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Show ' si . THE DESEHET I I that the proud etty of Ootham is waxing in Its effort to defeat tbe proposal. ' It might he noted that the only oppositon to the undertaking that bu thus far material- hz Deseret ! Bldg- EPt - Bondar- - Pa bltsbed nallr gmi. Weekly.of CIrcolatlea. Member of Audit Bureau . "'' One week, One month One year , t .11 I CeaU ... fc tdeha Nevada Single The above ratea apply mama. and Wyoming:' ether atatee by mall, per M. 1 swrjwNr -- to. & tur tot Ina, Woodman. Cone H unton Advertising Bepreaentatlva. ith ,Av New York fits, ".- Chtcaao. :z W. Detroit. HI lhtner Bid- Victor Bldf.. -- Kaneae City. I Bid. s ' Atlanta. Zl ConstitutionPen Fra nr taco, Hobart Bid , tit C'nloo td taue Bid. Idke City, no Fntered at the poatofflco oftoBalt Act- of Coareoa, - second cle.i matter accord! March , 1879, - - entitled to The Asaoclated Press la ofexclusively all the ue. for repobllcation credited fKtVle credited to It. or not otherwise publlahed and alao the local -- harvAVtH- rtaht of repwbHratl.oa.of- - apeclal die? reserved. patches here are alao Vl BALT LAKE CITY.- - APRIL 20, ATHLETES AND PROFESSORS I th ' outburst of ' criticism ixintt alumni tor tbs professional strain In col-l- o athletics thoro Is danr of forgetting a group that hu always had mort power to chaek abuaao of this sort than it hso ordinarily osardsod. Wo mean the faculty. The raqoireroent that In order to engage In an athletic eonteat a student must maintain at certain standard of scholarship wv a long time In being adopted. When it was adopted it was not invariably enforced with n degree of rtrtotneeo that would JusUfy tie ' between tho parallel .frequently Unbending profeosor and the devil-macare alumnus. Defenders o( the college as at hart a roa human being have n selected a ernes bin argument In failing to cite tho etruggle that has agitated count! eee prof moo rial breaxt as ths pro i feesorial eye hag acsened tbe latent theme p or report handed in by the young Hercu-lo- o upon whom the hopes of tho college are centred la tho crucial football game of tho season. We are far from ssglng that Insistence Opon.a passing mark In.- - -- udent'e courses would automstlcaly MU the spirit of professionalism in college athletics A bright fellow pf athletic prowess could cold. blood edir - compare tbe Inducement held out to him by reprasgn 1st Ives of various colleges and select the Institution of learning that moat appealed to him. a flrm adherence to lh TequIre-nvsof a respectable amount and quality ef scholastic Work undoubttdly tends to , discourses the man ftsho r- -- - -- ! first. It also tends to thwart the efforts of .officious alumni. What. 1 the use .of persuading the best runner at X Academy, to matriculate at T University. If hs is unable to meet tho prelimlos athcondition letic competition .ther-rnely- ( a decent showing in his classes? .This connection between athletics and scholarship should be made first in the preparatory school- - It msy be questioned whether either the pre-- 1 paratory schools or the colleges have exhausted the possibilities of this phase of frculty control of athletics. Nw York Evening Post. s Balt Lake City. Utah. and' Other Addr.m rorre.pond.PP. EDITOR- publication to THE ta ised hu coma from New York elate, and tbla emphasize the fact that the propoeed waterway improvement will result in sending freight from western and middlewaetern point through the St, Lawrence instead of by rail to the port of New York. A distinct advantage will accrue to. the agricultural and mlddlewest manufacturing Interests through this saving ip transportation charges, and with ths cost of placing American products, on European mar-kelmaterially lowered benefits will accrue to the nation as a whole from the completion of the project. Undoubtedly, however, the undertaking will mean reducing the buslnees transacted through the port of New York, and the most disinterested observer will see that motive underlying tba opposition of- - th New York senator. As to the contention that Canada would benefit more from the waterway than would ther United Slates, there i no doubt that the and manufacturing dominion's agricultural industries will profit materially. Iu fact;- - the enalor may be right when he contends that Canada would receive more direct benefit than would the United States. 