans to that end have been made. "MammMh," "monster"' and "giant" are the only wonls that are at all the new airship adequate to drs-rlband the hangar at Iikehurst, N. J., where she has tieeti ajwenihled and is now housed. Kven they do not con vey concrete conceptions of slse, and tho dimensional figures when they are stated are more bewildering than Im, pressive. When we are told that the 7.R-- 1 Is 60 feet in length and that the hull has a diameter of 'i feet with a total gas oatiaity of 2,115.000 cubic feejt.. xe know that she Js. tils,, hut as to just how big the mind remains .. a bit hazy. sr informed- fhat the Iakehurnt hangar's Inside dimensions are, roughly, six) feet In length by K0 feet In width and 170 feet in height, wo know that It Is immense; but the figures still Inave us with only a they mean. 'vajrae Idea nf what However, when it Is stated that the y.R-if hronipht down In a guflrtent-ly- , wide city street, would overlap considerably two standard city mmares tn length ajid would tower to the height of the ordinary eight-stor- y tuil(hng, we may gft a mental picturey of the ftirxhip that conveys npprosl-mateta real idea of her size. .... And., whenarc told .thaX-..thathree city hangar would cover almosttwelve-story two that average blocks, eould be pushed office buildings n t w ..,, M-- Berlin government is clinging desperately to the passive resistance policy in the hope that she anay be able to evade payment of her obligations as a result of the dispute between France and Great We have been hearing Britain. much about the bankruptcy of the Germans and their inability tn settlo the reparations bill. The truth is, Germany could pay if she so desired. Her real wealth remains. In addition to the foreign assets held by she still possesses her industrials, more col than the I'm tod Kingdom and France combined, and an inexhaustible store of potash. Her railways and canals aro intact, and her industrial establishments, factories nnd shipyards have been brought up to the highest pitch of efficiency. Her mercantile fleet is again competing in the trade routes of the world, and the traffic returns of the port of Hamburg already exceed the prewar records. Bearing these facts in mind, the American pooplo will be unablo to make much ot a show of sympathy without being hypocritical. It cost this country some billions of dollars and many thousand lives to prevent the kaiser from becoming the ruler of the world, t'nele Sam is entitled to reparation for his losses. Let the Germans settle without further quibbling. Tho OTHER the il Infia-mln- 1 7.U-.- ZR-2- t, whih is said to known as "Devil's Grip" is still nt large. This stranne disease is now prevalent in V irginia. The epidemic appears to bo confined to rural communities and to be spread within families by contact Children arc more attacked than frequently adults. Tho symptoms point to an inflammation of the surface of the diaphragm and the disease might be called, technically, eptdemic transient diaphragmatic spasm, and is quite posaaihly related to some of the other infectious conditions which follow epidemics of influenza. The. attack comes on suddenly with severe abdominal pain, which later extends to one or both sides of the lower part of the chest cavity. and rapid. Breathing is difficult The temperature rises in practicallv all cases and there is intermittent pain. Most of the patients perspire freely. The pain is increased on movement and in some cases bv swallowing. Most of the patients complain of headache and pain in the back. After from four to ten hours of severe pain and difficult breathing, the condition begins to subside, but there may be relapses. Most of the patients recover without; any secondary complications. MILE POSTS. In the Man hour of irre.atiwt triumph, acn.se his rein Ioktnit back alnnc deepest the hifthwav That has broucht ucres and (T.Un: For sometimes the prime is tarnished By curroion of the ear. And he viewa the path ascended Through the gutter of his tears. If the winning of a trophv- TSated highly on the earth. Leave the victor tment and bmken. Then It hea no whit of atorUi; And a man may take the plamttts Of the multitude and amUe, While his heart Is dumblv sehkia: For the things he's lost meanwhile. . Grace E. Ilall. CLOTHES THAT PASSED IN THE r mar NIGHT. Peiasenger board (after the firs 