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Show J -- TLLk Diar.KihT TiiUKSDAY WSWB " with President Ceolidye and with what he regards as of paramount importance for the nation at the present Ume. ed PhAn Waa. IS. Salt Lake City. Utah. Publtolreg Afternoon fc.ctpt Sunday. Member of Audit BurdOu of Circulation. fna Wek t- - ' V I 2 t I T RATES. .SUBSCRIPTION , THE COLONEL WOULD t .u Opa JJ "V.:. On Tear , I Cnl Single Copim Tb above rates apply te Utah, Idaho, Nevada, and Wyoming; other stats by mailp pw . month, $1.06. xuoMa were ever spoken than NO truerof Eugene B. Palmer, Salt Lake business man, when he dec la red Wednesday YouChamber of .C&imnerce. ' cant stop the progress of Pali Lake. Mr. Palmers talk heralded the opening of a - f75,000 for the purpose campaign to raise 1 Heni rtmlltaiicrf .4 bu.ln. of advertising Fait lake and Utah to the Utah. to The Dmrt Stoi. Balt Loire City. world, by pointing out the xanfed resources Addrere corrcK,diQ for publication 1 of this section. He went to considerable s. Tb Editor. pains to call Sttention to pointe of history in FOR ETGJS OFFICES: the growth of some of the larger cities of , London. Trofolyor Bier, Jfothumborlond Aa. the cast, and showed. conclusively that such Pari. Boulevard d. Capuclne. cornor Peo do 1Opero. growth! in the mam, was dile more to the tefure.' Uiv. ; ' 1 5- - Berlin don ,..11 Cntor Hr LDi -- Pokla- is Ptareo Mitn"otti Rq2" Now Coplo. of Tho 1 Itert f thoao offices and ylwtor. or Coo Hunton WooilfflM lne-- . I i t- 1 1- I t. Undent bpo will bo on too y,e Invltod to rail. whir h these cities natural adxantages The residents of thee cities, he pneed. became boosters lor their rpspec- - declared, tixe towns and it was not long until people Repraaantatlva New TorkAdvertising Ml Ith A City -n-n116 N. Walla Street began to pour in from all sections and added ..a 111 Lightnar 10$ Victor ... ! - "England ! d r r t far-aw- ay iod iae c--f ,r - J ta-io- Chns-tma-- tit anJ0 t Prec-deo- a- trar.-pf-r- - -t -- "? .' i'VlmUh'tU'mani e 1 jt " j pad y, f.-- r xieb-om- . ' - -- -- T KoFmUud in i. : itiuua by Btor TY , ; . hP - , J The Rockefeller institute fights disease in China and has undertaken the gigantic and noble task of eiim-- 1 Inatmg yellow fever entirely by killing it off, once and for all. in places where It is endemic.Rockefel- For that service, the lers will be remembered when men shall have long forgotten the trifwas ling fact that Mr. Rockefeller the world's richest men. Today England decides for or against protection and free trade, Lloyd George and Baldwin. Lloyd George tells Englishmen that London grows more quickly then New York because England has free trade. That may be. although New York has dons fairly well considering the age of the two cities. And what is good for London, chief cannot feed city of a country that its inhabitants (s aot neoessartly good for New York, chief citv ofen- s nation that could eaai feed the tire population of the world. Our problem Is to keep our work and money here In the family, keep our people b us prove our kind ot t government a success and gradually improve that 0government. 0 It doesn't seem likely that the British will vote against David I Lloyd Georre or radically change their established policy of free trade. You wtll soon know as the vote comes In. Llod George predicts an election la his favor by a million ,009 0 0 0 and fc' knows Britain. Sir Wllham Mackenzie. Canadian railroad builder, dead at 74, belonged to the old school of real railroad builders like HU1 and Harriman. Modern railroadmen, that buildup combinations with the tlckernd build up rstes with the assistance commission poor the old kind. - Yh Verdict of South Dakota, '.WITH it Fiske Com-Py- .) not seen the Interns-- , WHO hexlivestock shew now ope. to Chicago ku mined something more interesting than tha opening ef Congress. Yesterday veu might have seen the "Great polled short bora bnU Royal Ihe' first Choice prlaa and the prise winning steer a quarter, weighing n tone and e. e Two sous of Royal Cholea Sultan, "each a year old, tor la tha straw near him. One sold for $1.100. the other for Mhd. The thousand dollar steer bad been nursed by two cow a one beside hto own mother up to the day of the, show. Tha other, smaller, aurmed by hto mother i vlto no euptomeatory uuree. eiy, What chance has a calf, or a human baby, with-nnursing at all ? V thara wara no Amour tha abla Caraguia. MrO T. HaalUar-tmaaar er of tha stockyard, should attend to that. Lambs that hava Caracul rams for fathers ara bora jet Mack and ' Caracul providing excellent curlyeven when their mothers are for. anow whits Caracul raising should ta easy." and rofitabla In moan tain regions. There are no MmulefsotM hogs In the swine department. Pig men say tha vmlefoot-i- a a failure and it is all non sens about that hog being Immune ta hoc and cholera. This wtll surprise corGary, of tha Steel hia grieve Judge He at mulefoot raisee poration. that long Island place, convinced hog chmmra cannot reach them, and means ta all writer by adtesrtnie from Jersey Duroc to mule change foot. You forget ai! about politics, war sea freight rates, finance whenofyou eleven that wonderful collection thousand pure bred animals and the earnest men that breed them, concentrating on food production. ThejTare the happy, really interested men of this world. They deal with realities that do not disappoint 'them. a a John D. Rockefeller. Jr, says health and disease must be handled as international affairs Spanish influenza taugr?TUfl after thia war what other plagues have taught ua after other ware, that disease knows no country and despises distance, travelling as Hr. Rockefeller says along the trade route The Rockefeller institute has et. a good example to the governments of the world, spending millions to conquer disease, not only in this country, but in foreign lends whence plagues start on their travel SURah,"-winaef- Face to Face Minnie Maddem super-champi- j ' Decides Today. A MY AkTWVk (Copyright, mi, Tea Nights ta a and sang Come Home, Dear Father, She played with' Come Home.". Laura Keens, the actress whs appeared at the Ford Theatre oa the night when "Lincoln waa shot, in the last days of her life. She even played little Eva in Uaote Tom's Cabin- ,- as long aa her dresses xronid permit, having to draw in the long legs of early girlhood she cuddled in Uncle Tom's lap in the last performances. She b. portrayed - characters which have made a tremendous draft on her versatility, from regulation melodrama to the most complicated pay. cholofical plays of her time. Her roles hare been closely allied to literary triumphs. "Multifarious Interests absorb the attention of Mrs. Fiske. said Mr. Fisks, pointing to s pile of correspondence. Protection to the cattle on the ranges, the association for tha conservation of food anim- to. crusade against tn Mexico, Spain and South American countries; helping Mr. Hawkee with the Italian Society in the Interest of dumb animals In th, marble quarries near Naples, distributing letters and leaflets translated in story form on the same humane theme, in the baaaars of Persia; in fact, s little help to everybody In any part of the world Who will help to further the cause of humaneness to dumb animals. . There to siso a little adopted baby in Brooklyn who cooed her response to the Sho feels very loving caress of the kindly y tempting offers ghat whatever she has to at spirit of Minnie lladdern Flake, offer she w she to give it all te I At her home or on tbo stage, or America.1 , Jin ths retreat of the Adirondack Plrofewlonal Jealousy plays no Camp, the genius of Minnie Mad-paIn the make up of Mrs. Fiske. dera Flake shines wbh the as to the outstanding cast tones of a etar; an Intellectual force In which she had appeared, shr re- In her play world and a powerful piled, decisively. "In Leah Kieach-- ! Influence outside of the theatre, one na. It was a notable cast with can heartily agree with the eminent Mrs George Arliss, John Mason, Charles writer who naa declared. Cartright. William It. Mack and Fiske to more than an octree'' She many oiheba whose names are now is one of America's ten great wom- Flashlights of Famous People A Real Railroad Man. He-kne- w