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Show I CITV .UTAH DESEllET EVENING NEWS SALT LAKE DESERET Core or Hmm ( Boat U. T.mpla oad Ml Dos cur. t I to.Tala Wkldiy mice. r kir r k Mr A.turday N.we ky, per year ftiaf Copies Fereifa kMiMk satra. T'eily . Cir. aH Lake CtrrMpMdtiiN should pabUeaUoa b4 U otk.r eddreaoed la poalotTIra of SoH cob4 cla.a motlor awurdlBg la Act March t. UTS. ' r tr HALT LAKE - - cut. hEPTEMRER 30. 191 Con-faia- al Tab-arna- IB. General Priesthood meeting will convene la the Tabernacle oa Saturday. Oct 4, at T o'clock p. m. It U deal rod that arrengomenta for mission try reunlona ehall not conflict wltk any of the detee above announced, end that euch reunlona aa may be held oa Saturday evening be- - fixed for aa hour not oarller than 1:20 o'clock. HE HER J. GRANT. ANTHON H. LUND. CHARLES W. PENROSE, nrot Praoldvncy. . A THE GL'ARDMIVN was T is to be regretted that only few reponee have thus far been recehed to the call of the Presiding HUhoprle of the Church, asking for the names of residents' who are Willing to -1 ford shelter to conference visitors, the nature of the accommodation offered and the charges therefor. Probably the failure to comply with the request la due to, forgetfulness, or to the of Its urgency eurely it cannot be because the people fBatt Lake City hate forgotten their and proverbial hospitably or grown cool in iU exercise. This allusion to the subject Is to remind them that It i pf pressing hnpoilanee, for the Bishopric and tha Bureau of Information have already received numerous letter from intending visitors asking to be assigned to suitable quarters, while within two or three day the influx may T f- O snort The ntnotioth of lho Church of Joouo Ckrlot of. tla, Latter-da- y Salnta will convene In tho twit Uko City, on rrWny, Oct. , IHS. at 10 oclock a. m, with eaaalona a loo on Oct. 4 and 2. A Spaclat Prlosthood mealing will he hald la tho Aotembly Hall oa Monday, OcL I. at II s. doubtless come In tomorrow night with stories calculated to make the chronograph figure look foolish. Perhaps for tha opening day of tba season, 11 will he aa welt to allow them to tndulie their faney regardless of the merit. In the long run, however, it ran be 1W on. . HAKE T1IE tTAITORS WELCOME. com eke xcl Notice. aeml-aanu- s. aim the rioter. A not need to have a great love of the to be able In h time of public peril to acquire a flre feeling of relief and security when a company or battalion of uniformed, armed men marches upon a scene given up to rioting and disorder. The transformation is as quick and complete as anything produced upon the mimic sage; it is always a show worth aeeing. It is being enacted in Omaha today; two . weeks ago it was staged in Boston; and at various times and places in the past it has been performed to the great satisfaction of the orderly audiences that have witnessed 1L Tho military represents the. extreme of organization and order, hence it is the most remedy to bring against disorder. It is disciplined and pigld; the mob is loose and plastic. It is the human line and square, the pha- lanx; the other is the human mass and whorl, the incoheaive eruption. Its action is meohan-irbut unfailing; at the word of ommand; the other la Irregular, Irresponsibly each element for itself. It knows all the time what it is doing; the other does not even know whit it wants to do. It obeys law, which is another word for crystallized purpose and experience; the other tramples upon law, and is incapable of fixed intelligent purpose. Amid the wildest disturbances, the arrival of the military means that civilization has come hack into its place instead of anarchy it means that it is all over with the mob. And an interesting reflection is that the very same men wjio, as members of the mrh,'Violate the laws and wreak havoe, would.. if, they were members of the stale or nations - armed forces, defend the laws and preserve the peace they would stand 'for order, not chaos; for civilization, not savagery. This virtue in the'mililary Idea after All will not be denied by the extremest ONE does old-ti- be expected to have become heavy. Unless all precedent are violated, the number of visitors will far surpass the capacity of the regular ls and rooming houses; and it would bo to the city' shsme If, with IU thousands of comfortable homes, any of these stranger should hav to wander the afreets in vain search of a place where rest and sleep were to be had. In the days of the towns and the peopte'f poverty, and when the hotel accommodations were meager in every sense, there wss no trouble in caring ho-te- came the - more comfortably crowded tbelr houses, the happier the residents in the ability and the Inclination to share with friends from a distance. A renewal of this wholesome spirit is much to be dosired at the present time, Not being asked as a gratuity, it cannot be withheld without disgrace. Instead of hiving to search and Skirmish for places to which to send applicants, the committee ought. to. have at least half a dozen, places. from which each ieeker could be privileged to make his choice according to the eize of his party if not the depth of his purse. . , - ef-iri- e! . anti-militar- 