'T ntorht on say, where have my Where did you Steward put . them?" Faaaenrer "In that little cupboard there, with the glass door to It." Btearard "IUea me, sir. that ain't no cuphomrtl. That's a porthole," Reynoiita, Newspaper (London). ckithea ship)--- . ZR-- t Near San Verm Br Zma By Isabel M. Lnr HOW N3T TO DO IT. Of V. V Kara! ObsTtory The place was a lake beach on hot afternoon. Thousands ware swim ming. Many life guards were' on doty By Science Berric. A man was drowned. The story cur WASHINGTON. Sept . Br tar the rent on the beach was that the roan had been under water twenty minutes moat Interesting and striking feature when the ffuasd fount hint. He was of totality during tha clips of Sepcarried to a grass plat near tna snore tember 10, aside from the appear and the police ambulance was sum- ance of the pearly coronal light and I saw the crowd around the acarlet pronlneacea, will be the ap moned. man and the police ambulance drive Dearanoa ot tha brilliant Venus al up when I was tWo blocks away. As most In conjunction with tha sun. Venus reaches superior conjunction I reached tha periphery of the crowd, a man who was making bis way out with the sun a few hours before the said in great Indignation: "Of course sun and moon ar tn conjunction. At de man die. Dey cot- no bulmotorT the time of the eclipse It will be a What chance ia dey (ot to save him little over two diameter of the moon when dey ain't got no bul motor? It's distant from the sun's limb aad to tha northeast ot tha sua. Sine tt ta a shame?" Just then the fire apparatus drove at this time ea the far aide of Its up and the firemen ran over and com- orbit from the earth tt Is tar leas menced using a pulmotor. As well M brilliant than when it appears aa I could Judge the man was hopelessly Morning or Evan Ing star, but even Venus will gone by this time. I do not know with this disadvantage what had been dona before I came far outshine every star and planet and I shall, therefore, limit what I In the sky. Owtng to Its close prox-lhave to say to what was done after I tr to the aun It will a Dear on got there. While the condition was even targe scale photographa of the en Is based the will reeemoie in inn comment eclipse and hopeless, ray thought that if it waa worth while moon In phase. This ia on while waa in which wa never see it worth phase doing anything, Venus, except upon such an xtremir doing the right thing. rare occasion as this, for ordinarily The man lay on his back 'on the It Is lost on the rays of the sun grass. He was not covered, nor was at the time of conjunction. Not only there any blanket under him. A fire- Venus, but Mercury. Mars. Jupiter man had blankets on hie shoulder, and Saturn will all be above hut be 313 hot use Inem. The body- horizon at the time of the eclipse and, was in the wet clothes. The pulmo- with the exception of Jupiter, within Xur. was worked by fireman. I count less than JO decrees of the sun. ed his speed several limes Ha lorced BRIGHT STARS VISIBLE. r times etwenty-fouthe into lungs gas the sun Is now In Leo and not a minute. The gas used. 1 was told. farA from the boundary between this was oxygen. Two tanks of it were constellation and Virgo, one may exemployed while I stood around. Now pect to see tha brighter stars In these for the mistakes! r. two ' during the total constellations It is all important to wrap the body 20 de of About the phase eclipse. in blankets and to put hoLappllcations to the northwest of the sun to the skin. Sometimes Tt ia feasible grees a will of star the appear Regulus. to remove the wet clothing. Some ad- first at the end of tha vocate Duttlng the body In a tube of handle magnitude, of Sickle in Leo. The and prob warm water. Some advocate pouring ably one or two of the brighter stars warm water over the body. the same group will be visible. people no longer use the pul- (in atar second Uenebola, the magnitude mechanIn other it and motor. Faith In the tail of Leo. will lie a few ical breathing devices is limited to degrees to .the. northeast ofonly the eu. fro." Men "who say: ""Dey ain't ot Directly to the east and southeast Its brilliant t rinftH of the aun Is Virgo. fn tKftM " ine iun propei spica. a star or the first maamatude. or more life guards to have done bna- - about Aa a dear to, of il,uu. v ler the sun. will form a small, nearly Why should a wrong to use oxygen. with the planets triangle man breathe If hia lungs keep full of featum and Mercury. Saturn will be Hla without breathing?v oxvgen . nearly due north of Sole, and Mer :... 