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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOCAN. UTAH Cornell's New Law School Dedicated 444 Modern Contract Drldje r tK Httrtly I? .A i 4 N.i ' - Sfeuarc t'T'iIi; r i 'Jyv' K7. of h baBdaom nr Cornell fnl-otbuol, fcBa at Myron bill, bleb dedicated Mm ether day, Mr, doru.f ct Mm ll.VnuM struct ur (at right), presented Mm We) I (o It building to IrreJJrUt lJvlnx.tu Tylr TUr, ?t in Bidding for Slants I ht Atrtl v!w dchnltt-l- TW, ) slam bids whirl) do Dot better Mum o even rhsnre of J surer. But bet) Small slum hid 1 I n more ll.ua UU) ri ant loll It soun-fuvr, the tod lo try for an. all ala in. Mi coin blm-hand of partnership muni show at leart 7 honoMrUk with favorable distribution for tb lull bid. When ptrtaers hold 7 of the I w 4W- Vff - 1 y y.ffm . ;3- yk-'- w KLr - j . t t;:'( l' ii-V. 'AV I tr d ' '.z i, P honor-lrlrka- let .jv Gr-'- - - U ' .,'4 - b;tv7 Jvny f jf.uixdcLo Indian Chiefs at the Unknown jx: i, Soldier entombment ceremony - By EDITHA L WATSON -- On ND1ANSI Mm Warpath I parade what a Wlmt n gorgeous, savage, blood thrill-lupageant It would be, to e Un til trooping across the Happy Hunting Ground! First would come the ancient Stone-Agwarrior, clad In akin and armed with rude a terrible vanguard for hammers a terrible army. Then, the prehistoric trlliea which followed them, all on foot, glorloua to behold as tlielr painted bod lea rippled by. Here were the lords of the Ited Gods' creation, the children of Mother Kurth, who nevertheless sought battle with tlielr brothers, lighting for the sheer Joy of it. Then, surely, there must be a little space to mark the coming of tho white men and the atrnngo consequences of that coming. After that, agRln, we would see the tribes which still fought each other nnd those who fought with and against the newcomers, their belts hung with . scalps, their moceaslned feet eager on the g i e f !' N-s- , ' " ' - - V'- ' rv' - " - S V trail-maker- : 1 j -w- r-r. - V j October 8lh. 1918, he bravely combated a pa- trol under heavy tire. Muring the night h ma le a reconm.l-aunc- o clo.se to the enemy, of Some ln1rect gllim lferenee, ,re: the H)Xit:on " hlch Ida section waa to occupy , t) frc, gut blJg of tw0 In (be front, nnd returning, conducted it to that take-ou- t bids. Forcing lit A raise from one to three no Such hero!.,:u U understood by a t.i.ma com of a on hid trump or a take-ou- t rad, a more than can be explained writing, as with three no trump, dnnng time of stress, the one who does what A ralse froro onc t0 four ln ma. Sanmlers d.d, does It ilh no tl, ought of self. mlDori or 0Iie ,0 flve ln but only of carrying out to the bed of Ins abil- j J(r wh,I plavpr gIlould be alway, Now familiar names and faces pass by: Tope, In my ljert an(I readT t0 act ty what he bebeies Ins duty to be. upon ,U(,irect leader of the Iuoblo rebellion of 11N); King thwe contacts, during nnd since the World war. sIara Infl,rcnces lf warranted ' by hi. . ' J J In whose has It horrible death the mnreliea with X'tuuders, I can state that everytuing he Ihllip, , ,,e under8tan(j that 'i'sjo been almost forgotten; Sitting Bull, Black docs is a hit better ami mill more energy than s,rp constltu!e m no icnae an nn. JOSE.PH OKLAHOMB1 Hawk, and others of those superb lighting men o,...r met) of equal physique would do the samel y Ration" for slam. They ar all priand lances with by flying riding from the wlgwantg of the Chippewa, tl.e tipis thing. bids and do Dot regame marily whose an hatred cavalcade, "I luring the World war, Saunders served with ready, to consider a slam of the the of the the Sioux, quire partner pueblos Ilopi. show must on their still for their conquerors vab-at ('bateau Thierry uud was evacuated nnlesa the make-uof his own hand tribe sent Its best to serve the nation and what faces. from at St. lie sened there, Blanc Sllhiel; a service It was I such a probability. Mont (Cliampagne), where again he was evacu- suggests Those who befriended the white men could Two companies were organized. ated wounded, and In Use of the Yardstick in not ride with these grim old war eagles even Germany during the occuIn the Fourth cuvnlry. U. In the Happy Hunting Grounds there must he a There were 33 Sioux of the Second division Slam Bidding pation S. A., at one time. There were between 3.' and division of opinion which nothing, not even He received the li,tinguished Service cross clear-cu- t encount of honor-trick- s 50 With Indian the Four officers. brothers. Illackfeet, death, could beall But here come Cornplanter, listed shown by all original bids and as privates. Surely their medicine" v.ns for bis valorous conduct on Oitober 8th, 1918, Ited Jacket, and Ouray, making the friendship and the Croix de Guerre w.tti Palm for bis take-outstrong and their beurts brave, for they all reregulation and forcing, sign as they