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Show i LAKE CITY THE DESERET NEWS SALT She ylUir Except Sunday Phon W - 550. M.mber of The Audit Bure a of Oreularipna SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Published Afternoon rth Balt Lake Cite, Cm Wwk Ob Ob On Month T Mr . ... Tear uf paul in Coplea Th. abov rate apply to Cub, Idaho.! Nevada. Wyoming. Oregon. Washington. Colo-- J rado. Montana. New Mexico. California 1and j Arizona; other elate by mail per month. eom- and business Bend remittance Bait to The Deseret munlcatton Lake City. ftah. Ad.lre-- a correspondence for publication to th Editor RATIONAL ADVERTING REPREbENTA- - ....... 4vc Sin. -- Ot-- Nta IlVEi Con. Rothenburg CltyJ.. A Inc No, East 40th ft'reet North M'chqcan Avenue General Motors Building 305 Coca Cola Building Glene Building Atlanta St. Louis Ill Victoria Building! 521 Insurance Exchange Bldg De Moine H. H. Conger A Co. S Third San Francisco Btreetj Entered at the poroffice at Salt Lake vClty as4 second class matter according to Act of Congress. March 1. 179- Tic. Associated Prea la excluaively en titi-- d to the use for republlcation of all sew otherwise cred dispatches credited to Bed la thi newspaper, and also UiaTocSTriaw; AU for herein. republication right published here are also reserved ef special d.spa'-cheNew York 1 Chicago IVetro.t Hannas CKy a 8LT - - JINE LAKE CITY, SPRINGS WASTE;; SIMMER'S 1! Sf- e- M 9 a 1 1 WANT- - ! ; a in precipitation deficiency to nearly half an meh for month of June, and with a this half-spe- nt deficiency of more than four and a half inches for tbe period since October 1, 1823, everybody who knows anything about local water conditions will see cause for uneasi- pe-- S ,V. gucfi shorf-Vg?a lhg bay evep been made up by summer rams, and no one can expect such a phenomenon this year. Since there w no way cff holding over one years surplus to help offset the next years deficit, we 6haII have to worry through as best we can by the exercise of the strictest -- -economy; - Fortunately, it is not usual for the bad example of one dry year to b imSufitated by its immediate successor. ficient unto the day is the evil thereof," and a water deficit in one season doe not involve, except indirectly, any obligation to make up the shortage the next year. When one thinks of the thousands of gallons that run to waste every spring down some of our canyons, and then Hunk how - wonderfully well that wasted supply couldhe used in the hot days of summer, it will have to be agreed that the lack of foresight in preparing for such an emergency is almost childish. The trouble is, we appear incapable of thinking of both aspects of the problem at tbe tame time. When the heated spell is on and the water supply is short, we see no way of securing immediate relief. When the spring sun. is melting the snow at a rate causing it (o turn our streams into torrents, and the waste of water is prodigious, we do not feel the need of any more than we have. We somehow cannot bring ourselves to realize the principle inculcated In the text: Whosoeverjiath, to tom shall be given; and whosoever hath not, from him shall be taken even that which he seemeth To have." WITH u 19T0 17, WHEN FIRES OF RUN GLOW. 1 r. fires- - keeps up the showing made during the spring season, the year is likely to prove a calamitous ore Jet us he averted hope prn.oect-niaThe advent of the dry period throughout the intermountain regain gives trnie'y importance to the warmngs now being sent out by the fore-'r- y department and by conserv alpinists generally According to the president of the American forestry association, smokers are held to be the greatest single factor responsible for the unprecedented number of fires m the East this spring. Is the red demon of destruction that! visit with fierv hreath the local forests during the danger period now at hand, it is f3ir to assume that here a so the disposal of burning tobacco m the wooded sreas will be a chief factor Sure1? it ought not to be necessary further to admonish the guilty, or to beg for future carefulness from, those who are thus held to offer the greatest menace to our counrr pf hundreds and tryside.- Tba burning thousands of acres of tdVesl landsvvaluab!e m timber and as recreational areas; the destruction of the wild life of the woods, the rendering score ef people Immele-- s and jobless, rod reusing fn many instances terrible death these preventable catastrophes clearly come within the definition of idiotic carelessness if not of punishable crime. Can e not in this grave matter be vigilant, thoughtful and sane? ECONOMIC CONDITIONS AND PROSPECTS. AS between an excess of optimism, which was the condition of millions of Americans Iat year, and an excess of pessimism, which ts the condition of a great many today, (here is not much choice as-- a basis of danger. In a general way fco?h ts m their extreme development are unwarranted: Few people, a year ago. seemed to realize (hat (here could be a limit of business expansion. 