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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, BUND AT MORNING, NOVEMBER Even th Editor: President Hayes and President FillOn tha ava of Thanksgiving day. tha more, and also th entire administration President Oloppoi who sucwrltar ha rclved mora than ona (2) ceededof President Polk. letter from foreign born reader askPresident Hotchkiss was known as th HI familiars Jocular President." In Information this tn ing regards In used to call him Joe Hotchkiss. feast, when and where It started and It fact was his sense of humor perverted 1 brief history of same store tha In- that made him "forget one year to Issue of same. I thought at first of th proclamation without which ception the Thanksgiving holiday was not le- replying by persona letter but. decided gal. Th housewives never forgot this g hat In these days of Ja and on him because had all ordered amongst the young fries, why their turkey andthey kept waiting and rua) be they s a great many of my waiting for the proclamation so they readers has not had tim to make would feel to stick the bird In themself familiar with the meaning of the oven, butfree of course th proclamaThanksgiving, so will answer the tion was not forthcoming and when a eiuery through your columns In the raw has been around the house turkey lelief that enough subscribers is in- a certain length of time, well. I reThe red team scored a touchdown terested to make it worth while. once while 1 was an employ on a member forward pass which touched The first Thanksgiving dsy on rec- of the Chicago Tribune and Mr Fieldord was held In the New England H Voet sent me a turkey for the ground 4 times before It was ing states in 1621 after the then Pilgrims Xmas and it came to the. office in a picked up. had gathered In their trot harvest, It big package that did not say turkey it said to og been the ldear of A1 on it or nothing else sad I happened dent Gloppoa campaign slogan, "No then governor of Vermont. I be on my vacation so the boys In tangling foreign alliances and Thura-dav- s ynlth, VlU copy down a report of the cele- to on office the out " the of package top put bration as it appeared In the Stock-brid- the radiator and In after years the The turkey first became th official (Mass) Gasette of which Ed- bear mention of the Michigan football Thanksgiving piece of resistance unward Crownlnahlald was editor. seemed to upset them. der Preeident J. H. Taylor, but in his " Gratitude Dsy was celebrated In team As for President Gloppo It Is well day the bird was melted Into soup Stockbridge and In general all over there were no Thursdays and drunk through a straw. A ThanksNew England yesterday. It bad been known that his tenure of office. He song. Turkey and the Straw, declared a holiday and the public was during Thursdays. People still living giving was composed Irving Berlin and to spend it In merrymaking and In Great Neck who remember Presi- - the singing of by It was a part of th also In returning thanks to the lord for the luxuriant crop recently harvested Here In Stockbridge the majority of cltisens and a big crowd of saps from out of town visited the Ice Glen In the morning to work up an appetite - f or noonday dinner- - which served at the golf club and y of sardines, suckers from New Yopk and 22 kinds of pie. REFEREE WAS COCKEYED. In the afternoon a football game Corplayed neli m which the far western boys wrr victorious by a score of T to 6 ".he Big Red Team scored their touch-Swon a forward pass which, according to Amherst players, touched th ground 4 times before it was picked up by Right Guard Juke, who was Ineligible besides, but Referee Miles Standlsh allowed the score. It was said afterward that he was cockI told him.' eyed on Bronx cocktails. A! id old Mrs. Standlsh last light, to lay oft that raw stuff, but h thinks anything that has got a Plymouth label is real prewar gin. LIv and let learn. "The climax of the celebration cam after supper when th entire community and guesta attended a dance at new Elks temple Toung Standlsh Full had a bun and became obnoxious w hen he observed Mtso Priscilla Mayflower, to whom he had been reported engaged, doing th Charleston- .- Mtse resented his lnterferenc Mayflower and her part was taken by young Jobn Alden, or Junior Alden junior was well boiled himself pretty ) " Where do you crash Inf demand I ed Miles. She ain't your hotay-totsIs she? To which Junior replied by standing on a tab), pointing to the heroin of the occasion and singing a weird song which began something like this: Yes, sir, that's my baby! V No, sir. don't mean maybe'. Tee, sir, thats my baby now! "Standlsh was finally taken home In quart bottles and the evening wound up in a round of pleasurable kissing games MAN HATED THURSDAYS. Thus ths first Gratitude Dsy, or Thanksgiving Day, as it has Since that time been called the celebration has been held all ever th United States every November except during one year of- th adminisMisr Priscilla Mayflower rettented his interference while she was tration of Presldsnt Hotchkiss, who . , . . was la th Whit House between! doing the Charleston. gus-zlm- con-c.st- all-da- nd -- ' , 040 040 040 One-Ey- By BJNO IsURDNEB. betwecw--mfreret-a- FORMAL DIPLOMATIC DRESS GOING OUT of tha Ring Delves' Into History for Thanksgiving Day Information a celebratloa all thrsugk (be first half last century. It was n Thanksgiving night th first year Taylor was president that e Connolly was strolling around (HO tha White House grounds and ehaaoed to snoountar th executive, who announced that h was taking the air on aooount of something be bad eat which had disagreed with blm. (HO "What did you have?" asked Connolly. I. had a Taylor. This eras afterwards used as a title by Ibsen. 