1922. If'thbfoSdfKVlew-'TsrThS'Tjtitstlofri- or GRAFT. being treated with nauinaling of graft, inefficiency, of funds floppy method and misappropriation in certain political offices; two Instances which came to light during Ilia last week t enough to warrant the appear to be flap-andecided a protest. expression of It should be recognized at the outset that there are two sides to every question, and that a nobody should be convicted in advance of most hearing; but this cannot prevent tbe severe denunciation of the principles involved in the alleged irregularities. If the charges are true, the .responsible officeholders must be exposed and condemned according to the provisions r the law; if the charges are false, those making them are guilly of reprehensible whiclv should be condemned just g, as strongly; there scsrreiy appears' to be room for an honest mistake when a rerta'n man is charged with a specific piece of crookedness. Both the recent Instances are in connection with the state road' department; In one, allegation Is made that certain nieu connected with the department have been juggling stale funds, stale property And slate agreements in a way to inure to tbetr personal benefit and to hurl the complainant, under guie of a straight business transaction. In the other, have been made involving former charge employees in petty theft the padding of purchase records to buy fishing tackle! Accusations tike these hurt the public confidence in good - government. If the charge! are true, it means that the men concerned have no true conception of the responsibilities of public office. If they are not true the fact that they have been made at all Is deplorable. Certainly, the investigation should be pressed, the ftjtT facts brought to light, and the blame fixed where It belongs. w H public T frequency to charges mud-slingin- a. REFLECTION'S V O.N PUBLIC ECONOMICS. , accompanied by HRD limesInareotheralways words, people who are in debt are required to "pay up. Sometime, it happens that liquidation is the indeed, cause of a money stringency, a condition ' of financial life through which we are passing Just now. In the processes oL liquidation, money is naturally put into w circulation that circulation, the takes place when it leaves the hands of the debtor and finds its way into the vaults of the banks. For that reason clearing house statistics and bank reports are not always a safe guide in judging tho status of business. As a rule, men and corporations that , create employment are hit hardest by a money . stringency. If these employer are too har'd pressed in the demands of their creditor for 1 liquidation, production dwindles and employ- ;r..ment is cut off.. In the nature of things, when a spirit or desire for liquidation takes hold of creditors. ; - they are most. likeiy to le extreme. Tliere must a he gome liquidation but if it is carried loo far the public is sure to suffer. There ts no way of telling to what extent the demand for liquid. ation may go. For many years there has been ' a mma to go in debt. To make improvements and to make business innovations are the arnbi-lin- ns , of public officials' and the promoters of enterprises. I Nobody knows the sum total of rrh.Kd i bonds, county bonds, city bond and mrpora- -' tion bonds that are now Diitj.tar.dmg. ft must ; be mormons and reach Into the billions. much of it will be due in the near , future nobody know-- , but the amount must b- , . very great. If liquidation by this army of bond liotdcrs is carried to excess certain calami-j- ; are to happen. Liquidation thus a state of mind and the money ;;j .becomes ests of our country should counteract as far M possible the spirit of exregftv cUecUonA ti ,Live and let live- is a safe guide-To- r alt in times of money stringencies. Ji na-ro- 4t ;:r int-r-J- ' j n ft: - J t THE ST. LAWRENCE PROJECT. DOG TR 1 proprietor ef a musie store and Mmilamd Motor (Ccmnipamu - Its Service That Counts. 