50 (he possibilities t there was such a limit, as cruel experience has proved. A great many or these same people today have doubts about the country's capacity for recovery. Yet their mistake will be in lime made evident unless all past experience goes for csughL Tba extremists on both sides have view-potn- bees having s btrd lime of it during Ibe months, wittj disappointment on past t either front of tbe picture- - But know the, worst, so fer a the past is con rented, soYrtay we eonfodenliy hope for tbe best. V) far as affect tbe figure., the National That competent-authorit- y, City Bank of New York, in it June teller quotes the old saying that people go Into debt m good times and pay their debts under pressure of bad lime. Jl is again proving its truth m recent and present exerrors perience. A boom period commit whuh liave io be eorreeted and paid for. and th1 period of recession which follows is a period of readjustment and reorganization This is when tbe whole industrial organization slow down To recover sis normal equilibrium. Through that process the Vountrv is pasmg at the present tune; and once the prices is completed, business will be on a vast!y sounder basis than it was a year ago when everybody wag radiant and ahead were rosy in the the property tn u ei'reme . . (ONSIDFK THE QlEEhLY ht.VF. is a long stretch from the wiidvbuffalo or hartobest; of primeval days to the magnificent Hnlstenj or Jersey cow, and man's intelligence was never perhaps more valuably ad ipled to the requirements of sup-lyiIns table nece-silthan when by sucees-iv- e breeding he evolved the great milking animals from their rough and valueless ancestors of forests And plain. Steadily the production of milk per cow has been increased until it would seem that if (here is a lirnrt it must have beeh. reached. As showing one of the latest achievements .In this line, comes now FUarhy. a milk producer owned by R W. Bowman of Lewiston, Utah, with a reeord p f M 5 pounds of butterfat and J.8P7 pounds of milk during May. Various other animals of the herd came close to this figure. Furli a cow as Blacky and others" of her kind ire almost "worth Their weight in gold to their owners and to their community, because m addition to the large suma they bring in during.the year, Hiey set a mark for others to aim at and thus the breeding of high producers. " Report from Cache valley .show that there are numerous herds there, alt working toward higher standards of excellence in milk producing qualities and alt having many specimens of the best bleeds of milkers. The dairymen of that valley are doing a splendid work In this line and receiving fine returns for their efforts. Cache is ideally situated for the 'dairying industry' as it is far above sea level, lias abundance of fresh water, and land well adapted tn succulent pasturage. It is claimed to be one of the most prolific dairy prndui ts in the country, producers are and population considered, and it milk products are justly famed throughout America and many other lands. IT ng LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS AT FILLMORE. TUESDAY -, - 17 ,1930 0 South west ward from Panama, mile off th coast of Ecuador, th Gala.' pa go Islands lie scattered across th equator In great drifts of rock and sand. Fear; mm hr there, but th wild Ufa of th islands unique and un equaled in all the world. Fish as no Isaak Walton avejr dreamed of. doarf penguins, known nowhere else;' flightless cormorants, dudk, gulls, albatross and singing b'rds., the., maim iguana in countless thousands, all of them unique to them sun isis. flamingoes, land iguanas, giant turtle of land-an- d ae, goat end wild live there In their Eden. The tropic a4s birds will alight upon the traveleraholilder. The oea lion will eat out of .hisTohand. 