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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH lJSlNESlIMRECTQ 555 CLOCKS Uttlo rlo ks big clocks, fancy clock, alarms. We sell Uu dejieiMlable ones, Our reasonable prices ease the way, BOYD PARK JEWELERS yk. Unde Sams Sword Hand Made Stronger BOYD PARK. BLDG well organized war staff, which can function for war at a moments notice without crippling any branch of this general staff at home. The plan has been worked out by the two generals who were the best fitted to do it, and In their plan they have embodied the best features of war staff organization as developed In ' r. ' ' the World war." ' ' Gefieral Pershing, as chief of staff of the armies, is the head of the war plans division-- , created in the general stuffy which will' counsel from time to time 'with the war council, consisting of the secretary of war, the assistant secretary of war, and the chief of staff. y The order reorganizes the general staff into the five following divisions, each under immediate control of an assistant chief of staff. Personnel division (first division). Military intelligence division (second division). Operations. and training division (third division). . Supply division (fourth division). War plans division. The war plans division is. to be so organized as to enable it, in the event of mobilization, 'to fnrolsh the nucleus of the general staff personnel for each' of. the general staff divisions required at the general headquarters In the 106 MAIN STRUT ENGRAVED WEDDING STATIONERY Announcements Invitations -- Calling t!ard Your printer is our leprescntitive and Iim complete samples ami prices Engraving Co. Jennings-Gottscha-U ' The . WASHINGTON. war plans division in the general staff of the army and cit'ii cion of o war council have been 1)011011006(1 by Secretary of War Weeks,- - through publication of an order . by Gen. John J. Pershing, the chief of staff, directing reorganisation , of the general staff. General Pershings order is the consummation of a plan originated by Secretary Weeks whereby there would be organized within the general staff a special war staff ready for the call to war at a moments notice, with its organization perfected to the point of functioning as it' should in tire of war- - i 'i. j e plan worked out by , General I'ersblng and General Through-th- s Har-bord- the assistant chief of staff,.said Secretary . Weeks, we will have a flsld. X "Views When You Think FORD Think MSHpAujoCo S&M ROWLAND PAD riDT C NIK UlllLiU Davidson-Lak- e of Sawyer on Rehabilitation r- f2rQZif 1 , in Chicago by Judge Landis for vio- for liberty, Charlesr YEARNING' poet and a follower lation fit fhe espionage Set the selec-Rv- e service act,"and a number of other statutes, as a member of the I. W. W. He was also fined $10,000. ; Ashleigh is thirty-thre- e years old. He was born in London and has worked in South America on newspapers. His longing for the beauties of nature finds expression in poetry. One of his poems, entitled When I Go Out,"' contains thebe lines : : O W to v .. me tender, leaves that wait out- ' side of the road by. inclination, lany This sullen and keep Inviolate guishes today a prisoner in Leaven- Until I come wall, b to you with lips worth, buoyed only by the hope of From out this dull tenement of hate; President-.from Harding. pardon of the fresh breathing of the earth Through the intercession of Vaciiel Out To draw ailayment of my rasping fear, Harriet Monroe, Hudson Lindsay, Hy woundlngs and my frettlngs, till my Maxim, Charles Rann Kennedy, Judge mind Anderson of Boston, Mary Heaton that draw like Is soothed by winds nurses near, Vorse and others who believe In his innocence, Ashleigh hopes that Attor. O roads of all When I go out. , ney General Daugherty will recomthe world! fields O and cities, do not fall I mend his pardon to the President He beauty, went to the federal penitentiary on Walt, strong friends, my coming 1st my heart April 25, 1921, to serve a sentence of Once more drink glory on, a careless on him ten years' Imprisonment passed trail. love-dum- - Disarmament Demonstration by Women for a world-wid- e for disarmament participated in the . women of ail nations, to be held on Armistice day when the international conference convenes In Washington has been initiated by organized .American workWoming women through ens Trade Union league. Telegrams Inviting participation of a score of women's organizations of the United States and the organized 'women In 48 nations which, sent delegates to the ' Second ' International Congress of Working- Women jn Geneva have been sent out on behalf of the National Womens Trade Union league by Mrs. Raymond Robins- of Chicago, its national president. "To strengthen the governments in their desire to disarm by giving unequivocal expression of the women of the world, is the purpose of the