the-larg- 1923 fear-roo- m Chicagos livestock Show. The Rockefellers and Health. . When men make something that they need and call k--a memorial or a monu- ment to some one that la dead there tho proceeding to usually la reasoQvJn sse at least a little of abgurdltT; for call, lot a bridge or a road a memorial does not make It one, and when the calling la done merely to facilitate the raising cl money- - that otherwise would he hard to If rkpulslve aa well as vet the-th- ing absurd. These thoughts are suggested by the establishment down on Long Island of a bird sanctuary" which la to bear the name of Theodore Roosevelt In this cate the "'memorial" will be in every way right and, far from criticising the founders of the new domain Where birds wilt b cafe and happy, one must give them, the warmest praise. The idea is congroue with tha name, and nobody can have the slightest difficulty In realizing how Colonel Roosevelt would have liked It how Interested he would hax'e been In making It n success if Its purpose ' had been to keep alive the memory of some other man aa fond of ' . Jbird aa he wag He wrote much .boot birds talked much about them hod In all his walks and journeys they were --the objects of h!s constant and' eereful aUentloa them s they are known by few except the professional ornithologists. Thia memorial, therefore, to In every way fitting, but it to safe to assume that If th Colonel could make the dedicatory speech he would add to his prajse n plea for dothg to some extent in many, many other place, what to to be done here eo well and systematically. He well might have said that every - suburban yard, the grounds around every country homestead and every wood and field oyer which supervision can be exercised should be, like thia a sanctuary for the birds places where their lives wonldbe safe and whence the more dangerous of their enemies are banished. To exist and prosper, birds require little more than to be 1st alone, to be guarded from cats and boys with guna, to be provided with water for drinking and bathing, and helped a little in Winter when wind blow cold and food to ocarce. AU this to simple. It costs next fo nothing except sense and . kindness of heart, and its rewards are great. Bid. Bid. their mite to tire rapidly growing sentiment' ' $M Constitution Bid in their fax or. Of course, some, of these Victoria &d. J. - he admitted.- - ttsofeed natural ad$ cities, PeU4 and CMf JhpatW" Representatives. but few of them had anything to Do Argelea ..... , Htgftns Bldg vantages Fan Francisco Holbrook BhMfr compare with the advantage offered resi-of this state. - Ealtfe4 t tbo poatefffea 9t ftiIakrdtT.0 dentsMr. a second rlaag intu or according to Ac the subject from PaJnier attacked Congress. March I. the proper angle and was well able to subTh Associated Pro a la exclusively entitled stantiate every argument presented. H:s talk to tho dm for republieation of 11 sows dl was crowd in attenconvincing to patchoo credited to it or aot otherwise or edited In this newspaper, and also' tha local news pub- dance' and gaxe those engaged in the camlished herein. AU rights for repoblicatloa of paign ample reason for exerting every posspecial diapatchea here are aio reserved. sible effort to raise the money. Nothing ha 1023. DECEMBER 6. SALT LAKE CITY. been done in thia state in years more effective in advertising the resources of the state, THE MESSAGE OF THE PRESIDENT. than the campaign that has been carried on bi? at no other time in the history of during the past year. In many of the Utah Perhaps has the message of a Presu papers of the country the praises of redent been anticipated with greater eagerness as a state of almost unlimited natural, conthan the message which was delivered by sources, have been sung in glowing yet have President Coolidge today before the joint servative terms, and many visitors result- - Despite any as a been attracted here session of the Senate and the House of is this statements to' the contrary. Salt Lake Representatives., - The reading of are wealth men and of showing growing message will give both the friends and the