1.1 wi work cury an equal distance to the about me? for works fellow when the other or Snica and nearly in line wwium mc northwest An . abundance The three , ., . nr a i r contain- - with Spica and the sun. .......oi oxygen .i will form a brilliant group, the two ing b per cent carbonic acid gas kicks- planets being equal in- brightness and cenier nu tnuug'" the than Spica. .. broatning nrm. brighter & CJUl Of considerably it up. Some distance to the southeast of hi i 1.i.i drowning is to make the breathing Spica lies Jupiter, the most distant , center start up. of the bright stars and planets suri.a.ilv the oulmotor waa working the sun at this time. Mars was rounding minute a too fan. Sixteen times Is, next to Venus, the nearest to the woa.u sun. I'erhaps twelve times enough. It be found to the north will I However. have been better stilt. west of the sun on a line connecting may sav, rarely have 1 ever seen the sun with Regulus and about mid frelesa work their apparatus them. times a minute. way between quently than thirty TO TEST EINSTEIN. doShis criticism also appliea to men Sha-fer the The stars by that will be available for ing artificial breathing testing the Einstein theory are com and Sylvester methods. rew. within the required paratively 2 radius of SOOTHING TO SKIN. degrees from the sun ,. . . tt ..t in a uireest rar- - there are about forty stars that lie between the eighth and ninth magnihoisted' petroleum jelly or vaseline tude, and two that are brighter than for the rellel oi prurnia, unuiuuu. eighth magnitude, as compared with called Itch. the eighty-od- d stars that appeared on KKl'Ll. taken Wallal at . .. last year, and plates KI .......f nrnamr ' Bttina in it will be very doubtful if all of these .,lions K..i am mipnhlne ...w. K. ...... Is can be are s oiiuiuis successfully photographed. Efhowever, Ltke to pain. morphine, . . . ymAL forts will be made, however, to test j,. tnev are not iree irum uoni. these stars the Einstein eiailv is there danger If the skin is by means ofthat has been so closely prediction much scratched and torn. Furtherverified In two previous ecllDses. A not espeare salves more, carbolic number of expeditions are planning to cially helpful in skin troubles due to obtain plates of the field surrounding Itch mites and other aparasitea me aun tor mis purpose. BOOKS ON DIABETES. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS. Mrs. H. (1. writes: on book a 1. state You that (Any reader oan get the answer to would help t carry out orders. any question by writing The Tribune I can me where Information Bureau, Frederic J. HaaWill you kindly advise kin. Director, Washington, n. C. This procure . such a bookt mrtA Miurvmllt offer n applies strictly to Information. The bureau cannot give advice on much bow and for diabetes, good legal, medical and financial matters. should be eaten a nay i It does not attempt to settle domes, KM'IjI. will tic troubles nor to undertake ex have or 1. Anv bookseller win ' research on any subject. haustive order - nfor.w you. a fnf 1ln.txlm fnna write your question plainly and full name and address Give a sense Is In briefly. any diabetic. Neither Inclose two cents In stamps for specificon A aiaoeuc snouiu iiui im and return postage. All replies are sent his grapefruit. sugar direct to the inquirer.) DIABETES IS DANGEROUS. Q. When a vice president succeeds C. It. .r. WTites: to the presidency, does he use the 1. Is diabetes dangerous for a chair occupied by the former presi oman of 60? S. dent?- -. 2. Can it be cured? A. It ia customary for the chair x What diet, if any. would you which has been used in the office of recommend? the president of the United States to REPLY. be placed at the disposal of the out1. Tes. or of his family, in ... goingcasepresident of his death. This has been llUftCH'l, IV IB IH'V the persons 60 years old aa It Is In young done in the case of President Harer people. ding's chair. 