9 22, 1925. (HO 040 040 (HO OX 04C UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE DUE IN FRANCE by thw Bel cate, Inc.) lilt, (Copyright, Eradi- California Cotidor Soon to Be Extinct 1. Nov. WINNIPEG. (Chicago Tribuna Pree Cervloa.) Th largest flying bird la th world, a native of California, la said to be passing Into extinction so rapidly that bow not mors than fifty of tha bugs vultures remain on th Pacllo eoast. - This bird, th California condor, averages' an large an and in many cases exceeds In slaw th famed condor of the Andes. Before I960, ae oordlng to ornithologists who hv studied th condor of tbs Pacific coast, tbs interesting wtngad Inhabitant of tho new world will have gon to join th dado, tha great auk, th Labrador duck and other birds which exist no more except In th form of mounted skins tn museums Thee great birds lay their on egg every two years, keeping each young bird with th parents for that length of time. Obtaining Us feed entirely by scavenging, a benefactor Instead of a destroyer, th California condor fell victim, first to th whit hunters and later, from 1141 to 1171, to th miners, who used th large wlngqulllsa receptacle for gold dust. Later thousenda of th birds were killed by poison put Into rite carcasses of cattle to kill mountain Hon, bears coyotes and othtr predatory animals Look at th "Business Opportunicolumn of Th Tribune Want ties Ad and see how many good proposition are brine errenerd there Anile PART. Nov. IL (By th Associated league's governing body they would Press ) foreign office trousers and be garbed In "plu fours Other accessories of formal morning or afternoon dress for diplomat ar fast In International going out of atyl gatherings In European capital. la th trouaera Torelgn offlc nam given those striped garments of black or grey which normally accompany a cutaway or frock coat, whit or gray spat, an lmpeccabl waist coat of grey, black or white, and. Of oourse, glove and a top hat- - A tn tha buttonhcla and a monocle In th eye add greatly to th effect of th ensemble. But at th last assslon of the leagu of nations council held In Paris not cn ef th representatives of th tan pew rs having seat on that august body wore correct diplomatic garb not even Austen Chamberlain, emissary of that sartorically fastidious land. England. AU be bad of th uaual gat-u- p was a monocle, and h discarded that for ordinary horn.rlmmed spectacles whenever h had to read. Foreign Minister Brland of Franc was usual nonchalant and democratic In hi attire. Even to polished a statesman as Viscount Ishll ef Japan was in a sack suit, whtl ths two South American representatives, Saner Franco of Brasil and Senor Quant ef Uruguay, usually meet - punetatleaa, ware similarly garbed. The only concession in the formalities that the made was to assembled statesmen wear stiff collars and those of rather ancient vintage. Conscientious newspaper reporters who donned their best formal toga in honor of th council swore next time they "covered the sessions of the gar-dsn- la "The time for universal suffrage In Franc Is approaching ' This announcement by Henri Roger, dean of th 8orbonn of medicine faculty brought wild rheera from th deleof French to the th convention gate Leagu of Woman's Rights. That French women are slowly awakening to a sense of political responsibility wss the tenor of th whole series of meetings held here this week and It was smphaslsed by the secretary' report of the jears work throughout the country. 8uffragtsta from all parts of th world havs bsen Invited to attend an International suffrage conference in Paris next May. Among th American leaders expected to attend are Mr. Carrie Chapman Catt. Charlotte Glllman and Martin Crampton. There may be some hidden unpleasIn the French breast ovsr th outcome of the Washington dsbt negotiation but if there Is It doesn't show In the cabarets, where topical songs on that rather ticklish situation ar sung Vach In th Enrage. or "Maddened Cow. the aklt on Uncle Earn le always well received. After a chanted version of M Calllaux'e claims, the chantonnler cheerily Invites our tall com on over lanky national figure to one to France end have not drink, but several. Fill up your lamp here, Sam the song wind up, and then you'll for; get about such a little thing au-as t6 which the Montmartre money, dience, accustomed to seeing eome of Uncle Sam e nephews doing something like that every night, heartily agrees with roars of applause. Tha same holds trua of The Two ant feelings ACIDS If STOMACH Ask League of Nations to Protect Poor Whale Create Oat, Sourness and Pals Hew u Treat. Medical authorities state that nearly h of tha case of stomach trouble. Indigestion, sourness, burning, gas, bloating, nausea, eta., ar du ts an txcees of hydrochloric acid in tha stomach and not, a some believe, to a lack of digestive juioee. Tha delicate stomach lining la irritated, digest! oa delayed and food sours, causing tha disagreeable symptoms which every stomach sufferer knows so