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Show A if L XSfn m J!ESS AMK ANtIDEAL NEWS SERVICE OVER LEASED you market Reports, MAKES THE PAPER FOR CACHE COUNTY FOLK b . Features From Europe .Statistics Show Bachelors Die Sooner LONDON, Aug. 13 (A) Mar- ried men live four years longer in England than bachelors, it was stated before the Associated Bodies of Life Assurance Actu- aries. According to Professor G. M. Robertson, distinguished Brit- ish medico-psychologi- insan- st, ity is three times as prevalent among single men and women as among married meen and worrien. The organization officially went on record urging everyone to marry bbfore the age of twenty-fiv- e. Londdn Enthusiastic Over Gardening . f LONDON, Aug. 13 (A) A garden competition held by the Evening Standard brought out 12,000 competitors, each with a flower garden at home! The gardening craze has reached its peak in London. Nearly every clerk and-off-ice worker in the city rushes home from work to "put a few touches on his garden. Experts say there is one flower and one fruit that flourishes better in London than anywhere else. They are the carnation and Loganberry. LONDON, LONDON, Aug. 13 (F) Huckleberry Finn would have been whortleberry Finn if he had been born in Devon or Somerset. In Surrey he would have been Hurts Finn. Bilberry Finn would havfe been his name in Hampshire. Up in Scotland he would have been Whinberry -- Finn. The little blue berry, which is so much relished in pies the world over, changes its nme with its geography. Buckingham Palace Gardens Closed LONDON, Aug. 13 (A) Buckingham Palace gardens are almost unknown to the general public. This is because of the dirficulty of getting permits to view, the famous shrubbery. In Queen Victorias time it was Comparatively easy ,to gain access to-tgrunds surrounding the palace. But King Edward took the view that, the palace was his town hous? and therefore a placec of personal privacy. Windsor Castle,-othe other hand, is considered to be state apartments and is more or less open to the public. King George has made the privacy rule at Buckingham Palace even more strict. i he Aug. 13 (A) Mil-to- - 0 if . London-Brusse- Museum. ls it t ,l.n iStfcU, j ' e SAN FRANCISCO ( ADOnly and canies a . t. 5 non-poe- ts r Any hour after August 12 will be zero hoar for these flit ants in the Dole and Fa.sferwood prize 'awards for air flight from the mainland to Honolulu, an on ta Japan, tpper, left to right Al Henley Major Lhlngston Inins; (apt. William P, Irwin; Irtiver James I). Dole, donor of the prize; Bennett H, Griffin; Arthur . C. Goebel, and Mrs. Vi. P. Irwin. tram-iarifi- the starting gun is awuited for what has prospects of being Americas greatest aerial derby. Any hour after August 12 will be zero hour for the hopping off of the fifteen or more entries In the Dole nd other special prize air races to Hawaii,' and possibly, on to Japau. ; One ward of 135,000 to land on 'awaits the1 first the islahds Another money prize Will go to t)he flieis who succeed in reacliclng Japan, provided Certain conditions have, boon met, , Drink water tyid Ervine The types of planes re almost , ah varied as the number of entries. Disagree On Criticism John Some of them ..probahly . will be (A LONDON, Aug.-1across the-- great exDrink water and St. John Ervine flown of'solo' water; navigators and paspanse over the have locked horns others. , sengers will accompany Drinkwater declaration that Among the entrants are: Captain William P. Erwm of no practicing artist should Texas, a world . war flier, Dallas, on the phss adverse judgment by his wife, who also accompanied work of his competitors. has 4 .qualified as a pilot. They will Ervine, dramatist as well" as fly as Travelnir monoplane chrisof St. Louis. dramatic critic, says he cannot tened, DThe Spiritradial type motor It has a Wright London Resents Joke At Prince of Wales n believe Drinkwater is serious LONDON, Aug. 13 (P) Hayes hit a snag in the new' when he makes such a staterevue Shake Ypur Feet when ment. Ervine says Drinkwater contemporary he cracked a .line about the has criticized Prince of Wales which did not poets, in spite of his pronouncement. Poets, in the opinion of appeal to the audience, a silly was Ervine, are better qualified to doing, Hayes ass monologue of the type criticize poetry than which has won him favor in the are, just as dramatists are betmusic halls. He remarked that ter qualified ,to criticize plays the Duke of York bought a per- intelligently. Ervine says most ambulator at a recent exhibition of the criticism of novels is as a hint to his brother,' tfte done by novelists, and, rightly so. . Prince of Wales. not did not only The audience laugh, but it pooed the actor un- Attaches Airplane That Hit His Cows mercifully. PARIS, Ayg. 13 (P) An airtone to had Even Will Rogers collision with cows has dowm his remarks about the plane