2. If you win intelligently stuoy o Vi'Ur law. HUip uui a ijuii v. la it true that the late Q and follow' It in detail, you may live Roosevelt rode "a hundred to reacn su or ioerewKut.. on horseback In a single day? miles .v... nave suiiicum; K. T. E. study your case, lay out your plans A. In President February. ana leacn yuu now m im i j mem miles on Roosevelt rode ninety-eig3. is the cornerstone of the horseback liet In the seventeen hours be to. plans referred tween The and dark. daylight n trip should not ltrlefly, your diet sweets was from Washington to Warrenton than your and more bread and return. Three horses were used. of. can dispose system Q. Is there a law prohibiting the USE SULPHUR OINTMENT. burial of Chinese in the United M. .I. D. S. States? . T. writes: lA j you wuhiuci It.. 1. A. There ia no law of the uniteo uio WDa uo I it entirely Statea prohibiting the burial o( Chi remedy for scabies? me curable? nese upon American sou. 2. What should be done with however, prefer to be buried In after whenever and recovery? etc., their native country, bedding, u V1 make such- - arrangements. m m m ai,lnhn. nlntnunt ta possible ..... . , "' O. Ia a naval offloer considered a WHPr L(Ull um in, iwill cure w. k. sulphur ointment the professions! man? toW. T. C. iv an cases the occupational A. According ... MIii you ., t.AA4ln a iojt'ij. e.rmAnll statistics of the Bureau, of the C officers are and bedding that cannot be heated and navy army Can le BierilliSeU vy auivmui luiniw, classed under public service, not pro-- , After being sterilized they can be fesauonai service. , "full-moo- ts -- equal-side- d : rea-cue- 1 S. Oobb. By Angelo THE BOOK THAT GRANDPA TOOK Sine Rz Beach himself laughed at this story whoa I brought it to him, there Is no reason why the general public should be denied tb op to laugh at it. too. I had portunity It at first band from a young lady who figured in it. This young body is bow engaged in newspaper work. Bat before ahe took up iournaltam ahe waa an assistant at a public library in Pittsburg. una aay as an sat at her desk a rtrl aooroached her and told her that she had come to pay , for a bosk astiiok had been lost. "What was tha hook" asked the librarian. It Some.' Was Mr. Rax Ttea-rJi- Ooih 'a ' 1 took It out four weeks ago t read it. but Wa haul some rmuhla in oar family and the book was lost, and I'm afraid I can't return It, so. under the rules. I suppose I'll have to pay for it." Judging bv the airl'a innairanA. the librarian figured that she did not belong to a family In particularly affluent circumstances, so sympathy moved her to make further Inquiry. "I would suggest." she said, "that you make another search for 'the miaalng volume. Surely It must be somewhere around your home. Perhaps if you hunt again thoroughly you may find where it ia" "Oh, we know where It said the girl. "That's just the is," trouble." wa Well, yon ace, grandpa died." What haa Tour rrandfather'a to do with . Mr. Rex Beach 's jQolnar Some'r ."Well, ma'am, atee he w -- . i m hts coffin the undertaker used it to prop up grandpa's chin with. And everybody forgot about it until after the funeral waa over. And the--book Is out at tha eemeteev mriih grandpa." . n hf (Copyright, 192S, by the McNaoght syndicate, lac) APPROPRIATE. . . Whs AtH .1.iia. - w 1. siors: to couple 'with the jdoctor. Why not the "The Btnrlr la Thai Kta i.t-- ik- - , K. gest bill." The Clarion. ....AW 8WEBED 1 . ,, ' Father, what is a eynlo " 'A sinik. mv bnv lm Ih.i v.l . v uniis i. in t. kitchen vmithe the dishes and sometimes the baby." . ...i. - -- 1. .,,, ahn -- nh RIGHTO. Hey. mister! anything in the shape of Storekeeper res, we pickles. Judge. Sonny bananas' have dill .. -- : . have mai4e a - 1 t. claimed exemption during the war on ... must WH.lt live ..clmaiQ years from the date of the signing . of k. , XIn. ruun-Itla" knnlallfu . ......... , ..... 11. iia, oe- fore applying fog naturalization. How many of the Japanese are V. H. L-. There .K....I 1 jaa aaa . C t aaa AAA tr ! IMnillalUn .... ' wi du.uvii.uvu. r TOO- 380.000 veasels of different types ably a i ..1. Aral" aliniMn In 1 noun, in japao. Q. fishermen? A Patrt FINDING A PLACE. is Many a high school gradaat wrinkling hts brows and Qizrtatng about under a fir of questionhag that season of the year. "Now, just what do you want se' bit" inquires father benignly. "tea,"' says mother cheerily. "teB us what four plan are. Then well know better how to help you.1 The youngster wishes he knew bow to answer them. Be longs for something clever to say and the word