1 preserve this place for future generations several wealthy sportsmen have considered buying the srehipelagd. Yachtsmen anchor there in winter, hut without protection th wild but friendly iifa there soon will be gone. Gifford Pinchot of Pennsylvania suggests the wild life refuge. The Galapagos for Tribune has Urged their purchase by the United States government for a wild and life preserve, a meteorological scientific station, and casual refuge for ships of war and peace. Following this a suggestion comes from C. F. Kettering. head of research for tha General Motors. and E. F. McDonald. Jr., president of Zenith Radio, that a group of wealthy mn might well ronslder buying the Galapagos from Ecuador and Tt would giving them to th nation be a gesture of magnificence and meaning to th United Btatea. A group, say,-- '' of four hundred wealthy sportsmen could buy probablywlth- out great difficulty or sacrifice, Shou.d the problem be too great for private means. Congress eould well afford to duplicate private subscriptions for the purchase. Ccsnion of these islands to America must, of course, be made through treaty with Ecuador, but- - the terms and provisions of the treafy and the purchaso could be .adjusted to the special situation. With Ecuador unquestionably tha gainer by hanrg the Galapagos In our hands, a low price and an easy treaty r should not be hard to arrange. The port of Guayaquil In Ecuador could expect increasing trade and the whole western coast or bouth America would be opened more to American travel and The four hundred men investment who may buy these island will find the venture nationally worth while. A reader ef this column asks m to say what. In my Judgmsnt. dr the major mark of a satisfying religion. I cannot attempt to answer this anquestion until I have asked to other. namely: Satisfying whom? Religion i so Intimately personal that to suadardu It la to steril-I- x 1 - thi!andi and racketeering ameant to by King Fsaturss udicate, lac. I The Senate Friday passed a tariff designed to aid me tanner. Cotton. wheat, oau, ry responded by falling to new low levels. Cottoo dropped unde 14 cent for the first time in three years. The Government effort to wheel prices, wsll meant, may uphold the prediction of wheat men who said. 'Watt until the July crop come In, silk the carry over wheat unsold. The federal farm board reminds you that wheat was lowtr la Juns. 1929, than now. Farmers remember that wheat went from below 1?9 tn June, 1929. to 1 44 for cash wheat one month later. What will It do between now and July? (Copyright. 1M. B) that Multiplied by fifty-tw- o make more tbaa l4u6.6U6.06e 4 year, for Chicago alone. If the figure are accurate, th roooipu of organised ertm in th United States must be greater than thu receipts ef th national govura-men- 1L L diilik to b iogmatlo about religion. In th field of religion my Water stored by the great Don dam tn nurthsra Mexico lions ar hesitant and my af soon be spread over iuu.uuu! s'ior.s of magnificently neh bull Lord Acton once told of two who land. Th dam. now 99 per, unguislyrd London physicians rase one of eetersl were unable to as re upon a cent completed. consultant similar targ projects under way in which tbe were and. in Mexico, which is to b congratThey presented a qualified famil), a highly uraatlsfao-tor- y ulated on th nrgy shown In 10 thereport ' undertaking such work and getting Th family insisted upon a posiit dona. tive diagnosi now unemployed in Thousand physicians said that Jfenry Ford, recently In New Mexico, will find work, thank to Thewertwounable u g've a positive new the they York. "said the farmer problem engineering project. can be solved only by mass pro- That's better than devoting all your diagnosis, but that doubtless fifty could ha found who duction of fati products. time to a "wet r dry" discussion. physicians would give a positive diagnosi He evidently believe although I feel very much the same about Today New Jersey Republicans he did not aay so. that the proud answer to this query farmer, lord of more land than he will nominate for the Senate. The a positivemarke of a satisfying can cultivate economical';, must fight is interesting far from New about tha make room for fanning on modern Jersey, because one ef the canThousands of men can be found didates, Dwight W. Morrow, is the industrial lines. father-in-laand confident of Colonel Lindbergh who will give Many farmers would be obliged 0-- on el Lindbergh, with good, definition of the things that must if Henry Ford 1 would show them mark a true rel'gtoybat I shall taste, has-ke- pt out ef the how. with saying paign. and according to New Jer-Jo- her content myself D. Rockefeller, Jr. has ,sey political experts, bis assistance two things that must mark a re neede'd. ds not his for g.gantlc perfected plans One authority says Morrow will building project in the heart of New York City. Details would be nominated with 50,060 pluraliakT chambers of commerce in ty;, another gives him OO.OOpto 50,000 plurality ABd these are small towns gapp with envy. The plans , involve spending men wl usually know what New $350,600,(100, and will include sev- Jersey will do. BY GROVE eral theatres, gigantic