critics of the President a clear understand- their faith in this section by establishing industries of various sorts; and more such ing of his policy and principles on the major industries will come as business men learn questions now befdrd the American people. more of the conditions which exist here. The language of the message is admirably While tiiereTiaxe been many drives Tor ' clear and concise. The President speaks in none carries with TWENTY YEARS AGO short sentences, ' and leaves no room for funds, here as elsewhere, which attaches to it the quite significance . doubt as to his meaning and purpose. From the Flics ot th. Itoeeret News As pew His address opens with a brief but sin the campaign now about to begin. come here and new industries are people in to President which DECEMBER , 103. cere tribute Harding reference i made to President Harding's established, all residents of this section are Barney Oldfield, formerly a Balt Eaka so all are orjthould be interested bicycle rider and who later became kindness, his humanity, his greatness, bis benefited, ' ' character, "and his. work which has made in the effort being maw to win favorable champion automebiltot of the world, ar. nxed 1 Salt Lake from Los Angeles on consideration. With the beginning justice more certain and peace more secure. hi way east. is little reason inade, there already a will time this Space permit 'pt only Dr. R-- , & Law, an old time mining should not continue Lake Salt why brief reference to some of the outstanding to mining men engineer weU known to grow by leaps and bounds and become the to of the With message. regard principles throughout the state, was In Salt Lake ' and of the otherwise, gem, commercially our foreign relations it is the Presidents from Bows, Idaho. Ha waa' heavily in. tereeted in the Marshall Lake Mining view that we should be guided by two prin- great intermountain region in which it A little civic spirit of the proper district. ciples the avoidance of permanent political nestles,manifested in the proper way, will which-woulThe third and last reading ofa aeries sacrifice our in- kind, alliances by Bishop Orson F, Whitney of hto and - lhopeaceful settlement do much to "Keep Em Cornin. to use the dependence famous poem EUaa, waa given before battle cry of the campaign now on. of controversies between nations. the teachers apd students of the Brigham States should .. maintain The United Young University In Provo. THE CHRISTMAS CAROLERS. and membership in the Hague Tribunal, t'ncle Joe" Cannon, speaker of the should .seek the creation of a tffermanent house of representatives, resenting what be deemed an insult from John Herman world court of justice,,' TAB Toward Men which was J. Schulte!, chairman of the executive sung of Diplomatic relations with Russia should committee of the Knights of Labor, as'soon.as that government old is to be proclaimed aain in song by the summarily ordered him from the speak- The Christmas of Carolers thu city. spirit the - comes .to recognize er s room at the CapltoL sanctity of interof the Christmastime is the spirit of gong and national relations. Wiliianr Henry Welsh,. once private adoraDebts Our foreign dabU should not be gift giving, wiring The gratitude and secretary to James Buchanan president for the hearts of the tion glad people of canceled but should be adjusted in accordof the United Haiefc waa reported dead ance with the principles adopted for the tidings of great joy" which came.to men on rat his home in New York City at the ' age of 77 years. the Christmas day of that century. British debt. beautiknow to that the is It Fiscal Condition sTha President holds President Anthon H. Lund delivered pleasing a lecture in the Twenty-eight- h ward that our main problems are domestic, and ful old custom of smgirg the Christmas meetinghouse' before a large gathering, a first requisite Carols On Christmas eve is finding a conthat financial stabildy Ha subject wax "'Missionary Work in of sound F5vrm-The Budget System stantly widening observance in the cities of the Holy Land." is the meet effective system of retrenchment. America. This