'I.' : SURDS FLIGHT AND BALLISTICS. the'wild duck BEGINNING tomorrow, state become the lawful prey of the sportsmen for a period of - The wise, experienced member of the species will presumably lose no titne in trying1 to eslab- lish 4 new record for altitude, and in the interest of it behooves' the younger menMghoto fly high. There will be little peace orrafety for them except as they are out of gun range; for while the amateur ehooler may create nifteb noise and expend plenlDus ammunition wildly to very little pur pose,1 there Is no telling where an IccTdenta - - etaet may .strike, and the wariest bird some-- times falls a victim to the. greenest gun." The most imaginative fisherman, in enu- .. meriting 'the fighting tactics, and the size of the finny monsters that took his hook but which he did not land, is not mor,e entertaining . than your holiday in estimating the speed of this redhead or ihf pintail which he almost brought down as it cut the air in front Jf big blind." Tl is seldom lhai the narrator speaks of write of flight as less than a bufldred miles per hour tins being ,so convenient a figure to add lo or, occasionally, to eubtract from Surely if the bird be coming down the wind, a few score feet rrr Second can be annexed without serious ri.'k to the reputation. iTbat the duck is no knierer while aloft be admitted be always acts es tf he were' overdye for an appointment elsewhere,., and when a favoring breeze is boosting it his tail feathersThe seems 'Indeed to' be trying for a pfize in delivery of the weiwaj mail. But to tear. some hunters talk, it might-hthought that his customary speed was only a wbi-pbehind" sadden death, and several "wlngbeata three-month- s. on . duck-hunt- er -- ill e er ' 7.- - ... , Cold, unsympathetic acienca ha recently - been employing a device railed Che chronograph' originally .designed to measure the speed of a bullet or projectile to determine tha speed of ; game birds flight Pheants which are bred purposely for shooting and noted for their swift ! A PAGE IN THE DICTIONARY. pig- - Caraa at th roaiimuro ritfrrealat blue rock rail; - Uinktr 'a.dtt tuma prilU-- J P BfrKinn.y. KmMifJi Kr.eateUre haw Ycth (mo.. ij nTlb Ar.nue Cklril) 3 cm. t It outh Mlchi . Ent.r.4 si Ika 31 ui c- K4 fc rotkftiuf flight, rlt of mitei prr hour; eon. 27 to 3J partridge. 27 16 33; tad ftrrirf rlfton, th fsite.t bird pombl to hrerd, and devtlopoii to r winning met, seldom fetch 00 tn'lei an hour, and thea only for short The are results obtained from acdutsacet. (M M tus! calculation and trial, and no argument ts i'rJLt possible th them. Dozen of hunters will "4 ell Address all bu.la , od NEWS EVENING i AS THE VISITORS SAW IT. C ASTERN exchanges now arriving by mail - generally give lengthy and favorable reports of the visit of President Wilson In Utah a week ago today, as described to them by the corps of newspaper correspondents that traveled with the partyr They naturally give more space to the Presidents speech than to the details of his reception; but of the latter they all speak as enthusiastic" and significant of the aentiment of the community in favor of the ratification of the Treaty and Covenant. One of the most extended reports is in the New York Times,-whose representative, Charlie" Grasty, made a jret'reputation aa a war correspondent, and who is probably the best known gnd most popular memberof .the. visiting newspaper gang." Aa .illustrative of Ah general run of comment, (tar Tha Daaarat Naa fcr Dr. Eraak Craaa) Wbal art yau Oolng. Hwattof Ilaadlng tba AlcUonary. ft ea41ng lb dictionary f I didn't knew anybody avar raad a dictionary. J auppoaad yon only wont to it whn you wantod lo find ut tba moaning or pronunciation of a word. Wall, thafe ana way to ue It But aoraa--tlm- ee I Ilka Juat to roa4 It. Do- you know. It's a moot nurprtaing book. It- aa full of ao a dlma tbenexpected and tho unkaowa novel. Thera art word X never heard of. Hara'a a page, for Inatance, Including from aarobloaoopo to Aeaculaptaa, tn tba Standard Dictionary. Now, flret thing, whnt to aa aarobioaoopaf It te aa apparatuo for oaalng how many llttla , living thtnga. micro baa. etc- - are la a given volume of air. Did you aver hear at enef Never did. Of eouree you didn't, and you never heard of an aerocynt nor an aeroductor either, did ' yout Never yet that Well, the flret la a little d afloat, and the other la kaape a to an un- an inatrument for oonseylng-al- r horn child. - I'll be switched! Exactly. And do you know tho differ, ence between an aarograph and an aerolite? I do not. One of em la a meeaage eent by wlreleee and the other te a aort of meteor that fella to earth. ' Tou don't eey! Yep. And here' aerenef, a word meaning any kind of an aircraft except a balloon: It wee used by Julee Varna. And then here'e aeroplauetlc. meaning "pertaining to aortal and aeroporotomy. a eurglcal navigation: operation for letting air artificially Into tho air paaeagea, and aeroecepey, or tho perception of atmoepheric change by certain in er aea-waa- eecta. The Fourth Off Sale of Waists and Blouses ' . CONTINUES TOMORROW Beautiful effects, including many handsome French blouses, in crepe de