pass. vuloruus conduct on September 12, 1918. which the wonderful consistency of turned at the end of the war with commlsdont And here strides Negwngon, the Ottawa chief And this man Is a Cheyenne, of which tribe the forcing system makes available, But we want to hear stories nbout intli J whose espousal of the American cause In the Red Clouds and Chief Josephs of this Mooney, famous ethnologist, says, They are it Is not difficult to arrive at sound the uals, War of 1812 resulted In his being driven from Perhaps the ancient custom of re proud, contentious, and brae to desperation." slam bids. his home. He and his people retired to their generation. deeds In council has been dropped, Saunders Is a worthy son of lih beloved people. their In all situations where you are citing hunting grounds, and raised the American flag but we will recite some of them here : The Croix de Guerre, awarded for gallant ac- considering a slam, because great over the camp. Happening to be alone, The Chippewa evidently have not forgotten tion ln war, decorates a tine representation from honor strength between your partwag visited by British officers, who orIt la inevitable that the fashion how to fight, for Francis Lequier, a young Chip various tribes. Among them are Ordnance Sergt. ners hand and your own can be predered him to strike his flag. Though he was world will be hearing more and reM. a James who use at Gordon, of In two accounted or the with three Chippewa, others, for, company cisely forced to obey, the chief wound the emblem pewa. us the season when left ns ceived this honor for resetting y.hile under shell the yardstick will quickly tell yon more of velvet gloves around his arm, and drawing his tomahawk, tacked a machine gun nest, and were such a novThey progresses. fire waa of a the lieutenant French who of all that remained army, the most Important thing yon need we had said to the officers, Englishmen, Negwagon Is the only survivor, faced the wounded while on nn inspot tlon tour; Chester to know that Is, the extent of de- elty at their first showing the friend of the Americans. He has but one the machine gunners and killed or captured In However to grow into the Idea. Sioux, it ho was cited for fensive (honor-trick- ) Fourheur, wounds Armstrong received eleven He held entire group. strength flag and one heart: If you take the one, you they Improve on acquaintance and bravery in swift running as a messenger at against you. action. shall take the other. they grow Into your consciousness. D. ; John I.ellicourt Thomas forewas Harper, N. Ute; Odla number Choctaw, Leader, Sergt. Considering that the total Women would not be lacking In this spectac- man really add a fascinating touch They and he In when Saunders, Creek, Oklahoma Marty a ranch Cheyenne; Reaver, In of cattle of honor, or defensive tricks more formal costume. A velto the ular parade of fighters. Here Is BIcaganab, the entered the war. To his In E. who ruwas Nicholas killed Brown, Choctaw, great Indignation, deal Is 8 to you must realize vet afternoon suit, for Instance, Chippewa woman who defeated a band of Sioux mors gained currency that he was a German action. He was a corporal in the One Hundred can account for 7 to 74 with velvet that If gloves artfully tuned although her own people ran away and left her. spy, so he gave up his business at once, and and Forty second Infantry (composed largely of honor-trick- s you ln yonr partnership color scheme Is most attracHere Is Wlncma, the woman chief," who, at lie Oklahoma Indians), and was posthumously hands, you can assume that there Is to the Velvet enlisted to prove his loyalty to America. tive. the age of fifteen, rallied her people when they was cited for gloves add a superb brilthe medal. awarded of his In course the bravery no more than one defensive trick touch to the evening gown. With would have fled during an Intertribal war. nere, at Included action which The Crow tribe proudly speak of Joe liant record, Cantlgny, against you. her informal evening gown of saptoo, Is that unnamed Cherokee woman whose l who was given the Distinguished salient, and the Solssons, the Coupled with this assurance. 