cutom has prexa.led for A rbdaet-izuartUM made in national and many years in the town and cities of Eng- i shed for our own liberty in the local Lifting .the burden of taxa land but in this country it had fallen mb j Polish he atrngth which millions of Poles there if3! tion i the greaiaat service that Congre? disuse until about ten years aeo when iiontrihute to the character of our tan roler the wuntry, and the paramount came a spiri.ua! awakening which caused a,?jnp in tj!e present, they have earned the custom. of revival tr.e hair. the . right lo our recognition and support. To a orxan.zed band- - -- ane the' heir efforts for a reunited country,-fo- r The U.tf uw Lat been of great benefit! I'O'Tnment, for an ordered Iiber- lo the and aacuid cot fee revised by Cbrtn.as Lar,ia is about Uw Luxtis. . . tiie people.of Masaehusetts desire to cii.es of our Iin-- l and thousands of homes m ify the pre-'r- .their full and substantial approbation. give The .M -- r.jiYct t should be trans-jo- ur Calvin Coolidge. city were xiM'ed by tbe-- e sweet , oja Uarol ferred aa toes, te poai4iU to private owner- -! supers. The Salt Lake RANDOM REMARKS. ship and bcc.l he managed u to provide j Society last year sent out some 30) groups and adequate, cf singers into every section of the ci'y adequate y j ar;d The man who gets rattled generally has before every window in which the a: service to t candle of invtat:dr, burned the singer la screw Mise somewhere. With regari .io the borne people are 0 refined that they i.- V-oto be thex brought the Chri-fnisays that spirit m s"Pg. to having common sense. a;far object U i planned for- this year to increase only feasible method of i.cta.ijr.r a' man's feelings won't help Harrowing the talion and adjust,! g ri- . of smg-rs- . and to th'" end the 'toward cultivating h.s friendship, 1ume people impress you as though at once a rcor- - ;earols e being taught m all the citv schools! Congress should ri tot. all of iron'smttfe fire dim gamzation of the rate structure for freight- - ; "jWai Prohibition should be made effective in onras iza. on. Tio-rgreat h- - oii and jIJoner , r later takes one tiy the hot end. sweetness m the old sons that tell of thej A blessing in disguise often has a hard Christina?, time. Thev voice Hie p. e and ' lime proving its identity, Environment a au important thing m gratitude and exaltation or the great heart! .life. Hour and water in a china pitcher is ", . xnent of nations! Activity ! as as to make it humanity in a pir.t that is a tho sidewalk it Pituc; in a p&il onBoston worthy of a sepirate department and 'a rare itself. One cannot hear, Silent Night,' bdlr tickers paste. Evening I"? Tn the "World. Harkt the Herald IranscripL place in the cabmeL All veterans should be fully prov ided j Angels S.ng. It Came t pnn fie Midnight ,.,J FELICITATION. Tor but no soldiers bonus should be granted. Tar.' T.tr A.i On Jud. as I 'lam', au-mUpn-i- t .iculiure Simple and direct inethods1ithout bemc refre-hw, th-- ' : r - , Tail, a deeper of a! dude' p, , ;d. an i 1 put into operation .by the farmer himself j me KSSSly by lo ones fellow are the only real sources of hfdp for I caat forget tUr " au There should be a heartv -- culture. The farmer must, however, be re-- 1 to the That I am II ' Hexed by a reduction of national and loeallcall Ur volunteers group leaders and- fulks with fanie, a " taxation, and freight rates.qn farm products linger?, and everydiome should the " Carolers. The be reduced. eandle ;n the window will be'e theTx'eiad-An- d must The farmer must organize yebTm gad on business principles. The wheat acreage tH lo them to tome and smg the songs' m That Myselfl must be reduced and diversification in ,hat bear the meap of hope and faith and1 so I choice to all the children of the earth. light to step Pd the farming must bedtime" more universal. Thelloxe . ",l? government interference in the disposition! ,themU?nyfb!l ' SYMP TH1 FOR POUND. i of exportable wheat- - not favored by thej Excuse Me, please! ' j President. , 1'te the plaudiU well enough, 'The Monroe Doctrine must be maintain- - U- !lrnp t