chines, georgettes, lingeries, voiles and organdies. The colors 'are navy, taupe, prune, brown, bisqye, flesh, pink, white and many pretty color combinations. The regular prices range from $8 to $50, your choicp tomorrow at 25 Off. -- Cooking Exhibition r 1 continue the cooking dem- onsration with Wesson Oil and Snowdrift throughout the week. Wednesday, and Thursday from 10 a m. to 12 m. and 2 to 4 p-and Friday and Saturday, from 12 m. to 2 p. in- and 4 to 5:30 p.m. e. 2 cap ( Snowdrift. cups of au(r. It cup of, apoera ..try. flour. It t.a of .king powd.r, 2 eupasalt. milk, taa.poanfnl B.at aucar and Snowdrift wall tog.thar, than ofmixaaxa,In than batn yekaa add flour and milk altaraato-ly- , until all la u.d. boat, fold tn th. whit.. f I x. Thla la rnouch Baking-Powde- r for t nic layer. and salt ahould be Sift alfted In with flour fldur once before meaourlng. The Cake muet be cent la Thure-dabatwean 1 and I 14 o'clock, Flrat Price li 0: Second Prlaa Can of Snowdrift. Cakaa mlxad dally at tha Cooking Exhibit. 2 Mr, Never heard tell of any of om. Neither did L nor of an aaroalderlta, "a meteorite 'containing Iron;, aor aa aaroelte (meana the tame pyrargyrUe. whatever that may be) ; nor of aerotroptam. "the turning of roote from the direction of their na tural growth by moan of feaei." . I ahould aay not! And did you know that the eclence of ballooning (of craft lighter than air) te call-e- d aeroetatlon, aa dletlngutahed from aviation, which te tha adonco of flying with machines heavier than air?. Nay, nay, Horatlus. I reckon not. Outside of friend dictionary wiere will you find euch eucculent bite of Information? Where, for Instance, will yon eee or the word aerugo, meang coppar-rua- t; aealon, a "kind of hawk;" ar aeachrolalla. moaning obscene speech; or eesclgnln, a ut chemical compound derived from seeds; or aeechynomene, or sensitive planter I must ear, as one would observe In the colored language, that "them 1a awful - knovledgable words." Rath-e- rl I love to ramble from page to In the page dictionary, for to sae and to bow many words there are in the English language that I never dreamed of In my wildest nightmare. Perhaps youre right. The dictionary te mighty fine reading, of eouree, only, as the feller eaya. It change the abject too often. PRIZES .TO BE GIVEN for the best cake made to the following recipe: TWO Ta!T will m. - (. wall-baat.- y, OCR DRUG BTORE T9 AV 4 SOUTH MAIN IT I 2111-11- horse-chestn- bo-ho- ld (Copyright, ill, by Frank Crane.) TWENTY YEARS AGO. From the Files of The Deseret News I8. SEPTEMBER SO, Announcement was mads that the Church authorities had decided on the erection of a new home for The Deaeret News on the historic Council House cprper, South Tern-pi- e and Main street. After considerable discussion and soma litigation, Juetlce Pardee awarded the much heralded to iMlas Deda Stromberg of Salt Lake. Hon. 'William A. Kinney, who practiced law In Salt Lake for many years, and was a heavy property owner, paid a visit to hte old home from Honolulu, accompanied by ' hte wife. Salt Lake business men gathered et the public telephone station on State street and - conversed with state officials of Montana and Idaho over the long distance phono. It was a test of tho new line to Montana and was considered a distinct triumph, the distance being about 290 mile. Georg Swan, city auditor, died 'Suddenly at hte residence in Salt Lake. Re had been In. hte usual health up until two days before, when he was seised with what his physician diagnosed as intercostal neuralgia. Mr. Swan In 1SI4. Salt. thesealed- - That name Is yoor protection aealnst Inferior imitations Just as the sealed package Is protection against impurity He was 71 year of age. TheCreatwtName held a-- ; meeting and discussed tha San Jose scale, which had mads Its appearance la th northwestern part of Weber county." ' Lake-count- fruit-grow- er benefit of the President cause here. Utah was one of 4he two states which Mr. Taft carried in 1912, and there is still a strong feeling st confidence in him here. Practically all of the churches here are standing by the President in his fight fertile adoption of the League. Mormon" TaDernacle, The where President Wilson made his appeal for support of the League of Nations tonight, was crowded to capacity long before the President arrived. When the doors were thrown open a crowd which for a time threatened to overwhelm the police and aoldier,--fough- t for entrance. Thousands Who could not get in collected about the Tabernacle and the Hotel Utah,' a block away. In the Tahernae le the crowds awaiting the Presi dent and Mrs. Wilson listened to thr great pipe organ which played- religioup and patriotic airs. . The President and Mrs. Wilson appeared at 8.15 o'clock and there was g great demonstration. There was another shout ' the Banner"' was plaved. snd ringing applause when th President shook bands wub President UAer J. Grant, Treident Grant offered the invocation, in which be prayed for inspiration for the President. The audience responded with a deep throated Amen." The President was introduced by Governor Bamberr'r. Btar-Bpangi- ed pack-ag- e, bot have an eve out also for the name ,$v -- -- n |