a French judicial comcaused was Prince of Wales when he which airmen and a in edy London. performing in farmer are at odds. At ' Dunkirk the King Gives Y Camp air liner With ten pasOld Roman Stone came down in a aboard sengers LONDON, Aug. 13 (A1) ran into two and field of cloyer King Through the courtesy had to have The farmer cows. George, the international Boys the cows killed. He promptly in A. Camp of the Y. M. C. a bill of expense. Windsor Forest has a direct drew up the two cows he Besides link with the Roman Empire. field of one of item the added a with Its site wan marked to the it and presented stone given . by His Majesty. clover The pilots argued and The stone is from a collection pilots. pay. The farmer went of Roman and Corinthian ruins wouldnt seat of justice and the to off brought from Tripoli in 1825 by came back with a court officer King George IV and exhibited and a writ of attachment. The at the British nt Ber- nard Shaw, Sybil Thorndike and ahd manager, her husband Lewis Casson, have been making a speaking film out of fSt. Joan. Miss Thorndike carried St. Joan to success on the London stage. The problem of prompting becomes very acute in the speaking films, Casson , says. The actor who dries up and loses his lines is a great tragedy when he is speaking at the same time a camera is registering hjs acting. Of course trained actors do not actually dry up very often, but they hesitate and hesitation is magnified so much on the phonofilm that it is almost enough to destroy the illusion. Casson thinks the speaking film has an interesting future but he says experiments with St. Joan have hot .advanced far enough to make it certain than ' the. film will be released for general use. - The original owners of the ties. 'Dont go into any new enChicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul terprises. Railroad were of the most .con"Former owners of the road servative type. Considerable claim that the extension to the English money was invested in th undertaking and the roads Coast was the real cause of credit, up to fifteen years ago, their troubles. They insist that was the very highest, the com- if the war had not come on w hjen mon stock selling around $200. it did and if the politicians had not instituted a campaign of -a share. Twenty-fiv- e years ago railroad persecution, everything men to liked a .own wealthy railroad whether they knew would have come out all right A study of the situation,' howanything about railroading or not. This desire was probably ever, shows that there were . causes. For prompted by the same instinct other contributing which makes a toy truin attrac- instance, - this extension was tive to a small boy. Statistics built with the idea that Alaska, show, in fact, that the. primary was to have a great develoi-meand 'that Seattle was to difference between a man and a boy is the expensiveness of become the greatest seaport for , his toys; Now certain men who Oriental trade. Instead of this had made a lot of money in con- happening, the Alaska bubble nection with oil and copper de- broke and Seattle fell flat. Adto this disappointment, cided to buy the Milwaukee ded there followed a series of very did. railroad and they After bad crop years throughout the to it decided purchasing they build through to the Pacific Northwest. Then the troubles (a coast- Sitting in their offices in China and the business depresNew York these men ordered sion in' Japan have retarded this difficult and expensive 1 400 greatly the development of the mile extension from the Mis- Orient, while the declines in souri River to Seattle and Ta- Montana copper production has coma as, they wrould order a been a severe blow as the road steak for dinner. According to had great hopes when building reports some of these directors into Butte. All these things adwould give more thought to ded to the fact that the road was widows and studying a menu card than a owned byand orphans operated by absenrailroad map! Soon after the extension was tee ownership, probably were built, these pien saw that they factors in its downfall. It moreover, must be rehad made a mistake. If it takes courage and indicates good cognized that the Milwaukee judgement to sell at a loss and operates in a very highly comgtt out of a bad thing, these petitive territory. When the men certainly had both courage Milwaukee, was extended to and good judgment. Soon after Seattlp from St. Paul and MinUJs the sock started on its neapolis . both the Northern Northern-wergieat decline and the dear pub- Pacific and the Great lic became the owners of the serving the territory, and Milwaukee Road.' The common were operating splendid traini stock fell from 199 to 3 and, from the Twin Cities to Seattle, the prefered,-whicheretofore' Tacoma, and Portland, Moreover was considered of thS highest rates in the Northwest were ab- - i ' grade railroad