57 South State Street ' 1 accom- dreds of telephone subscribers on.the entire instruments. Elder Heber J. Grant, of the Council of the Twelve, bom on a visit from a mission to Japan, and Elder H. R. Tanner were the speedier at th regnfSF Sunday service In the Tabernacle. President Angus, M. Cannon of Salt Lake auk presided. home on a. visit yv. W. McCune cam from Peru, where he was sngsged in extensive mining activities. T. J. Nipper, proprietor of the Palace Meat Market on Main street, went Into his place of business In th evening and found -- a rifling th cash register. He seised hold of his arm and stsrted to take him to the police station. At th doorway the Intruder broke loose and ran. He was not raptured. Two new wards were created in Provo. Increasing the number from four to six A - of - boundaries wa genered effec-teand the wards were named by consecutive number. The new bishoprics were organised a follows: First ward, Or-Berg bishop, David John. Jr, and Chauney B. Thomas counselors; Second, L- T. Ncl- son bishop, William J. Taylor and J. M. Jensen counselors; Fourth, Ernest E. Pwl- - ( ridge bishop, Alfred U Booth and Edwin H. Smart counselors: Fifth, Moroni Bnow bishop, W. E. Rydaleh and E. 8. Hinckley courteelors. Sixth, Hugh Clayton bishop. Ralph Poulton and Brigham John- THE enormous advancement of igrieujture .in tbe past decade leads to the belief that it is to become even more important in the future. Thousands of our young men who gather in the cities to work for wages would do well to consider the possibility of the farm. Already a little more than half of our population is found in the pities. This means a better market and a greater variety of farm products. Electricity and transportation have led to the betterment of farm life. The cash income of the farm may not bo so large as it is jn the cities, but farm life has certain ndvantages that are sure by tWl in favor of the young man who devotes himself to rural occupations. In life fiit place the farmer enjoys better health; second, the conditions 7tf farm lire force upon' him. economy, and in the long run he is better ablp to save than his city cousin. The government of the United State and certain great land corporations are offering special inducemiiU to those who will settle on the farm. Money may he, borrowed at a low rate of interest, and a long period of time giyn for land payments. The farm can- - be more easily capitalized Ilian a city industry. son counselors. ord like Badcau' Military History, is impressive. It suggests that art ion was so nwoli in bis mind that all else m Ins communications had to wait on the essential verb. It was always do it, start it. make it, grid there nothing to do but obey. No wonder he hated gassy" men. The Nomad" in Boston Transcript. ' HlGIISTAliriCJ burglar H. A VOCATION. HH IT Of course it COL ARE t jm COSTS? ssihe and bryqnd the dreams of epn the "in. but the man who pays the mat hills, the present crisis would result m some uiiprejndired, mvesligalmn nv somebody that would give him the lruU abouL-tbcosts and profits in the roal industry in figures unclouded by propaganda. He would almost he willing to suffer hardship and undergo discomfort if one of the results of the sink would publication or auch unbiased figures. Here is.a basic c na, r'n nn, npn w hose product the railroads, the factories. )h householders depend fo live. moe and have their being and about whose costs they neither know, nor can ascertain, anything -and exactly, Worcester Telegram. definitely i hUID FAINT For kitchen, bedroom of bath, Lowe Brother High Standard Melotone and Mello-Gloare without equals. The one is a dull finish wall paint;' the other, a glossy surface that sborf mallows down to a beautiful satiny sheenT Both are restful to the eyes, waterproof; grease, stain, ink and easily washed; ; hard-dryin- g, . dirt-defyin- g; long-wearin- g. These two members of the II S. family uphold the reputation bf the rest.' They zz&sss HCADfHAjrrCM PAINTS. YoIlPAPU ss covef more surface than the products of, other njanufacturers for which you pay the same price. H. S. Paints cost no more per gallon and less per job than other paints. .. Come in and see the sample panels and ask for literature. . . PM Cr '- - CUSS ' non-partis- an TODAY e , OLDER, WISER. - ' y na(l' dramatists cannot even consider working up to intensifies of without immed:alely plunging their plotfeeling an opium den, or a sinking schooner