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Show f7TZ TAGE FOUR Guard Cutter High Schools in 19 Stales Give Bib! Credits Study . Rv Asvwiatrt j Pib) PHILADELPHIA, May 21. The growth of Bible study iti the public schools in the United States is on a steady and considerable growth, it was revealed recently in a report by the Rev. Y. A. Squires of the Presbyter. ian Board of Christian Mr. Squires showed that ISf states now officially sanction the crediting in high schools of Bible study done either in conjunction with the school instruction or in churches. The actual increase in this phase of education, he declared, has been approximately 300 percent since 1917. Ten other states allow Bible Study credit but without state authority. The movement, Mr. Squires said, began in North Dakota and Colorado almost simultaneously. Of the states doing Bible study; in high schools eight years ago, Indiana has achieved the most notable success, Mr. Squires survey showed that 41 percent of the Indiana high schools give credit for Bible, $tudy dene outside the schools and an additional 12 percent credit the Bible in classes their curricula. Eighteen percent of the . total enrollment in the schools of that state has availed itself of the opportunity. A majority of tHe Indiana high school principals too according to Mr. Squires, indorsed the work and its results. in North Dakota a syllabus based on the Old and the New Testaments with state examinations has been followed. In Colorado the plan is similar except the International Graded Sunday School Lessons are employed as the texts. Credit for Bible study and attendance at Sunday Schools is given in the Arkansas high schools in those Casas in which the teachers have been adequately prepared and the course of study officially ap- - took hci in tpw', for they struck a gale and the Governor Parr was . again lost. s By August, 1921, the schooner had reached a positioni about 00. miles southwest, of Lisbon, Portugal, when, on the 11 th. Tampa she wasTeported on fire. But even this was not sufficient to end her wanderings and on the 13th the fire was out. Then she crossed the much traveled line of vessels going towards or from the straits of Giberalter but was cnlv seen twice, of on October if. ill carried bv the she hd been Canary Current to Between the, Canthe coast of AfIslandsand ary rica, having travelled about 4000 miles in a little over a year. At present, life ships locar tion is not known, but, Mr. McManus thinks that the Canary Current has carried her into the path of the trade winds so that she is probably moving west and may eventually return to her This would starting point. duplicate the case of tWp Fanny E. Wolston, which made a complete circuit of the Northern At. lantic between 1891 and 1891. - e?e varies, in that while most of it is carried on .in tire city centers or in towns of 5,900 or REPORT MADE Japanese ministers have each from one to ten V over, our TO PRESBYTERIAN GENERALASSEMBLY Crumbling Subsoil Prr) 26. (By The Presbylei ian Board of National Misions, through,, its general secretary Dr. Jchn A. Marquis of New York today made its annual report to the Presbyterian COLUMBUS. May General Assembly now in sesfrom the rtf sion here. Extracts " ' : follow port "Geographically the field includes each of 48 states, Alaska. Cuba, Porto Rico, Santa Domingo, with, a little of Canada, It is estimated that Presbyterian Na tional Mission agencies touch not lesg than 10.900,000 of the possible 115.0(H), 000 people included within its aren of work-Worjs being conducted f in 8,000 commun'ties, , (By Aiwocmted Pmm) ROME, May 26, UniC-e- : GIVEN TO REPAIR ; TOMB Yobi?V;T'r I?i?pGi?Gy: ft ASIA IN Despite re- NEW YORK,' May 26. -Charles R. Crane cf Chcago, whose philanthropies in the Near Blast have embraced ftl most every phase af humanitarian activity has recently given a sum of money to repair the tomb in Asia Minor of Hodja Nasreddin, a. famous, humorist" of the 15th century.