wtU. which to say It. But nothing mms. " except, "Well er 1 think ."Yes, yea." says father hocefrirht, . "what do you think V ssyf" "Er, well. ' whatever yoo stammers ' the child. For children they are, although, they have been graduated with great ceremony and a beribboned roll. Tbavgeo-erhigh school graduate of today-seeto be you rarer in every way than those of an older day. Few of tiiem have the attitude of grave recareer sponsibility toward life and aXrtauoat that we had at their age. The truth of the matter Is that the great group of healthy youngsters have but a very indefinite notion of what they want to be. So many avenues leading outward, confront them aj thatyie-nee- a awl .clear 4 flmrar poet to help them out a bit Wasn't there a friend who atrosnrty advised you what and how and when to do? Father or toother or. kindly relative who pushed and prodded knd dragged you a part of the way? Youth ever has reluctant feet and the firm propulsion of a ia needed- If they are to cross tn " ' first bride Oh time. a bit Even If the bridge carry them , it tViatar nt ?lAallv hi Tn tha wav ntit go, the start will not be entirely lost. There Is no law that says 'one must select hla road and stirk to It, though it lead to the verv rIace on least desires to go. That's Just the point. The usual adolescen t doe not knot where he wishes to go. He ts likely to mlstakle vague yearnlngn toward He is Inhigh altitudes as talents. clined to feel that he had cnnvscrlans he has but very wherewobbly secood-Karid- etpiasefi. r "i ry- Wkedy to be possessed with the idea that h is wlso beyond the wisdom of years. Hut be not deceived. Behind al that there Is a frightened, eonosed and helpless child feeling his way ont' of tha most .difficult place that will be his for many a year to come. Help him! If he cannot help you to help him, take the matter into your own hands and help him aiTyway. TbAf what we grown-u- p people are tor. There would be no excuse for our the cumbering ground If there were no silly, trying, needy youngster for ar--rt hold us to lip push on. It's all very hard on our comfortable middle age, of course, but the reward comes In the later tint when they are going ahead under their own power and we sit in our airrjcixairs' and beam upon them and remember . the time when e. the Bell 1913, by (Copyright, Inc.) . wetl-ajtob- er -- . Syndl-drcat- . .a l I - WA dla-hett- .. CHINESE and WILTON un.f.i, -- Oar stock of beautiful CHIXESE RUGS is now so large and of such bewildering variety of size and color that a selection may be made that will blend tastefully with the interior scheme of every home Rose, Blue, Mulberry, Lavender, Tan, Gold and Taupe IT COSTS NO MORE TO BUY A GENUINE CHINESE 1. : EUG. WILTON RUGS We have almost an urilimited number to show you. Great amazement and a spirit of appreciation of these splendid carpets at exceptionally moderate prices have been evidenced among new home owners as well as among people who have been waiting for years to replace old rugs with some- -. thing really distinctive,in WILTON RUGS. VISITORS t.ni-nes- e. ALWAYS WELCOME n. sin', OUR CHILDREN Favorite Storie ..My During Edipte Evan. FLY SIX HOURS. Is driven by six engines. each of .300 horsepower, and a maximum speed of miles an hour can be attained. Her cruising sixt1--fivoe win miles an hour, speec, and fully loaded and manned 'the ship will be equipped to fiy about sixty hours, during which she should cover at least 40OO miles. This would make a flight across the continent comparatively an easy matter, and a eon-taiacross the Atlantic should present trip few difficulties. The frame of the Zlt-- 1 is constructmt m, mi ed of duralumin, an alloy developed by the aircraft industry that Is as but only one-thir- d as strong as steel, The fat-ri- c which covers this heavy. frame has been weather-proofe- d and rendered resistant to the heating effects of funllght by inting it with a material known as' aluminum dope. TT.-- T for the officers and Living quarters . 