11 velvet milady here body, painted and decked like a warrior's, was He was twice wounded and Service medal as well as the Crolx de Guerre. you are bidding a suit, you must phire blue dull forest. velvet gloves found among her dead menfolk, where they had , selected French Bert Hay man, also received have the further assurance of Im- pictured is wearing The government gassed. and carrying a velvet poeketbook. alnly tried to defend themselves on the Trail model American as the are and soldier, Leader French Pueblos the the medal, among pregnable trump strength between Three sapphire clips surrounded by of Tears, as they were driven out of their Sergeant an oil a Ilopi, to whom of whom painting was made to hang on Indian Joe, ' your partnership hands with the add a decorative note. homeland. where federal awarded the Distinguished Service medal, added factor of other distribu- brilliants was the walls of the French building, Warriors, these And the mothers and fathers types of all the allied races are displayed. Some- and Gus Gertlez, a Pueblo bugler, who has the Without distributional values. of warriors rolx de Guerre. times the warpath leads to high places! tional values or strong sequence Some historians claim that the entire history Private Joseph Oklahombl, Choctaw, reFour tribes were represented in the ceremo- honors, slam bids are not more of America would be changed had the Indians Croix de Guerre, under order of Mar- nies at the burial of the Unknown Soldier In Ar- than 50 per cent successful and ceived the not participated In the Revolutionary war. There shal Petaln. A translation of the order follows: lington cemetery. (What lf this Unknown was therefore should not be essayed. Is not a war In the history of the United States Under a violent barrage, dashed to the attack an Indian? Perhaps he, too. follows the great (g), 1932. hr Leila Rattarsley.) In which these first Americans did not make (WNU Service) of the enemy position covering about 201 yards warpath lu the Happy Hunting Grounds!) themselves known. But It was not until the barbed-wirHe rushed Red and Soldier Whirlwind Pine Two Taken From GraveOwl, entanglements. through Ridge Look Lilt the End World war that they took their places as Amer- on machine gun nests, capturing 171 prisoners. Sioux, and Stranger Ilorse, from the Rosebud rushed ican citizens and fought for the land of tlielr Into her Mrs. Sapliead yard and Refitted. He stormed a strongly held position containing Reservation, Lone Wolf, a Kiowa, and Plenty birth and tlielr ancestry. Then, on strange warwithout house troubling neighbors more than 50 machine guns and a number of Coups, a Crow chief, assisted in the ceremonies. Oakland, Calif. Docks agleam paths, they fought their greatest fight, and sure- trench mortars. Turned the captured guns on homas D. Saunders, whose story was told to knock. she gasped, Im ln and sails ly the great warriors of other days leaped down the enemy, and held the position for four days above, was one of the My dear! newly patched, two from the Happy Hunting Grounds and strode an awful state. I dont know what square rigged ships of the Alaska In spite of a constant barrage of large projecJoseph Takes the Shield, Sioux, and Ray with them over the battle fields of France, nodburied Packers licet, for years Crossed No Man's Land Red Fox, Chippewa, are also at rest in Arling- to do next !" tiles and gas shells. asked here in the tmidllat graveyard of matter?' the Is ding grim approval to each other as their Whatever the Information times to get concerning ton. Ancient foes, these nations, hut their chilchildren showed themselves valiant members of many the pacific, are ready to sail once the neighbor. enemy, and to assist his wounded comrades. dren buried the hatchet that (Me.v might further the fighting race. Ive just had a terrible warning again through the Golden Gate and Is an extract from a letter written by the cause of their allied country, nnd now they Here follow the paths along which they Surely, too, these World Warriors knew that of approaching death." Sergt. Major Maurice Long: are honored together for their devotion. Their ; they were aided by Goodness me I What do you once blazed a glorious chapter In D. A, Thomas In Saunders, Company Corporal everlasting peace. nrpath ended their faith In ancient things Is as much a part American history. mean? There Is something strange nnd a little paof them as their fighting hearts. Perhaps a tiny Second engineers, while a member of the first 1 The 8tar of Alaska nnd the Star said Mrs. Saphead, Well, forward solmade his of the wire in American thetic Indian way platoon, thought cutting stone fetish, with an arrow-heatied to it, or bought one of those lifetime foun- of England are being refitted for a In was enline with he until unit of all In from the advance had so fur ever they diers, known, some other charm that was once the protection tain pens the other day, and now new life strange ones, no doubt and In company with Private Wilkerson, Com- during hard-hipdanger, and dnth (for over of a fighting chief, reposed In an ollve-draLondon at sea. The Star of Alaska has broken ! solwere first the the of Second rear 290 that engineers, bring up glorious parade its pocket as It once had lain over another stout pany B, been sold to a group of students with In Infested to then enter the Ilapoy Hunting Grounds), with that snipers, Jaulny, heart Perhaps, while the chaplain Invoked the diers Production from Asbestos Spruce Pine. N. C., who plan stoicism for which they are famous. white mans God, a silent appeal to