demonstration. The American demonstration will focus in Washington, where it may take the form of a parade, and it will doubtless be carried eat Ideally all over the country also. The text of the message of the National Women' Trade Union league te the women of 49 nations, signed by Mrs. Robins, contains the following: "Prastdent Harding has set Aral- - Movement - QuS-Ai-trri-e M. By JOHN Poet in Jail Yearns to Be Free W. W. wEvwrr WORLDWIDE dimkbmect sties day for- - the opening of the momentous disarmament-- ' conference at Washington. When we remember the Joy that went np from the people of all nations in thanksgiving that peace would once more dwell on earth, no other day would lend the same significance throughout the entire world as this' anniversary of November 11, ' 1918. DICKINSON f ERE are two names that are sure of immortality; Catherine Dorothy Draper and John William Draper. For there will always be encyclopedias in which is the record of human progress and Individual achievement. And these encyclopedias will contain articles on photography. And no on photography is complete without mention of these two names. For the first photograph of the human face was that of the fair features Of Miss Draper. And the man Who made the photograph was her 7 brother. Professor Draper.' Moreover, whenever photographers meet to discuss their art, the story of the first photographic portrait is apt to be retold. At the recent convention of the American Chemical society at Rochester, N. Y., Prof. Francis Owen Rice of New York university retold the story and exhibited the copy 'of the photograph reproduced herewith. Interesting In this-- - connection are (he other photographs reproduced. .Each gives a glimpse of the progress sthat has been made In the 82 years since the Drapers achieved Immortality. . The photograph of Theodore Roo&velt, assistant secretary of the 'navy, which shows him In the act of speaking, is the familiar snap-shwhich the veriest amateur of the present day can take.' The baseball scene the dirt thrown up is a hy the man sliding in is suspended in the air, so fast did the shutter work. The birds-ey- e of the White House was taken from an airplane, yet the picture is as clear as if the camera had been on a tripod 'on top of the Washington monument.: Louis Jaques Maude Daguerre born In Normandy, is the pioneer of the- process of photography; his name is immortalized In the word flaguerreotypy. He worked for many years to fix the pictures seen In the camera obscura. Photography, as everyone knows, is the art of preparing permanent representations of objects by means' of the light they emit or transmit. YWedgewood and Davy are credited with the first step. They obtained prints of ferns and lace by placing them on paper or leather treated with silver nitrate and exposing them to the light Daguerre made the first photograph produced in a camera. It was a delicate positive; the image was very friable and no copies could be made. Soon Still it waa 'a photograph. Daguerre reached the point where he made announcement that he could take p photograph of an inanimate object, hie camera requiring an exposure of approximately half an hour. . At the time This was in 1839. Daguerre announced his discovery Prof.- Samuel, Finley Breese Morse (1791-187was In Europe. Yes; this to the Morse who invented the telegraph, but he waa more than an ln- ar-tlc- ; . speed-pictur- e; (1789-1851- ), - - V NIGHT BLINDNESS. What to known as night-blindne- ss ts the finest coffee made. Once triedalway used i AT REDUCED FREIGHT RATES A- - ' Keyaer Fireproof Storage Sail Lake City Utah. SHERMAN. to to Since that day the aftermath of a rare condition in which a person- are finds that objectswardsevanlog with its hunger suffering and the war, becoming less and less distinct, and at misery, has appalled the conscience last ha la totally blind. This may ocand paralyzed the spirit of mankind. warning and This Is the great hour for woman of cur without previous b'vlt the next' morncauae alarm; great the world to help lead humhnlty out ef ing the vtcttm of the condition finds the darkness that overwhelmed tt. .. to his delight that his sight Is restored. "The governments will be strengthThis is repeated every night but at ened in their desire to disarm if the the eyes become so weak during last women of the nations will give untha day also, that tha victim may be he their wSV equivocal expression El r. Let us save you money. Write for our freight rates and how to pack you goods for shipment. 