office buildtwo where Greece, thousand a and on Fifth ings, ldng atrip , done more FATE. avenue, left vacant, presumably all the rest of beautified with tree while Mr. hard Tbe savage In the Jungle, the the has world done since then, is barbarian and the Rockefeller make up his mind amazed, the ignorant terrified, by ihmlr af accidents and th hard what to do- with li. wnlch beset their .ves The real estate alone is worth a hailstorm unprecedented in vio- - obstacSs lence. j as tricks of fat over which they $200,000,066. in real money, one In - have no control. There is no such district of MaceGreek a a 22 wer killed, their skulls thing as an accident or a trick of What interest everybody ie the donia, by hailstorms es big as fate. Everything has it causa, fact that Mr Rockefeller's devel- fractured tennis balls. j Everything proceeds from cause to opment will include a radio grand effect in an orderly manner. Most opera house, on that will produce The old Greek religion would of th obstacles w worry about th grandest grand opera not only have tt explained easily, the gods can he removed if we set about refor the benefit of a few that occu- Indignant, disobedient men moving them In an orderly way py boxes and seats but for the with closelypelting them, crying packed anowuans from Worrying aDout benefit of all. the millions within V. unt Some good Chris- about them Is the manner of the reach of radio. tians still believa that lightning jungle, the savage, the barbarian. and other troubles are There are people right around us A Chicago newspaper aaya that piague sent to punish human beings. In- who even eeem to be proud to call city has S 000 epeaksaslet "operatis not a themselves fatalists ing normally and 15 000 other cluding necessarily, many Innocent very intelligent idea. It "outlets for alcohol, drug stores Wall Street went to bed sad cigar stores, also beer, gin and But there wax good new THE REAL THINKERS. 1 flat whisky for , investor that specialize in , Generally speaking, sajs Dr' Me' " $3 j.T5 is th amount of re- standard Oil storks. in th ser-- ; Horry, University of Detroit, It Is wards offered for the murderer of ond quarter .f 1930 Standard Oil not the founders of science, th Llngle. Chicago Tribune reporter handed to it owners $08 5?0 901, great scientists, who oppoae relig- Such an amount seems n,ai1 a, Moroni quarter In the but thir camp follower. haif( change In gangland of FtandaM O'! thinking oJt nothing for biory Jduatd, The moral nwrns te b, if you themaehee accpun propositions tt is conservatively estimated that want to prosper, rrt tha r hat thy wl:hout knowirg the rece'pts of gangsters ment to chon you up Into small from gambling houses, peakaa-cs- . work to byll4 ,,,d ies, handbooks, disorderly houses ith a. pieces- thn 1 , 1 c!r , bn .- d j -- las-we- Twenty Years Ago. Jl'XE 17. 110. Joseph B. Lippincott. a prominent civil engineer of Loa Angeles, Caltf, as- sociated with everal large projects On the coast, was a visitor In Sait Lake Cit, and while hers was a guest of City Engineer Georg F. McQonagle. ligioa that is to be satisfying me. A religion that is to be satisfying to me must give fre expression and fall scope to my particular brand of religious impulse. William James. I think without undue simplification, igarrewed all type. religious experience to They are: once Th experiences of th born twiceOf th The experiences born. n 1 group. belong to th Such religious impulse a I have dramatnot flower from any does ic emotional upheaval or drastic ethical reversal- - Rlnce boy bool ( have avidly clutched at the garments of spiritual value, but 1 have never be struck down pysey blinding light on the road to any Damascus A nlutios that ts 10 express saus'y me must, therefore, iho impulse of th once-bor- n type of spirit. satto be And a religion that is isfying to me must rest upon theory of the universe tnat invesi human existence with value and purpose. I do not feel my religious moorings loosening as I progressively discover th lawfulness of the universe, but I should feel sp.rituallv adrift if I wer forced tn believe that man and nature together constitute a kind of perpetual motion machine' Innocent either of value or purpose beyond its motion (Copyright McClure Xewpaper Syndicate). , to once-bor- The Way of the World iist in - PATTERSON. you contribute to th development of an untold army of potential criminals, Bending vchi!Jren from one school to another ' nor will Jt ever aplv the problem. Th problem of juvenile delmquen cy and incorrigibility lies sole'y with tha parent HEALTH PROBLEM IS SOLVED FOR MANY They Eat Kelloggs ALL- BRAN Daily Constipation is the most common