- .Tvearyone who has visited the Near East is familiar with the 'Hodja stories, a type of e similar to Aesops fabwhich had its origin with' les, Naspeddin. Ilia tomb, in $ fie'd near the American orphanage assuring' statements and glib explanations which have been made by the Roman municipal authorities of an unusual series of: street collapses, and cave ins the fact that six of these disquieting accidents have occurred within the brief space of several weeks is causing consid. at Konia, Anatolia, has been erable alarm here. described by relief workers who The first of ' these accidents have visited it. It Is a sma'.I was a cave-i-n which caused a domed, building, pertly open at large section of the Via Ripetta the sides. Under the dome hangs to fall to. a depth of about six an enormous green turban, feet. The collapse occurred in abodt the size of an unbrella, broad daylight, the ground fall- which the Hodja is reDuted to ing away several feet in front of have worn during his lifetime. Five hundred years ago, a crowded tramway. - But the was the Mark Twain Nasreddin proximity of the Via Ripetta to the Tiber River offered the ap- of the Near East,1, said Charlsecreparent explanatioin that the re- es V. Vickrey, general in Relief, Near East of the tary cent heavy rains and flood condition of the river had caused a an address here this week, Mark Twain, he, was rpore weakening of the alluvial sub- lake a mere than funny man,' he soil along the river bank. was a great philosopher who Within a fortnight? after this clothed homely truth .in a collapse, however, there were raimetn. of wit.anda-tire-. s similar more was an itinerant wise Ha accidents in various sections of man- an exponent of the Golden the city, some of them-fafrom is represented as a who Rule, the river, and the- Romans, al- sort! of irvln of . combination ways ready to inject melodrama Cobb and Will Rogers, -- a' stout into the simple facts of daily ex- fellow with enormous spectac, istence, saw in the series the lea riding about the countryside presentation of a- new- source of on a diminutive donkey, distriterror. The inhabitants of buting his pungent sayings to southern Italy and Sicily live un- the public wherever he went. der the Damcletian sword of Mr. Vickrey gave, several illusthe prospect of tell- trations of the ojd philosophers uric disturbances ; would the Ro. quaint humor. mans have to- live in constant On one occasion, he related, dread of the possible effects of the Hodja was sleeping on the a crumbling subsoil? ' veranda when he awoke suddenTo this question the author- ly and saw whet he took to be ities have hastened to give an a robber, dressed in white, emphatic negation, asserting climbing over the garden wall. that each accident had a, special He seized hi$ bow and sent an sause and that there was no one arrow straight through the all cause for of therm underlying imaginary intruder,ronly,lo find In some places, it is explained, that the white object was one too much new construction was of his own shorts hanging' to weakening the subsoil; in oth- dry on the wall. Pra:se be to seepage had that I was not inside my shirt ers;"'' when I shot the arrow through caused weakness. ' , it. r Nasreddin Arbitrators to Decide leen the is said .toof --have the originator - . almoat entirely upon tli PROTEOTTOY OP TUw hu. APPL1KI It! 'ITS 8CRPACKS, ecimmuie tnuBj,'. council to, be tiicpry. It h ' ' eu nunt, p&uit with PrUYf lUu folk-lor- , . k ed English-speakin- five-othe- r V - . ever-prese- tNNETt Slt PAINS CO. OtAS Cake City, Utak The U.O. Lumber Co. ' ,tThe Progressive Business House - -- s - - - s , gi-fect at-pu-t -- -- -- J hard-and-fa- s, et . , es Main Give the youngsters this wholesome long-lasti- ng sweet for and benefit, pleasure use it when work drags SEALED TIGHT . f KEPT RIGHT er if ed North Lome. nt rain-wat- 315 Slip a packet in your pocket when, you o - ds at v Hello Daddy-do-n't forget my Wtigleys or-les- - - ENAMELS Bennetts Property Life Insurance i Prpducts are for Sale at ' - 'to VARNISHES PAINTS and be augured of absolute tatiefnetion and long life fur your property., r -- earthly-iconlin-ent- vior!. SI1II OF HONEY r Plays Tricks With Streets of Rcme ' two-lhii- 2C put-statio- The list pf populations reach includes European immigrants of 22 different languages groups, Asiatic immigrants oi eight different language groups Spanish-speakin- g people in the s uthwest American Indians 26 languages and dialects us'ng Crust Fart of Earths Alaskan Indians and other nar tive laces in southern and cent-Formed The Moon ral Alaska, Eskimos, migrant workers, Mormons, Jews, Negro mountaineers, es, , southern . (By Scienceervice) Ricans San DomThe Cubans, Pprlo LONDON, Mjr 25. and g earth is thq parent of the moon ingans, white- - stock - presenting many in more than a poetic