7 - u, Tea & Coffee OF FURNITURE :-- self-relian- SepU,mber Mfg, Roasters. Packers and Importers, SHIPPERS TPE tne practical lines of business, such as banking, accounting, etc. There should be an industrial- - branch of the educational system. There should be an agricultural course. Out of these four courses could certainly be- - applied, separately or jointly, information which would without question make every individual t, palftlcipating mpre capable, more with greater earning power. Some have an idea that there is suck a difference between the various classes of patients that- effch must have a separate institution in which to be treated. With' that view 1 am not in accord.. I know' after a third of a century contact with all classes that it is perfectly possible for all classes "Of cases to be treated In the same institution. It is unjust to stamp any as defectives." school T ie mountain Country. 41st yea 1 CAPITOL COFFEE Co, ' SCHOOL HALL men tar y and High School Classes. Courses In Dot mestic Science. Music and Ait Apply to Prin4 cipal. Salt Luke City, Utah. . . I SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH L. question of hospitalization the World war veterdnls one embracing many important features which have heretofore been unnecessary in the construction of proper hospitals for the care of civilian sick, according to Brig. Gen.' Charles E. Sawyer, the Presidents physician ' '. and military aid. j . There is nothing too good for the World .war veteran who is trying to himregain his health and self in civilian activities, he says. A vocational training program which is carried out on the basis of entertainment and hospital occupation, is unfair, both to the World war veteran and to those who have the responsibility of operating such an in-- ; ' stitution. v. .Sensible engagement- - such as will improve both mind and body should be the policy of the rehabilitation forces. To make such a plan workable It is quite, important that every institution giving hospital care to the should have, a and perfectly arranged special apartment in which vocational training can be car- -' ried on. With an academic course as the underlying principle, it will then if quite easy to carry out a commercial course which would lead into all DMALgfiS UTAHt OLMST Co CLEANERS A DYERS. Service. Quality. Clothes Insured. Work guaranteed. We pay return on Price list requests postage. Myers Cleaners ft Dvers, 111 E. Broadway. JLCZTCST ZRTCT&2Z& V7T ,T ventor, He was born In Charlestown, Jlass., and was graduated from Yale in. 1810. He studied painting under Washington Allston and Benjamin West. He became one of the best (A our early portrait painters and a credit to his masters. He was the first president of the National Academy of The University of the City Design. of New York made him professor of the' history" of art In 1835. It was while returning from Europe In 1832 that he conceived the Idea of the telegraph, but It was not until 1844 that ids efforts were successful and he was able to send over the wire the message, What hath God wrought? John William Draper (1811-188was born near Liverpool, England, and came to America in 1831. He graduated In medicine In 1836 from the University of Pennsylvania. He took the chair of chemistry and natural history in the University of New York in 1839. In 1841 he became professor of chemistry in the medical department of the university. So, you see, in 1839, when Daguerre made his announcement of the first photograph, Morse and Draper were colleagues in New York university. Morse was interested in photography through his portrait painting and in chemistry through his telegraph on which he was working. Draper was interested in photography through his chemical investigations. What more natural, then, that Morse should hasten to write Draper, of Daguerres success In taking a photograph in a camera? Moreover, Morse gave , a full account of Daguerres process.. He and Daguerre were friends,, the Frenchman having traveled in America, exhibiting "dissolving views." . Draper Studied Morses account He quickly saw changes that could be made in the process to shorten the exposure of minutes to seconds. These, If successful, would enable him to make a photograph of a living subject. So Draper Immediately constructed a camera made out of a cigar box and two spectacle lenses. Preliminary experiments gave promise of success. Then he asked Ms sister to sit for him. She dressed up for the occasion in the costume fashionable among New York belles of the day and climbed with her brother to the roof of the university building where the sun was shining in full summer glare. Draper first covered his sisters face with a thick , coating of white. Then he put her down in a chair and clamped her head In an iron brace to prevent her moving. Doubtless there are galleries" even yet in remote country districts where the clamp is considered a necessary part of the ap- come partially or totally blind. This strange affliction may be epidemic. It has attacked bodies of troops exposed to greet fatigue and the glare of the sun's rays. It to seldom met with in temperate climates, except among sailors Just returned fTom toqplcal regions. It Is frequent among