menace to health today. It is ex- tremely dangerous in itself and is the source of many other complicating ailments. There is no permanent relief in pills and drugs. Many of them are dangerous. Kellogga ALL-BRA- N is posi- tively guaranteed to relieve and to prevent both temporary and recurring constipation. If it does not, money will be refunded. Kelloggs is rough-sg- e. And roughage m food helps eliminate the possibility of Pat,on- - NIost modern foods do not Jntmri voughage. Two tablespoon-exa- ct fuikef Kellogg s dai'y i the proper amount. In recurring cases, should be eaten with each meal. It is an essential in any reducing diet. In addition GROWING RESPONSIBILITY. Perhaps the finest truih we can L. E. Jones of Provo was credited T" HE NEWS has pleasure m presenting get across to ourselves if we can with catching the largest trout since the get it across is that with the in the following from Judge Daniel creased control of our circum The f sh, a openirg of the season Concerning that period in Ttah s stances And our world native (rout, was taken from he Pro o Summer e is a on vention. machines, and ...oderV lodoesn't pbeo people, but tell Reds; which history when the territorial capital was tr a to out sun of the river after shine group of voters it Is tryti.g to "scare methods give us, there comes the long fight, and weighed keep cated at Fillmore and when sessions of Ihe wished were afto 7 4 able they into La. they duty of feeling a much exactly pounds when drgssed. ford last winter. a a territorial legislature were held there. Judge greater responsibility for the ue ail these facilities. We should of Hard times are in those which Ground waa broken for the construcHarrington quotes from the journal of his Maybe the idea that one Ameri- People keep on driving a good car feel heavier responsibilities toward tion of the Tel.ow Pine Mining company can ship could lick two of Eng- despite our life and limes than our grand- -j fattier, the late. Hon. Leonard E. Harr mg! on the out on land's was inspired by watching, th new raodeL radiator cap father did because w have so KeUoegsALUBRANcortauisiron! mill of 50 tons daily capacity in the of American Fork, one of the most sagacious, Sir Thomas Llpton. much mor opportunity, ,0 much the bfood builder. It is tha ongiraf Goodqprings district, and It was anuseful and experienced of the commonnounced that grading for the railroad "proved effective by The moral clear. is a If Bishop lawmakof wealths stalwart group millions and recommended by pioneer to the mine was nearly completed can t collect In Wall Street, there s phj. stcians. ers, and whose statements concerning the no hope for an ordinary layman. events of hi Ime can he depended on for Kelloggs an of has Chief Police bam M. Barlow of apAnother way to keep from grow-- i petizing flavor. Est it with milk or Fa'ti Lake City, returned from Helena, accuracy. is to assume that the other in-- 1 old of anche in tng Juvenll :ream, cereals and delinquency fruit Mont . where he attended the annual driver has ordinary horse sense. to the courts. Bo says one who in 6onps and in cooked foods. juices, Y our Editor Deseret Sts convention of the United Commercial know Judge Lueila grocer has When he says all modern girls ought to In an Interevmg lllu'oraled article In the in the red- more There be was Travelers for' chil- He are means he1 over who the councilor. might North, 7 a misdate appears respect that petters. presides News grand June of pat Saturday package. Made by Kellogg law if its $200-- a month agents doosn t rat high enough to dren'e court in a New York stall in Battle Creels. aid"was as to the number of sessions of the legislature with a gold badge town. On wonders. Ay the way. buy cheaper cars and quietly ciate with aov other held at the State House at Fillmore. their surplus if there ought not to be mere woFrom the Journal of the late L. E Harord was rened here of the marThe objection to ebvibus aetion men on the bench in Jireentle rington. who for many jears represented Utah the !n before Oakland. in a movie is that the dumb can court and courts of domestic reday riage and VVasatch counties in the Council of the Calf, of Fliiott t law on former- - a member set the point and explain it to lations Judge North, Speaking to Legislature, it is shown that the first session, 1.200 New Jersey club women. their suffering escorts. to wit. that Of 1855-iS- , was he.ld at Fillmore, of The News editorial ata'f ard M.ss ' say ; the second one, that of 1&5S-5was also held Mice M'lier, a pepu'ar vouns woman of ALL-BRAN When these prophets say prosThere Is a responsibility that there the sessions of those da a being