sense, in octhe epin'on of Dr. R. II. Rastill. diverse groups according to and environment. cupation lecturer in economic geology at evangelism, Cambridge University, who "The division ofwhich" is recently announced a theory the' purpose "of the evangelistic deepen spirit mais made our satellite of that terial that wra once part of the md develop the evanglistic ac vities of the who.e enureh has earths Crust, Dr. Retail's theory, however, during the year- finished two differs from that of Sir George year campaigns in 12 different Darwin and others who have presbyteries, has set up a program for evangelism in all the previously made similar sugges- different synods of the church, tions, for ha thinks that a layer in has with the cooperation of the earth's crust, about 4) m'les thick and covering about board of Christian education of its total area was provided evangelistic and vocational1 addresses in Presbyterian off peeled by the attraction of schools and colleges, has taken the sun, This tidal action of the sun was effective while the steps to place in public libraries there are Presbytercrust was still in a plastic state, wherever ian a section of books churches and the moons own gravitational attraction caused it to foil relating to evangelism, misthe- - wui k of the " pitived. up into a ball ofthe form that sions, and all church. ' now in see we the sky. The extrordin-ar- y The recites crusta larea formon report left earth Drifting Derelicts ' . ed the continents. activity on the part of the womens organizatheory also accounts for tions 'of missionary Show Ocean Currents theThis There churches. the whilefact that according tc generally 'accepted ideas, me 5,946 local womens societmasses of lighter density- - such ies yith a combined memberi (By Science Service) . ship of- 239.084, -- organized- - for ts make up the WASHINGTON, May 22. German Actors should cover the entire sur- study, prayer, and service for i Pay A veritable Flying Dutchman missions. and national foreign face of th globe, they actually a ship without crew or sails, the The American Indians who The BERLIN, May 21. schooner Govern- cover only about a- third tne are at least nominally, reached or Parr" is now being carried by missing two thirds consist'ng by the various enterprises of the long conflict between the theot the Canary Current - off the of the moon. Measurements, board of nationaPmiss;ona nym atre producers of Germany- and ; he, its feys density moons, the or actors, 'Northwest coast of Africa tosterd, prominentj about 51,300, about lps pertaht it tier ward the Sargasso Sea, in; The is op the earth, 'show cent of the total Indian 'copula as they call themselves, has at half times a threand ,last been epded. ,Thq $fai bgye , opinion of A. B. McManus tf the as heavy as an equal volume of 4ion as reported" by thd" bureau scored what Un-- . "will probably .proe of Office the of. Indian Hydrographic Affairs, Fresbyterian water. This is more dense than an ; , empty, ited States Navy. all (j missionaries victory. have of charge he average fo rthe continental clause the4 The . in manager in three-- non This vessel, one of the most and masses, but Dr. Rastall Protestant work famous derelicts of recent years, assumes that all the time of reservation government board- agreement to which they particsailed from Nova Scotia for Bra- the disruption, some of the ing schools. For the training of ularly objected was that by fndiains workers which they were placed in four zil on September 27, 1923, with heavier underlying material Presbyterian st .classes.1 with dethe board maintaines four Bible a load of lumber. Rut she soon vas elso torn away, fees for each maximum ' On the Navajo reserve finite struck a storm and on October The new theory also fits in rehools, class. this was declared schools tion seven are They boarding 3, after the ship had been badly with the ideas recent! set forth miss'on-ariewith their served incompatible dignity Presbyterian was by crew rescued damaged, the by a German geologist. Prof. Alas artists, and .that no artist and the ship abandoned. At this ford Wegener, who believes the There are 22 oriental mis- could submit to having such a time she was south of New- Amrican continent was origin put on him.' under the board stretch- strait-jackcurrent arid Wind sions foundland. united with Europe and onv a'ly The has been classification Salt over