1 crew are situated on th keel inside of the hull, where a runway 6O0 feet long is divided into messing and Bleeping apartments. Cooking Is done V. on special atoves that are heated by the exhaust gases of the engines. The Interior of the ship is Illuminated by meang of detached light unite energised by special batteries. Ijidders used. lead from the living uuarters to the top of the ship, where they terminate THE TIES THAT BIND. in observation platforms. We were greatly relieved to learn Helium gas. which is nonlnflamma-bl- e that lh the open spaces where out and is not readily explosive, is thev talk about n. thirsts and used in the new air monster. Alto- God's tbeth-- household gods country, are there gas cells, are the same as ours twenty gether The signeach one of which Is a separate unit. boards and the street car cards These cells are made of goldbeater's throughout the country are given over aklns, obtained from the Intestines of to mo?t oredukus and cattle, and approximately 830.O00 cat- arguments for the use of Lux, Rinso tle were required to supply the skin. and the consumption of Ridgeway's. Suspended directly below the hull As VnT as we eat the same food, are the six power cars and the con- drink the same brews and wear the trol car. The control car is the nerve same brands) of underwear, we need center of the ship where are assem- never fear the dissolving powers of bled all the operating, steering, shift- labor or Socialism. A man cannot that fight another roan who has used his ing and altitudinal appliances govern the manipulation of the great brand of safety rasor. They have craft. The radio equipment is also arready suffered too mucfi in common. lecated there in a sound-proo- f apartNeither can a woman who has that ment, and complete telephone and dishpan-- y look on her hands feel suvoice-tub- e systems communicate with perior to another woman who uses all parts of the ship. the same kind of soap. They are Water la carried as ballast for the sisters under the suds. Brooklyn Life. ZR-- t In bags holding from 500 to 20O0 When the ship drops too . QUESTIONING THE JUDGE. pounds. rapidly during a descent, her speed Jinny, a Carolina negreas, was can be checked appreciably by dump- a Aunt great advocate of the rod as a help ing this water overboard, treating the in child rearing. As a result of an earth immediately below to something unmerciful beating which she gave approximating a young cloudburst. her youngest and "ornerlest," she was Nothing that human ingenuity con into court one day by outdevise has been omitted and no fests brought raged neighbors. have been neglected to guarantee that The after giving her a severe judge, the ZR-- t will be as safe as any air lecture, asked If she had anything to craft that can be constructed. It was say. determined that there should be no "Jest one thing, jedge." she replied. repetition of the ZR-- 2 disaster if guch "I wants to ax you a question. Was can be and guarded against, tragedies you everthe parient of a perfectly It' Is for this reason that the trial arutbVess cullud chile?" Everybody's are to be Lakehurst at short flights Magazine for September. and repeated until when a. real flight Is of the the ORIGIN OF A GREAT IDEA. that worthy possibilities new air scout Is essayed she will be The cuff on the bottom' of trousers and thoroughly prepared ready. cam lh this wavy. A Scotchman had been out tn a rain and had turned THE LATEST CRIME. up hi trousers at the bottom. When '"There Is no name." thunders rhe he returned he found he had lost Rev. W. Howard Graham, "for the a sixpence. He looked everywhere crimes that follow the drinking of for tt, but In vain. That night, when bootleg booce." There's a name for retiring, the coin feH out of the fold. if yott-Juput The next day he had all the trouseverything. Doctor, How about ryu-thet- ers "cuffed," and the tailor, discovyour mind to It. A. tn the New York ering the reason, soon built up a p. World. . ' hla; business. Christian Advocate. CAN The infection COMPARISONS. again, we are told that the cloth used In the construction of the 7.K-would make a tent measurably larger than the biggest circus tent that was ever set up. That will mean something to the hoys ia to whom the main top of the circus still the bigAnd then gest thing In the world it Is stated that there are forty miles of wire in the air monster. That may not convey so much of a picture, but we all know that it is a lot of wire. Also we are informed that on 20 the ship was moved from her con st ruction orari e on one side of the hflngaj to a housing crai over on the other side, and that since then tire ship has been IKeraJrv up in the air inside the haratrar arel subjei?t to tt.s approximating strses and strains tn which she wtll be subjected in trnx statements are flights. And g and impressive in reatly wha-- t tH of the ie of Ow thy not suffice It may If do hangar. they ho pointed out that the hatufaJ could be sot down over the eapitol at Washington and would cover it completely, save that the dome wouM protrude some eighty feet through the mof, or that the treasury building would rattle around It like a die in u box. In The official mime of the ZR.