Wakanda and swept with wicked machine gunfire, being a floating university to conduct states that The survey geological of the detachments or to Those Above mingled with his words. occupied by rearguard Today, as Old Glory Hunts .serenely In the some asbestos Is mined and some on a round-thworld cruise. They What if the warpath has given place to the enemy. They alone captured 63 German pris- sunlight over a deserted warpath. Negwagon's the asbes- plan to sail from San Francisco For is example, quarried. a caves oners of after the hospital searching us. to back ords come Seventeen thousand highway? The fighting heart, essential Ingreditos of Canada Is near the surface bay with the South seas Hnd Auswith persistence and courage. This at Jaulny. ent of a warrior, never dies. Indians have proved them true: while that of tralia as their first stops. Is quarried, and 1918.' on 12, France, September (Extracted Seventeen thousand Indians heard the call to The Indian is the friend of the American. Arizona Is ln a The Star of England's new ownpit formation and It the great battle In 1917; they enlisted as ma from General Orders No. 88, Second division.) He has but one flag and one heart: If you take Edward Elsen Grieve of Los Anto er, tunnels t drive is necessary 'Corporal Thomas D. Saunders, Company A, the one you shall take the other. fines, soldiers, sailors, physicians, nurses, lawgeles, will take the square rigger min It. , on Second at St. came a, clerk Western engineers; bj yen, clergymen, engineers; they Newspipcr Union.) war-path- rV" i j If tA'CS . lu.i , , - I :; s g p keen-vlsage- d s, Neg-wago- n 8, Sohen-derleo- e Salnt-Mlhie- Sotieea-SIodoc- y r d s, b f i I y v.:' n ci'w j W' i . r f Tit-Bit- Etlenne-a-Armes- v-- . .,! )l. I. Itnmuy lo Mie Chicago It the United Fiate government. authorizes a borrower, whether strugbig city bank, or state. gling building and bnn an'oclutlon, the treasury. to draw The trcaury mines the fund by selling to R.vrotor I' note or cer- Her-- Ktsuilnrr. Ibis Uer bank I (he BrcoO strm tloo Fiusm-- ciromtln, lib b Cot giei create. I to case 111 Cun i try through the dopre-odone un under tb unique, something tie government and firm mi I sun. Not a dollar of real money pasoe through It. So gold, no stnek of bills, no tellers windows, spear anywhere on the nine floor of sn office building which It hnt taken over and filled. Director Not Bsnktr. Two of the seven men directing Its operations ire not professional bankers. Severn! of Itie Oliver, tie. for their appointment s It. F. C. were only directors, psrt time" banker. They gave most of tlielr sttentlon to other lines of business Tet the corporation has s capital of It accept from the d. bentorc. or ft. K. t promises to pay. When the IL E. C. tificates. ultimately collects the buns it bat made. It will pay off these debenture. Meanwhile the It, F. C. bold s as security for Its hum the or other assets some of them frozi n" It has taken from Its borrowers Collateral. How Loans Are Mads. Scattered over the country It has 32 local agencies, each with s manaroluntcer advisory comger and mittee of bankers and business men. A force of examiners at IL F. G headquarter here check up th loan application and make It recA board of review, ommendation. above the examiner, doe llkewl. Then the application goo to tb for apseven director IL F. (V proval or rejection. Money for relief or for construcI obtained In some-whn-t tion proji-rt- , the name way. A relief director. who has a small field Investigating force, canvasses all applications thoroughly before they go to the directors for action. A new branch Is In proves of cre: blind to the farmation to lend er. Many farmers have a surplus much live stock and of grain, plen'y of debts, but no money and no credit. If compelled to pny tlielr debts at once, they must butcher tlielr live stock at ruinous prices. The plan Is to tide them over with feeder" loans. They will feed part of their grain to the llv stock, which will be sold only after It has been fattened. niort-gage- J.I.wsUhio.ono In Seven months It hns lonned about fL.mn.tsxMziO. This Is Just os was disbursed by twice as the War Finance corporation In It entire career. The It. F. (. hold power of life and death over many of the countrys banka, and In the recent ern of bank failure went to the rescue of more than 4,nKI of them with loans of umre than $800,000, . 