P''111'1 v"th ' The spare cash some of them have got M. It is our duty to protect ourselves In!Ubrave people, unuaunied by woes nobody know- sof, But whrt-t- W ! idealism want we and a vision. maintainingps'i.t-i, oppression., thiprol;ction miry use'a!ram4t a of has coihe for more practical The tune tripfe despotism. Amerra ha? a peculiar m- - And ao. Thanksgiving here I voice-Fo- r of moral power. The spiritual forces of the ' ,vpi!i Tile.rV? fancy, no Iranjoys and woes that go with Me! world make all.iU final detcrminaliona sient for liberty. Contemporaneous There's none, of all oq this old. Ball, -j and Frank hn"wHh Burke raheT. Re; v M. L. UPTON. ... . 8m'8 Id make everyone "betler acquaint-jMS- f ffiki!' 'b, uS Detroit . Kansas City Atlanta bt. Leuts -- v From Now Tork Tlinea. , 6 TODAY BE DLL1GHTED KEEP EM COM $NV DECEMBER b -- fv the Republican choice to Cool-- , Inj id re. the Democratic to McAdoo. the Farmer NotiPirtiMn, to JUfol and lette beatlnx Hiram Johnson Ford ta interesting, but ha litt meanlnr At tbl moment, politicand ian say tho odds favor Coolid before McAdoo Thre a lone next June. 0 0 0 will be no Nobel Peace Ther The manufac prize award this year.Nobel whoieft turcr of dynamite. hi great fortune for prizes of various kinds literature, acienca. peace, etc., established the committee which announces that noona this year has done anything worthy of a peace - prise Perhaps tha committee hasnt heard of Mr. Bok. who offered ona hundred thousand do.iars for a peace plan or of former president Wilson a interesting statement (hat the United States baa proved itself "baza and cowardly" by refusing to Join the 'League of Nations. 0 0 0 Tha worlds richest mins of magnetic iron has been discovered in Ruasia Nobody knows what wealth is hidden 4n that gigantic country with its gold platinum, precious stones, coal, forest and above ail, inexhaustibls supply f patient is human labor. The iron discovery will make the United Ptatea think about recognisvery seriously. Discoving Russia, ery of a gold mountain would put the recognition through with a rush. We respect profound' whatever has cash value. 9 9 Senator Masabeau would make Frenchman every Ineligible to public office unless he naa at least three children. That 4a to help the birth rate. The children may be adopted. Whether it ta wins to force men or women to become fathers and mother la doubtful. The important thing te tha quality of tha child that depends on the spirit In which, it la created and the welcome it gets from Its parents, especially from Its mother. 9 Daniel Pgare was arrested at Chicagos Guardian Angel church for acting as undertaker without a license It doesnt seem Important who buries a man once he la deed. More important are bogus licenses issued to bogus doctors, and the other doctors. Ignorant In spite of regular licenses, that raw supply the undertakers with their material. J Tee I do not believe la tar system on the staxe- - Shake-pear- e. the master, decreed la the beyiaiiinr'The Play to the sold Minnie --Maddeni FlakeThine, to me to toetotvs tones, maklnr an affirm'-t:v- a yag amphaatxa a conclusive no. Cominq from the tips of a preeminent star, and one of the (rest women of her time, an actress-sta- r who has been a star lonyer than anyone else in the American Theatre, indicate, th, supreme devotion of Minnie Maddarn Fisk to . her art. -- Of course Interposed Mr. Her rtoon Grey Flake, her distinguished whose work stands out in hto contributions to the history of tho modern drama, Mrs Flake recognizes tha commercial necessity of the etar system, but she has never compromised a principle to vain popularity.