-drcle will be Fleet naval aviatk-,AJ.nship No. 1. and her function will be that of long distunce scouting in connection writh fleet maneuver. She wajj buit at the naval aircraft factory in Philadelphia, the parts boing shipped to the station ot Iakchurst, whre they were assembled. This country was to have had three ships of this tyie, the others being which is now being comthe be pleted in (Jermany and Is to turned over to I'ncle Sam In settling . war claims, and the which was purchased from the British and which, on her first trial flight, met with the. tragedy that shocked the- - world. The last named was the largest of the trio, with a gas capacity of 2.700.MOO cubic-feethe tlerman-buil- t while the one ship is somewhat larger than now being tried out at I .akehorst. 2. 400,000 having a gas capacity of Or. cubic-feet- A NEW DISEASE. cause Mqre than eight and a half million women are gainfully employed in the I'nited States, which is equivalent tn saying that of every four Houf to.Ketp Well by railing up society persons who might be in lino for such service and explaining the advantages to be obtained at that hotel beyond all others. Stringing seed pearls seems not much in the way ot an occupation, but it is not an easy thing to do. Ono woman makes her livelihood that way in New York and is em ployed by the best Fifth nvenue jewelers whenever an especially fine necklace- - of one Of "their customors needs restringing. ...TJtc ejaaj0o( the. miareuns is up, and tout-I'through t "rfcuBrarsWe "by the interior, or that three baseball coming, arid thjo drones had better look out for their jobs and them games could he played within it at one time without one's eniTotu-hin" selves. upon another In the slightest, wo to' reaJIse what "mammoth"to when the word is applied means GERMAN, WEALTH. t Lakehtn-Fstructure. the coming-ou- The elusive germ WOMEN WORKERS. New Naval Air 130 South State Was. 2103 en-a- j, 6. Where was the first custom house in America? A. It was at , ,m "W-- - A. E. C. Yorktown, Virginia. O any Coolldgs Haa President brothers and slaters? H. H. N. child. A. He Is an only How did the National Orange originate? U. E. C A. In 1st the government sent O. H. Kelly, on the staff of the departto investigate ment of agriculture, and report on agricultural conditions means or to in the south and suggest Mr. Kelly found Imnravlna- - them. Q. conditions deplorable and the ma- ioritv of farmers poor, backward ami Believing that organ disintegrated. isation was tne best means oi securhelnful legislation, he and six ity others formed. In 167, the organization. National Grange of Patrons of eouia o Husbandry, only xarraers long, but from the first women were admitted both to membership and office. There are four degrees In each local grange, one in eacn state and two In the national divtalona. For the first four years uie progress was now, toout in iai. spread, and by organization began were affiliated. In 187, 10,000 granges 17S the membership was 1,500.000. It tn securing much waa instrumental beneficial Among ads legislation. for which it takes credit are tne founding of the department of agriculture as a cabinet offioe, and the interstate commerce commission. Q. What part of the population of the united states is east oi tne sxuc A. H. T. elselpplj A. The bureau of census says that 7C.33S.0O0 people lived east of the Mississippi river In lived west of It. lwhlle Q. Can a friendly alien who claimed exemption from the draft on that ground become aa American citizen V-- J. C. J. w A. The naturalization bureau says that the courts of the United States 2. Let Your Boy's la a Ik -- .as-a-u- r vv aa uo Nature Intended 1: QUALITY SHOES FOR BOYS give greater satisfaction. A visit to oin; Boys' Department will be well repaid. We Fit His Feet ! ciSK-lli22 West flt 2nd So. Mail Order? |