Inintoa hurricane. After all, there are tempests even in teapots. Brteux, In Madame Pierre" has human Varts mdam V0 brhak nVha"Pr off the furniture, Vfw York, world. . -j Utc-Mov- ''Nk a. system in the territory outlined heard the concert seig In many plhcag crowds assembled and heard the solo and accompaniment megaphoned from , the telephone It is useless for one slate to combat tbe plant while it grow in another but, with (he established through the farm bureau movement,, it is predated that in 12 years tbe barberry buah, beautiful in itself but host' to .this pernicious qpiest, wiU be extinct in the United State. . Touring Model, Price $1465, Salt Lake Five-Passeng- er plished pianist, played the accompaniment, the. performers being S25 mile apart. The experiment had been advertised and hun- ng GEN, GRANTS ORDERS. Search the advertising columns of the daily newspapers and note how few used Hupmobiles are advertised for sale. The nroportionately small number wilTfurnish a clew to the increasing popularity of the Hupmobile in this region, where all year motor demands are heavy and where the Hupmobile is counted owners. on to save time, inconvenience and actual expense for " WeD be delighted to demonstrate. by-th- e v e CASE OF PRIORITY. waJLtid'Lie uni-jonni- ; . , A PHIL 103. An Unusual experiment in telephone aocoustlcs which" provided a gratifying success was conducted Rocky Mountain Bell r Telephone company in News. Arrangements with The Deseret were made with General Manager Murray qf the Telephone company and Superintendent Summers of the Mootgna division to establish long distance connections between this city and Helena, Great Pedis and Missoula. Mont., R. J. Jessup, a member of The News staff, placed the hell of his French horn to the transmitter of a telephone Instrument and played popular concert numbers. In Helena a Mr. Reeves, Grants orders t- ' How many care do you know, other than the Hupmobile, that are good for more than 00,000 milea of dependable service? There are few indeed, even in the higher priced class. And it isn't merely the length of service-tha- t makes the Hupmobile so popular; its the quality of the service the depend, able, always1 ready, right on. the dot, power of the car. From tho Pllce of Tbo Deseret Jfcwa. were a!wav snappy in J t every sense. They were all in the Imperative ' mood, and were generally destitute of formalia farty to a controversy j.! resorjs id ties. Usually they began with a verb- - "Move ii ,TIEN Wsubterfuge or technicality in an effort your command tonight"; "Send forces without jnaintain his position his action may generally ielay ; "Keep all prisoners sent to Millikena indicating a conviction that he Bend until further orders"; "March jour com ; and fears loss of his case. And mand ' tomorrow to water beyond command on the telegraph road Calder of Nw York advances to Five your Mile Creek; Start with three of your r8,niient that completion of the SL Law-Pye- nc divisions a soon as possible by the road north waterway . project would aid Canada of Fourteeif Mil Creek to the place; in Grant' Tgagft thsa It would the United SUtes he reveals orders toof this verbal construction as given in a rec- - .. . Car . th AS .J 4':. 100,000 MUe TWENTY YEARS AGO. a parable from nature illustrating the dangers involved from keeping bad company it would be bard to find a better subject than the story of the barberry bush. Thirteen of the principal grain growing states of the Union, including Utah's neighbors, Colorado and Wyoming, have united in waging war against this plant which, years ago, was Imported into the country as sn ornamental shrub and has even been cultivated for its pretty red berries, which incidentally make delicious jam. Recently representatives from grain growing stales who are. asking Congress for a half million dollars annually to help them fight the barberry bush, testified, as did plant pathologists from the department of agriculture, that it bad been the means of destroying in the years 1916 to 1920, fully 333,000) bushels of wheat, 256,000,000 bushel of oats, 50,000,-00- 0 bushels of barley and 1,000,000,000 bushels of rye. All because H is the host," and the only host, of a spore which, later, infests the fields of grain with