investments, fell normally low and from 218 to 7. Finally a Receiv- of.; the .extension operates er was appointed for the proper- through rather barren territory. ty. Since, that date Kuhn, Loeb! The minority bondholders be- - . and Company find other bankers lieve that these low rates were have been working on a plan of the cause of the receivership reorganization which is now and that the Interstate Comawaiting the approval of the merce Commission should allow. Interstate . Commerce Commis- all three of these Northwestern sion. This plan provides, (1) for roads an increase. As proof of raising new money by an assess their contention they show that ment on the stockholders (al- the. Northern Pacific and Great though these stockholders are to Northern have, to a certain exbe given some bonds for their tent, (without any expensive new income), (2) a radical re- extensions) suffered as has the duction in the fixed charges for Milwaukee. While riding on the at least five years, and (3) pro- Milwaukee east to Spokane the vision for a new prior lien is- Northern Pacific tracks were in sue to provide for future fin- sight of our train for about 400 ancing. This reduction in fixed miles while at points in Montana tracks of the two railroads charges is being accomplished the so close together for stretchare to income bonds all by giving es that they would serve as a' old , bondholders except the double track system. Some day , holders of underlying liens.4 And this territory may need three thereforemost of the bondholders are to get, in place of their trunk lines; but it certainly did was present holdings, an income and not when .tothe Milwaukee the Coast. On the bond which will probably sell in extended the 50s when received. This is other hand, when judging the the present state of the pro- Milwaukee we must not think Coast Experty and surely it carries a les- merely of the Pacific road still has its the for tension, son to every business man namelines ifl Wisconsin, Minoriginal because suchave been ly, you cessful in some industry remem- nesota, Iowa and South Dakota ber your success may largely which should be more valuable have been due to luck and that than evef. The Milwaukee is known for you probably will not be so sucthe worlds longest cessful in your next venture. Al- having electrified railroad, operating reso in this competitive age member it is very difficult to electrically 660 miles through make a sucess in a business in the mountains between Harlow-toMontana and Seattle which which you have not been trained miles apart. This means 854 are I say this because I see so many men lose, after they are fifty that there is a gap of less than 200 miles which is not electrifiyears of age, money which they ed. This short unelectrified make before this age. When you retire from business, retire and stretch is directly west .of e securi- invest only in (Oontluued Ten) . Phonofilm Prompter Has Difficult Job English Have Various Names for Huckleberry -- Bab son Believes Milwaukee Road Will Eventually Be Very Prosperous System Great Aerial Derby Awaits Starting Gun, Hawaii Bound Journals Weekly The CAN FIND A BUYER FOR WHAT YOU HAVUXTO SELL IN NO BETTER WAY THAN THROUGH THE JOURNAL WANT AD ROUTE airplane owners finally had to put up security before the indignant farmer would let them board the machine and fly away. 4 r Boys On Boulevards Going in for Batiks PARIS, Aug. 13 (A5) Mens batik hats with batik ribbon streamers are being introduced to Paris by male mannequins. The first of them appeared at the now hour at a cafe near the. Theatre Francais. Frenchmen take the batik head-gea- r calmly. . .motor and a garfolene capacity of 25 gallons, carried in the wings end fuselage. Another Callfornfa competitor is' Major Livingston Irving oDJlerke-ley- , who plans to flyalon in a built , monbplaaA His specially Pane wilt have a gasolene capacity f of 383 gallons. Lleutennt Norman r A Gbddard, member of the 'Putted States Naval KCserye at. San ililego accompanied bt Lieutenant R, C. Hawkins of Diego naval air' station, were granted special leave1 to make thej flight..-Thewill use a - nronbplane designed, by, Goddard .specially for file flight.. . Captain Arthur V, Rogers, of Los Angeles, formerly' of the British navy air service, will take Leland A. Bryant, Los Angeles archeitoct, ing. full jag navigator. They will, due One of the California entrant cantilever monoplane. s .Arthur C. .Gobal of Santo Monica; Mr., Dole is chiefly responsible who will also use a Travelair mono- for the Derby to the Hawaiian Isplane,' He expects to fly alone. Hjs lands. He is a Wealthy pineapple plane has the Wright redial type dealer. gnsolene capacity of (60 gallons. They Will compete for both tlie James D. Dole prize and the W. E. Easterwopd award. Bennett. H. Griffen and his navigator, Al Henley, hopped from Dallas to San Francisco to participate in the. Derby.