well. Artificial dlgeatant are not needed In auoh cases and may do real harm. Try laying aside all digestive aid and Instead get from any druggist a few ounces of Bleursted Magnesia and taka a teaspoonful in a quarter glass of water right after sating. This sweetens tha stomach, prevents th formation of excess geld and there no sourness, gas or pain. Blaurated Magnesia (m powder or tablet form never liquid or milk) hermlos to th stomach. Inexpensive to taka and Is th moat efficient form of for stomach purposes It is magnesia used by thousands of people who enjoy their meals with no more fear of Indigestion. (Advertisement.) Us," hat had a long run Th burden of It le that France bet exported more than enough of her national treasure to America to balance the ecore. Why, we even eent you Cecils Sore! and Clemenceau, th songster exclaims, adding, however, still, It's true you dldn t exactly ask for that pair At "Ten oClock Theater, th newest Parisian entertainment venture, and at th old "Xoctambules, dean of th Latin quarter tong center, the reception given to jibe at America la th same. Americana In the audience are not molested and when they understand the songs they usually have the act to join In the general laughThe Cave of tha Red Oubliette," ter a reopened cabaret of the left bank, dodges the debt subject by prescribing that all songs rendered there must be at least one hundred years old. Broadway came to the boulevards recently when th Parisians took up the quirk lunch" plan A algn on a restaurant jurt around th corner from the Boulevard Montmartra reada: 'Patrons a ho lunch here between 11 o'clock and noon all! be given a reduction of 25 centimes Think of others and hurry up " Chamberlain Getting Careless 040 a sprlghtly little oabaret Donkeys, on the outer' boulevards, where th Mr. song, Coolldge, Have Pity On By FRANK E. MASON. Universal Service Staff Correspondent. Whale lovers want PARIS. Nov. 21 th league of nations to protect the poor fish An International Audubon society is demanded to encouraga kindness to whales The leagu In-of nations will he asked to foster an ternational treaty to further limit the open season for whals fishing la now from September 15 to May SI. When Casanova aaa defying th whalebone Industry a century and one-ha- lf agoL 33.000 whales were killed yearly for the corael makers During tha tyrld war less than II 000 whales w ere 'foundsierra! klU. Laat seasqrrthe-rtumbfH to soon will he as extinct hale a The aa the lchttivcrnunts If the slaughter Modern power launches conttnura equipped with harpoon guns, have taken the place of the old sail boats - for-M- rs cr nine-tent- 1 1 Harpoons now have high explosive detonators at th and. Japan la expected to take a leading part In th whale protective league. Of court, the Eskimos eat whale blubber for their light midnight meals but th Eskimo are not represented In the league. Th Japanese ar th g race with a you at only whale-eatin- Geneva. PARTY OIVIN FOR VlfilTOR. te The Tribune. BEAVER. Nov. 41 Complimentary to her guest, Mr William Waxthon of Rtwrstdo, Cat, Mrs. Cara XL Carle-- , ton entertained fourteen of the ladles of th Rebekah lodge Tuesday night at a card party, followed by a radio concert. Mrs. 5V art hon la a member of Ramon, Rebekah lodge, on at the largest In California. Special Be Your Own Demonstrate) r -- y, Youve had many demonstrations made for you" ,ncv - make one for yourself. Come in and take out a Hupmobile Eight. Keep it an hour or a day. Put it through everything and especially the- - things youve been afraid to try with subse-yAuent- ly other - cars. Speed it up fast as you care to go and hold it- there long as you want. Then do it again and note how comfortably you ride; how easily the car sticks tothe road. - 1L Slow down to a snails pace behind the old, clothes mans wagon, and then shoot around in a flash and see how easily it handles. - NOW- Do everything twice. The first time just to prove to yourself that the Hupmobile can do them and the second time to note how easily it does them and how. free and relaxed you feel. . ' whats know After this kind of a test, you will really what in fine automobiles today. SEDAN 2195 r Bias itmgt,flm itm a baits, itMtn turn, nmflttt COlipe -- Oldsmobile sets a new (Two or Fcar-Psa- a.) - tfuipmtent. 1795 Roadster cokfar) 1895 , 0. S. Dttiit, Tatr ts t It is N that every woman who drives the ' Hupmobile Eight finds it the sweetest driving car of all she has ever known , and immediately says so. 2095 Touring Car - impressive aiM Record on Pikes Beak g Six! For ' Youll want a duplicate of this of within a week after one these latest Oldsmobile Sixes had left the factory it scaled Pikes Peak in the fastest time ever made by a stock car 28 minutes, 49 seconds! And the same car had just completed the run over Lookout Mountain at the speed of 44-9miles per hour! (Officially timed by Rocky Mountain News and Denver Post). . . A car like this will serve the average man for just about as long as he cares to drive it. Drive one and youll want it! record-breakin- - 57-mi- le record-breakin- g A Touring SEDAN 875 Coach 950 $1025 Pricat f. a. i. Lanttnf. flat tax A. E. TOUESSEN Salt Lake and Boise. 443 Main St, S< Lake. 1017 Bannock - St, ' Boise, TdeV O L D &MOB I LE I. a i Hyland Motor Company Morriisj B7 ! Couth BUU Street. . "It SerricB Tht Count.' i Phone Weifitch 1450. C. |