the dreaded black rusL Scientists declare that a single bush may infect 1,000 square miles of grain-growiterritory; spores have been found In the air at an altitude of 10,000 feel. So hard ht it been to convince farmers that this beautiful bush is.lhe direct cause of black rut, Ibrough th parasite it harbors, that some states have had to pass laws making it a misdemeanor punish-ab- le by a heavy fine for a person to permit a barberry bUih lo gfow ou his land. Though it wa recognized in France as early as 1660 that this bush and the black rust were in some way associated it has only been in recent years thatsciejit'Hts have determined THE CHOICE OF -- in ' AMONG PLANTS. Y . - nt a put-mon- THE Try a Ride This Week -- pro-fooo- or accepted, however. Senator Calcfer'i statement will be regarded as an argument In favor of statesmen will realthe project, for ize that whatever increases prosperity in Canada will help the United Stales as wet;. TtjS dominion is one of Uncle Suns best customer and if the deepening of the SL Lawrence will in the pockets of the Canadians they will have that much more with which to purchase American-mad- e goods. Even if Senator Calder can furnish absolute proof of his statements, he will have established no case against the proposal to unlock the river-w- ay to the Atlantic. ' j y- far-seei- ng Cll RGES ' m i ds-pera- h4- APRIL 20 1922 NEW8 THURSDAY , wffikSST u frc,l4!aUAndet Lords Prayer Lady Asters Coat. Fer Cent a Month. SO r' in Europe. t0Jn thon1we By AitTHl'R BRISBANE. r aarurheC i'bouV agreement. eountrhts merely took a few Tho word from th Lord's prayer, agreeing to forgive debts, trespasses and other war Incident. What can sHled Christian nation do to keep two other nations from living up to part of the Lord's prayer? ; Ths eternal 'feminine leads us upward undoubtedly. It has led us from cava and cannibalism to "whatever w are. But trhat fkmlnin never - forgo - Sam Inin Interest. Lady Aster, charming, young. abl member of parUa- IE AH! ths ,, arg-ftli- German-RuMUa- n ; ' Anglo-Ameri- ca ment. arrives and cries from ths ship . 11 th other America bankers Tnw to her sister, Mrs. Dana Gibson, and! sweet, wild dreima others on the dock. You look 'like! Money works hard, doesn't cars fo. a lot of poor white trash! - Yon just whom It work Interest, compoundought to see my new coat!" ed, pile up. investments well mad Increase In value, for the Just and Thousands of year ago. on th Is- th unjust, the strong and the weak. land of Crete, women squeeted their, unfortunate. Insane woman, waist, wore bust less, made tbemaelve Mr In each century, Flagler. Uvea, without abominably ugly It, possessor of a big fortune.knowing that has passed they have discovered Her new kinds of foolishness, Aid they! trustees report to th court that this ( year she la worth two haven't finished. million dollars than th was last . Frank Munsey received a special . more Her doctor gets Icq year. cable from Paris telling him that la-- ! thousand a Various relations get from five year. die now share their eyebrows. The She on goto si ths the .eyebrows they pre-- t they paint can uss none of it. fer, suitable to the Idea of beauty whatChines, 'or pound Interest. Ask your banksr ever. about ft. and 1st- arithmetic o , plus a money work tor you. Get and The great Russian bank organized llttls or keep money-now- . set t Moscow, - to stabRtte finanes and you later. Poverty Is slavery tp promote- Industry' Is In trouble , , although It, lends money at 12 per r'iment decent a month. .That rat. 144 per feated bill ca.led "th dangerous cent a year, la tow compared to what . though, bill, with that a mneouid others charge in lloaeow. be Imprisoned seven year for think- The bank has decided that to make Wenderfaf-1a--thep,werf'C- Kfttenle.-PeralaTj. kout the "a reasonable profit" It must chant Lnv.t,nf'.rOUv- ,hoaht that wanted I per cent a month on lodna . It will frr.Trnt-- . pay depositors 4 per ent a month.. best th bm. publish snch tamightg. Such news is enough ttr send If was Intended ; . a Tmlnai a Key. n14 ot end - Com- -t l mercW; Mitchell, ot th National !f 2Man,df ,tem" hniJnsir , moaao City; Clark, of th American Ex- Against Interference with pnhHc nb- change; Krecb, of th Equitable, and I S: |