the natives of some parts of India, who attribute it as our own sailors do, to sleeping exposed to the moonbeams. The most probable cause of the affection Is, however, exhaustion of the power of the or from retina from MONUMENTS. Write for catalog. Standard Marble ft Granite Co.. 117 W. Broadway. am. ..VA For a real good place to eat, follow the crowds te of a first-clas-s ga'llerjfij 8HAYS CAFETERIA Professor Draper made an exposure Post Office. Down the marble stairs of only thirty seconds. Then he closedl Opposite RUBBER & STAMPS STENCILS. Seals and dark the camera and hurried to the ear tags also made. Send for samples, price room to develop the plate. As a mattei etc. Salt Lake Stamp Co., 65 W. Broadway. of fact, all he really hoped to get CREAM BritTGHT.. Send us your cream. was proof that an Instantaneous ex- Western Creamery Co.,. 244 W. Fourth South. ' posure was feasible. ztx. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS But. It was an excellent likeness every description on very vasy terms. In fact It was so excellent that most of Write Salt Lahe. of the people to whom It was shown POULTRY BOUGHT. For best results ship were entirely skeptical and did not eggs and game to Fulton Mkt- - Correct hesitate to accuse the photographer poultry, Write for prices. weight. Prompt returns. of using the pencil of the artist to supOLDSMOBILE Cars ft trucks. DISTRIBUTORS. ply the deficiencies of the camera. Used ctu bargains A. E. 447 S. Main. However, Professor Draper obligingly trouble! Piston motor rurc times your repeated the experiment many Gill 'till PistonRings King Co.. lAKast Fourth Soutl with unvarying success. Moreover ha wrote several articles for the maga- ELASTIC STOCKING MFRS. zines of the day, giving full details, Manufacturers abdominal. Matertiity supporter Truss fitters S. H. Bowmar Co.. Brooks Arcad Finally the doubters were convinced, Not only were the doubters conWELDING. AUTO RADIATORS ft Machinery vinced but they demanded photography built and repaired. Best and cheapest. Potter Welding ft Repairing Co.. 651 South State. of themselves and their wives an Soon there way L. D. 8. BUSINESS COLLEGE. their sweethearts. such a demand for daguerreotypes School of Efficiency. All commercial branches. free. 60 N. Main St.. Salt Lake City. that Draper and Morse opened a pho- Catalog KID FITTING CORSET PARLORS. tograph gallery. This was certalnlyl Specialists in designing, making, fitting corsets, the first In America and probably thq xiemstitching, embroidering, braiding, accordion and side made. 40 E. Bdwy. Buttons In world. pleating. the first With Professor Morse in Europe in VULCANIZING ft RETREADING. Quality and ). service. Standard Tiro Works. 861 So. 8tat 1839 was Matthew B. Brady He was a precocious boy of 6KE YOUR LOCAL PUBLISHER fifteen, an employee of A. T. Stewart, For loose leaf binders, special blanks, records New Yorks merchant prince. When ol all kinds. H gives Quality Senric Professor Draper produced his instan- MOLER, BARBER COLLEGE. Qualify at bartaneous photograph Brady saw his ber ia few .weeks 4$ S. West Temple Street opportunity. He quickly established a He.nagrs Butincta College With n national portion mItiiMHinlviHl, Write for cpibiwa 24 gallery on Broadway. He was sucSoulh, Sub Lake City. cessful from the start. In 1851 he took a prize at the London worlds fair. When the Civil war broke out he was "Brady, the Photographer.1 fame and galleries In with world-wid- e New York and Washington. When the Civil war broke out Brady started out with a horse and buggy and a camera to photograph it He was In the thick of the first battle of Bull Run. That night he blundered into the New York fire department zouaves. He was on foot, but he stllli had his negatives. The zouaves guv him a sword, which be strapped on outside of Ills linen duster and sdi made his way to Washington. In making his wonderful collection of Civil war pictures, he spent the fortune hei had made as a photographer. In WaslM paratui Daynes-Beeb- . (1824-1896- lngton, owned by Levin Corbin HandjA a nephew, is a collection of 10,00(1 Brady negatives. Nearly every onq is the portrait of a celebrity. Edward VII is there.. Bo are Andrew JackBOB and Edgar Allen Poe and 8am Houston and Santa Anna and J. J. Audubon. The Index reads llke a catalogue of tha world's greatest of the Nineteenth cen- tury. Brady, the world's most famous photographer, died in the Presbyterian hospital, New York, a poor excessive light, so' that this organ to rendered Incapable of appreciating tha wanker stimulating' action of twilight F moonlight. And This la Glory! Little Willie, sitting opposite to an old pensioner, whose breast bore many medals, gazed at him and the medals long and earnestly, and at length said to his mother; "Mother, why does that man wear his money on his coatl Won't they let Mm have pockets?" London Mirror. |