000. It Is the overlord of a ILfriO.OOO.. 000 construction fund which. If ued. might make Jobs for 2.oo,ooo men. By lending funds to hold stored cotton off the market. It hns buttressed cotton prices so the farmer may get more for hla crop, and begin to buy clothing, furniture and farm machinery. All these things the corporation achieves with pieces of paper, but paper backed by the vast credit of i FIND GERMS MILLIONS OF YEARS OLD IN OIL s- Possess Power of Breaking Up Petroleum. Berkeley, Calif. Germs millions of years old have been found by Dean C. B. Llpman of the Unlver sity of California. Dean Llpman announced the dls covery of bacteria ln deep oil deposits formed millions of years ago. The strange microscopic germs have the power of decomposing petroleum Into other substances, such as organic acids, he says. The bacteria was described by Dean Llpman as living chemical laboratories, which not only have the power of decomposing oil but also are capable of turning Inorganic salts containing certain substances directly Into the nitrogen which Is essential to all forms of Ufa - time. Llpman pointed out that soli bacteria play an Important part ln the chemlcnl transformation of ammonia to nitrogen ln the form of nitrates. In this activity the bac- teria serve as adjuncts of plant life and are extremely necessary allies of the farmer. But none of these bacteria has been definitely shown to carry through the entire operation alone. The usual process Is for one type of bacteria to turn ammonia Into nitrites, and for another type to carry the process from nitrites to nitrates. This new bacterium, however, has the ability to complete the process alone and to do It much more quickly than the commonly known soil facterla. j Discovery Is Accident. Dean Llpman said he and Louis Greenberg, graduate student with 1 whom he worked on oil bacteria, An Ally of Farmer. made their discovery more or less some knowD for been has It ? by accident. Ir the course of attempts to cul- - ? ture orgnnlsms from petroleum on t cellulose ln order to determine J whether they might have the fac- ulty of destroying cellulose, this other characteristic was discovered i unexpectedly. to the South seas to get away from the ticker tape and forget the Good to Remember depression. The world deals A year ago one of the two old with people. Star clippers, the Star of Alaska. Us white canvas billowing, cleared the Golden Gate and took part In the Alaska salmon season. It returned to Its resting place here after a sue War Rages for Year; cessful trip. News Now Leaks Out Aged mariners recall the days ! London. In an Immense counwhen the entire fleet of 25 clippers try of 462,200 square miles a made the annual run. fierce civil war has been raging Then it was that skippers bet for the last year, and only now the customary $1,000 and the crew has the news reached the westIts last nickel on the outcome of the ern world. race to Puget sound. Two years ago The country Is the least known the Star of England and the Star of in the world Tibet, land of ImAlaska staged their last race. Last passable mountains and Inscrutyear the Star of Alaska sailed alone. able human mysteries. For the first time, steam vessels Recently news reached here of were used exclusively this year by but violent clashes desultory the pakers, the sailing ships defiwhich have taken place between nitely abandoned. the Lamas Buddhist leaders Of the original 25 In thei fleet, only of the Derge and Bara nine remain. The others have been sold. FAMOUS CLIPPER SHIPS WILL SAIL SEAS AGAIN e i r LENDS MILLIONS BUT HAS NO REAL MONEY j , y ranj'- , ouieland.ng they tbre of i surely account for at th total bccsl Thus they ar guarai.tcr-c against tnor than on being held bjr opponent. It I rarely advUable to bid for a grund slam. A grand lam which U j et by on trhk account not only for tb los of gam but for the Uarrlflc of well tmall dam Grand (tarn should b bid only wbea partner arc assured of t least 8 honor trliks with number of add! tlonal playing tritks nnd no poind R. F. C. Unique Supc rbank bl loser In trumpA Becaus of tb lack of dlttribuDeiigred to Aid Cuiiness. tlonal or ruffing values. vca a small tiara bid at no trump Is n Watblngioti. A g'nnt siqierbank precarious venture When that look and arts like none of the other bunks In the world. considering a slam. If possible a In a few tbort nionih It bus out cur your partner cooperation In arriving at a suit which will offer a Slrelrbed all of them In size and eafor road to your goal than the j power, j It Is doing a land office business hazardous no trump. Another wanting must be given jin Washington thee days, writes 'against a very common fault. Tout la agnlnst trying for slams on dlnjtrlbutlonal values alone. When as- VELVET GLOVES declared Isllng your partner' Hz (IIKHIK MIKOLAS (rump bid, even though you can 'count sufficient dlsirlbu tlonal tricks seemingly to cover a conduct of six jor even seven odd, unless jour honor count assures you that your 'oplionenta cannot hold a many a j2 honor t ricks (which may poealbly be two aces) the slam la too great a gamble. Slam may be often and aucces- fully bid by a player whoa ear la constantly attuned to catch every encouraging note In the bidding. occur Indirect elam Inference tho Donna, Hlddlns tlirot)Klout processes of the forcing system. 1 y good-nature- d |