held cakland perity Is around the corner they must be accepted with children, annually, and not biennially., as now) and thejj in Texture and Improved around the corner and that is giving them ihe proper must mean third session, that of 1855-5the last one, wlas 4. a here the filling stations are. kind of home life. Fair there,'1 and , Taste held there bosa Of this last session the Journal states; miglil be Then, to, you can tell tbe eipeUdJ Tliej are probably the The president of the Council not being presby tbe cents on bis beets where ent I was chosen president pro tem thereof. first to be approached by she's, scifemers; the desk rubs. When a quorum of the legislature arrived, it but lhe arc in most cases by do means waa deemed advisable to adjourn the sitting to How many great realists, cever tictinis. If it is not their practics to Salt Iike Cit), which was accordingly done.' having learned to write their nasty it appears by the said Journal that th iooi before tliej leaji as long a the clergy- thoughts, remain mere village gas-si- p was held in Balt men do, when they do lake the time to annual session of 1857-5Lake City and ,not at Fillmore, but three sessions in all were held at the Slate House, look they jean the prospect more critically. 60 the carrot contains th grat as above yhe last one being that of 1858-5vitamin A. It a Just another proof noted. Respectfully that true greatnaas has darned simPkbblNG OF A NOBLE BIRD. D HARRINGTON ple tastes. Safi Lake City. June 15 Bird lovers wi.l read with rcaret of Civilization makes life more Inthe pacing of another specimen of Amer- tricate. After five thousand year THE --SUKER" LISTS. need a of development, women ican wild life, the heath lien A reepnt surrevealed that there n but a single heath greater variety ot vey TTHEIR proverbial shrewdness apparently hen armal, in extence The heath hen, Americanism: K does not Racing through prevent lawyers from being a smaller and ruddier Teptiea of the prairie Europe behind a guide to get culamong the easiest prey of sellers of worth- rhicken of the western plains, once was so ture; living in ignorance of the less securities. As a group they are rated common in the eat that laborers and sert American wonders that astonish vants stifOilated m their contracts that it European! by those iwho travel the highways of finance was nnl to be at meals more often AJ Capone Is at least learning 'pred The as third in gullibility, beinc surpassed only than twice a week state of Massathe victim feels whtn a group millionaire widows has and by more than ?ino.i0 In its how clergymen. But chusetts is determined to "get him. t save the bird but lias lost it fight. thy are different (0 (he other two groups f.ght for the b rd lias pa ed Government plans another drive sp ro of all that Hujiiat' they accept their fate, with philo- human could do in its behalf. The sophic silence, and can rarely be induced to passing agencies ef the heath lien is declared to be utter a word as to the manner in which npe ef th greatest tregedie, of American Ono would think wild life Zanesville Times-bignthey were victimized. their training and tendencies would cause ' BROUGHT IT WITH HIM. them to be keen in prosecution of the 6 sbarpsters. especially since they could Descendants of Wolfert Gerrette Van look after their own case and thus take no Enuwentmven latelv celebrated the three is risks of throwing away good money after hundredth anniversarv of his areival in bad. But they appear more ready to pqckel America. Y'nu se. made a name for on, their loss than to attempt recovery, since himself. San Antonio News. the latter course, might involve humiliating t, IATEHRJFIFD YOITH. confession; besides being painfully reminded of the dictum that a lawyer who argues The government ha found out that his own casa has a fool for his client. w'8(ermlins covitam vi'amipj, but even thai As to the millionaire'Widow class, will not make gmall btfs glo.i eating them PAY BILLS ON THE-Ot- !l Charleston Past about a thousand in the numbering OR AS AGREED country, and said to offerdhe least NAGGING THE IIOLESk- sales resistance against the wiles of A good way to reduce the w h'g'at surnt dubious the salesmen securities experienced observers contend that fpwer of plus would be for Congress to pass a law illegal to cut hole iq doughnuts. them belong op anybody's sucker list" than makingll I --The Pathfinder. t dlar-ringt- on PARAGRAPHS ALL-BRA- ALL-BRA- . ALL-BRA- ALL-BRA- ALL-BRA- ALL-BRA- N tnd-yree- n asso-wou- ld kind-ban- k dMP VV I IT ?, 00 8 111 jjrvNrv al. YOUR CREDIT RATING h. BASED -- PROM1 i p-- JUKE flow to Bay the Galapagos. . Chic so Tribune. i - f |