- Bom tn Now Orleans little 'Minnie Maddern began to have a stage following at the age of three, making her debut in Little Rock, Ark., in Richard III as the Duke of York, tho youngest actress ever appearing in a Shakespearean role. Her father had a group of theatres in the South with headquarters at New Orleans and Little Rock was the place where he decided to launch a career for hie little daughter in the realm or stageland. Later, he won her place as s star in her own right dt the age of fifteen: In the several times I have talked with Minnie Maddern Fiske, I have found that It to next to impoM'ble to get her to talk about b ireelf. In despair, I took Mr. Harrison Grey Flake to the eide end plied him with a few questions With Mrs Fiske. spoke her manager-husbanThe lines come last. She always goes first into what to anterior to the play. In fact that which to not written in the play. Sho studies the feeling of the play, the history, the people, the customs everything to be found concerning the period of the play. In "Vanity Fair she played Becky Sharp." her favorite characterization of all of the plsye in which she has appeared. It was "mad to order" for her and 1, far from "Vanity Fair" aa euch in book form. With Langton Mitchell ehe worked a long time to put the real over the message of Thackeray footlights. She went through the same construction with Tees of the D'Uber-vlllexpaining new fame for Thomas Hardy's novel. It waa in this play that Mrs. Fiske had a great thrill. On the first night, st the end of th third act, the aud writer-hu,ban- d. d. ," bull-fighti- eighteen-monthe-o- mstern-strongl- rt j rad-Ask- ed i -j eminent- - - en. The repertoire of Mrs Fiske cov- (Copyright,-- til. by Joe Mitchell ers a wide range. She played in Chappie.) Editors Note: Send tea names of rear favorite fa nines folk now living lo Joe Mitchell Chappie. The Attic. Waldorf-Astori- a Hotel, New York City. Tbc readers of this ye per are to nominate for this Hall of Fame. 1 YOUR OTHER SELF. There's naught to fear It people aaeer. Just try to be e ntn! Work off mistake; Endure the aches. And pay the best you can. Don't give to hate If a cruel fate Has. stored lnwost .soul! . 'Tls nature's jaur , test; 'Tis for the best; And halps you near your goaL Inside of you A heart rings true. A bigger, better man! Throw out your chin; Go out to win; He'll do the best be can J. Hammond in Forbes Magazine, THE TIME TO CHARGE DIRECTION. If you wnnt your Ufa to 'trover again you think you would do much differently than you have done. At the name time you do not chance the coarse yes are following et the present time Ten years hence ere you going to look back at the present time and rerret that you did not make charges? If you knew you ure steering indirectly, if you knew that nn effort on your part would make your life more worthwhile, why not he guided by the good Judgment which now Ja prompting you? You know you dre not making or taking opportunities to put our- relf ahead nd are not mak's as much of yourself aa (N. Y.) You realize that you should create v. yourself, jui f1)! oimcrtnriive MId A tLCCKY MMBER effort arl telf- on your part. denlal d ou do not you here, my poor want to make the exertion "Why are friend? naked the minister who wn Why live so that your last years will be vain regret visiting the priaon. I you did not Tm the victim of th. unlucky Just because 1s no reason Jfu r. said tha prisoner. should add another day why number IS, of ;he "Indeed! How thatT when a wrong direction, change and on judr. would "Twelve juror Houston amply trpay. zlr." Ranch Review Chronicle, you-mig- 1 When Company hospitality is best the and food of kind right displayed by serving what could be nicer more enjoyable than Calumet Tea Biscuits? Raised high and light baked to just the right crispness. Whether its company orMjust the familyTvhether it's biscuitv pies, cakes or muffins, palatable and Yvhoiesomd foods can always be economically assured when Calumet is used. The last spoonful is as good as the first. Remember the name O&flMET Tha Economy BAKING POWDER A pound can of Calumet coo tain full 16 ox. Some baking puajen com in 12 ox. can iattead of 16 ox. B, mm yo got . can. pound when yon want it. '9 yee-terd- XAKIYU MONET, "Still printing paper marks". -'"YSS.' fepilea the Berlin official. "So long aa tourists keep buflng them aa souvenirs wa might as well the slight buk steady profit." New York Times. take wulitowjw JU a . EEST T TEST EVERT INGREDIENT USED OfFlCIAHT APPROVED BY U. 5. FOOD AUTHORITIES Sales X1 ld Times as Much as That oS Any Other Crtad |