- - Griffin also is using a TruVelair monoplane with a Wright radial motor. Griffen, 32 years old, is a world war flier. He trained students in aviation and flew bombers over the enemy lined in France and Italy. Fqr a few weeks he was stationed in England. Henley also was .in the- - army air service snd it was because' of' his knowledge of radio and navigation that caused him to be chosen to accompany Griffen. Henley, 82 years old, likewise is a, pilot. After army service he entered comnihrclal fly- ' y -- . THE BATTLE CREEK As Seen By Wm. G. Hull-No- w THE MASS of Hooper, Utah ' years of 62 and '63 found the Indians growing very to the people of Franklin.- - They stole many horses, even growing so bold as to take them from the stables of the pioneers. They became, very exacting of the people, demanding grains and other foods, on their own terms. But believing in the theory of their leader, President Brigham Young, that-i- t was better to feed the Indians than to fight them,' they did, even though it became burdensome at times. ,(Som pf the tithing grain which was receipted but left in the individual flutstreamers granaries until needed, was given to the Indians.) They find the eccenThomas Hull, father of Wilto shoulders the tering horse one and a half bushel tric but not objectionable. As liam Hull had charge of some of each in each sack) when I looked up William Hull the for the tithing grain. bright and saw the soldiers approachhead-wehas been worn by relates the following interesting ing from the South. I said to the : incidents respectable French citizens for About 5 o'clock on the even- Indian boy Here comes the so long that a mixture of colors name for seems a more or less natural ing of January 1863, three In- Toquashes (Indian wiM all4be soldiers) you maybe development to the French- dians, Chief. Bear Hunters tribe, killed answered "Maybe They on who were Bear camped River, man. , came to my fathers home with Touquasho be killed too but not three pack horses and with an waiting however for the third Paris Has Street order fromthe Bishop, for nine horse to be loaded, they .quickly Of Cubist Homes bushels of wheat. I was, sent to jumped upon their horses and PARIS, 'Aug. 13 (JP) Modern led three horses away, disappear the granery to sack the wheat, cubist houses line one little the Indian boy went with me ing in the distance. Mr. Hull street in Palis. This art revolu- and proceeds: That night the solhelped me. We had two of diers' tion has been marked by formal the three camped just outside the pack horses loaded, bushels three on (Continued on page 18) having put 4 multi-color- s, ar -- e 1- -4 h three-quarte- - , -- n, -- high-grad- Magnate (Copyright, The family is a tremendous entity and cannot be overimportant for him that day. But he never watches the clock when he has serious work in hand,, That is why looked. One's friends may be considered a smembers of he is able to play golf on the day he is planning to play one's family, because when one is true to members of ones family and to ones friends, they will be true in golf. A deal of nonsense has been written about methods of return. success. My ideal is that success results from driving Faith and trust and hard work, run the world. ahead. Mothers and children help make it run more cheer' I would say that what a man needs is courage, hon- fully. . I Would say that if anyone wishes to make a success esty, and a capacity for work. a normal uses no legal device to escaped, sucis I back also woman think of a of most that life great that the best plan for him is to take his coat off wdrid A man who gets ahead in the cesses of to devoted a a a and life loviDg or wife, hun mother, for all right go to work. barter than the next chap. It sister. v 3H'th-And helpful that is I wuuU uu.u may ta thing; that watch the clock to get out to play golf berm, . . . , , r I . m oat-Pag- e By MARCUS LOEW IF YOUTH BUT KNEW and for getting ahead in life have been spoken mean RULES ofteic As a matte? of fact, rules is determined to get nothing to the man who really learns the rules and then ahead, except that he first own purpose. disregards them to suit his never disregards, Rules the right principled man much msumler-etoo- d -a however, ere the rule! of nentilityhe disarm to frlcnj ' word. .He usee no trick rs 1327, Famous Features Syndicate, Inc,) gamble prodigiously not on horses, or on cards, but on himself and his own judgment. It is a good thing to bet 'on .yourself in a race, because you are going to try mighty hard to win, and no one else knows your own, capacities as well as j'ou do. That goes without saying. i ' I would say in closing that youth neier can a know. The best way to teach youth is to be square, to Woik hard when it is working time, and to play hard when it is playing time. , Be loyal to as auv, s ones best sail pel haps is as good a motto t , |