from the since then have carried her ing territory Africa, and that it floated away Lake abandoned. is free actor north-erLoa and to a Every City Angeles an extended cruise of the to its present place. This would to his from make Calin arrangements southern Atlantic. not have been possible as tong Wintersburg to play. But whenever an ifornia. churches The play among covered as entireearth the wa& Her cargo, of lumber has kept tre at present confined actor wants to emerge beyond her afloat, although waterlog- with such a crust, but after the Chinese to seven city and town centers the ordinary class whose maximoon had been torn away, it ged, but she continues to be a mum fee is fixed at $75 a n California. menace to shipping. Efforts to was possible for the continents emThe work among Koreans is night, an arbitration board of destroy her have so far been uru to separate from their long to one large city cent- three men must deliver an confined successful, even though in Dec- brace. inion as towhether his claim for Los where Angeles, er, ember, 1923, the U. S. S. Cbast Koreons some and 2.500 are In England there is no' law to,a higher wage is justified, in German brink-notsmall town one the in Dinuha, an as f The feeling against using circlesJoaSanis atre that "the -- stars part of the advertising medium ay stamphave saved 'their pride at the ing business names and address quin Valley u The work among the Japan- - expense of their pocket books. eron them, four-mast- Tuesday, May CITY,' CACHE COUNTY, UTAH JOURNALTLOGAN the-southe- m - mother-in-la- w one- - joke. His wife -dayplaedd - some- - hot roup before him, and when he took a large spoonful, it burned him so, that large tears robed down h? 'eheek$.,Vhy are you Yes''; replied the Hodja, -- a ministered under. American supis always the er vision. Thj money is used fr s?keri bis. wife. ;I was good mans word ' ' , . . same. ri. house' aruH farm'- buildings,! and . , thiiifddg of the death of your for fanh, equipment, the iloans But the said mother, Hddj. to rottfers be'ng . secured! by 'didnt krioty you loved m.v the mortgages repayable in easy mother so much, replied of the refugees ; wife. The Hodja- made a wry IN GREECE BUILT; are beginning I am weeping because face. steady w hV.j) will provide addyou are not with her. he said. itional facilities for other refuNasreddin was asked which 26. Gleece. SALONIKA, . refugee loan is the May This more moon, was gees. useful, sun or The of the opening , 2,000th most successful and useful pir lie replied, The moon, benew cause the sun comes out in .the refugee village by the Greek of international imanc ng i when is it already government was celebrated here European history. daytime, light enough, but the moon this weekat a ceremony where I the capital of Bulgaria, comes out at night when we II. C. director of the at Sofa, Jaquith, one of the centers need , present light really Near East was the Relief, in prinEurope, is fdr the A neighbor visited Nasreddin pf interest one day and asked for the loan cipal speaker. He summed up friort. part quite a model n (own. of his donkey. The Hodja an- the progress made by Greece Stncfe 1880 it has, been a0?1 swered that the donkey was not curing the past year in meeting entirely rebuilt and laid out in at home. Justthen a loud bray- its refugeeproblem. European style, the narrow, Turk w inditig' lanes Of the id if In these 2.000 new refugee ing came from behind the'house replaced been town ish said which having have the bufit villHges Ah1, teen neighbor, you exhe said, there are now more by broad streets bordered with Lied have lied to me. of the claimed the Hodja angerly. than 17,000 competecl houses, fine buildings and houses construction. Would you believe a donkey's vhile 35,000 more are iq couise most modern word sooner than mine? of construct'on. Thus nearly' To stimulate home industries, Nasreddin was asked one Hay half a million refuges will be the Turkish1 Government has by a judge to state his age. provided for, or about half the issued an order compelling an But total number. he sairb Fifty year's, employes In the public service The international refugee iri wear only clothing and shoe. you made that answer ten yeafs aeo, protested the iudve. loan is being successful! v ad of native production. cry-'in- ?, - - -- 2,ooo3fv uppay-ment- sf , - . - Thatys What They Hand You QUITE SO h QUlTE So g -- |