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Show EAST SALT LAKE TIME, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1923 $2 BILLS ' LAKE SALT THE EAST TO STAY The Treasury department has little regard for the superstitious. Judging from llie recent statement that no foiimlutlen existed for the rejiorted plan to discontinue the printing of $2 hills. The first announcement brought several letters of congratulatory tone to the department, indicating the extent to which the public has accepted the absurd belief that currency of that denomination la unlucky and a nuiSome objectors assance as well. serted that since they came into of few $2 bills they were likely to confuse those with the $1 greenbacks, although no more reason exists for that mistake thun for a similar The treasury slip with a subordinates sentiment to common sense, and lielleves that a needed place exists for the two because It take only half as many of them to do the work of an equivalent amount of ones and because paymasters In some sections of the country find them convenient. The prejudice against the $2 hill, especially among those who regard It as a harbinger of misfortune, has resulted In mutilation of the bills, usually hy tearing off a corner. Because of superstition the hills have a TIME I tihV Livest rommunitj Builder. Published every Friday Afternoon. WENDELL U. LYMAN, Kdilor sivl Manager on social and busiAll items of ness activities should to submitted to the East Salt lake Times not later The than Wednesday each week. Times' office i in the Sugar Bank Building, at 1109 East 21st South. a n Continuance of second class privi-ledg- e of Sugar House Times, granted in May 11, 1923, at the Post Office Salt lake, appliedfor. The Times will be sent anywhere in the civilised world for the proscription year. price, which is $1.60 five-spo- t. r Full information on advertising rates will lie supplied on application. Phone Hyland 9lhi. SALT LAKE CITY, - OCT. 6, 1923 THE GRADE CROSSING Death slill maintains his supremacy at the most elllclriit iruitlc patrolman, as the toll of a single day so terribly Indicutea. Probably It was not an day, but merely one on which the tragic tolls of carelessness were compiled In h single toul lluit of 20 deaths of motorisis tit grade crossings Sueli tragedies throughout Amorim. ara dourly avoidable. It seems futile to say that they are, In face of the disregard that nun have for common perils, but until tliut I xson Is dinned of Into the ears and iiniseliiiiKiiesR every driver such loss of life will continue to he Incidental to pleasure. The grade crossing Is ulwnys dangerous, never to he approached without art fill million, never to he negotiated without preliminary compliance with the old formula, ''Stop, look ami If inotorlsta will only listen." that a menace haunts each crossing, hiding Its time, awaiting the approach of the reckless motorists, contriving the dreadful conjunction of engine and nulomohile, then will lie no such tragedies, for the tragedy of the grade crossing Is that sort of tragedy whieli cannot s'rletly be termed accidental. Always It Is avoidable, always It could be forestalled by cuutlon. short life. Plilnens T. Burnum knew how to eapilullze the longing of the people of half the world to know how the other half live. Ills widely advertised of the Scriptures," which was a hlpiiopotumuB, gave a religious flavor to amusement that a good many people then regarded as sinful per se. The sacred white elephant of the Hanges opened the vista of ages to the parochial puritan. The "educational feature of the old circus wus a famous destroyer of the bitrriers of lrejudlce; the circus may have done more than luniks to pry Into some It was In uny event I tropin's mliuls. the flret universal form of relaxation re-s- i that our grave and reverend forefathers knew. The vitality of the Institution Is probably due ns much to (lie world-widciithollrlty of Its spirit us to the desire of people merely to e he thrilled. What secrets has Earth still In store for us7 And how long will it lie ere the invincible spirit of science soars beyond our own planet and begins one by one to wrest secrets from other spheres nnd oilier worlds? We do nut refer to the nonsense of spiritualism, hut to a science which may one day attain exact knowledge of those vast uiuteriul worlds, stars, plunets and suns which whirl through the Immensity of unexplored since, says the London Dully Express. One day we or our descendants may learn. Then man may perhaps know what he Is and why God made him In Ills own Juinge. years after graduation Is for many rensons a more Important and Interesting date than any other In the alumni calendar. The reunion then scheduled hreuka In upon the regulur order of things, says the Independent. Other reunions follow one another at Intervals, and after the quarter of a century mark Is passed death Twenty-fiv- e ten-ye- At 25 begins his heavy harvesting. years that choice of careers which confronted the class on graduation day has long since been made, and then men who had In them the gifts and energies that spell success nave achieved or have begun In nclilere, their destinies. Political und economic views have In general more .Conservative' while the religious and philosophical views of llinsc who have not lost interest In such matters have, ns n rule, become broader r.s well as All In all, the good more mellow. fellows" who foregather at this time go home from their reunion knowing hot only whether their expectations of one another hare been fulfilled, but also without much doubt as to wluther they ever will Ik. No other minion has been nr will again he ns large as this. It Is the last real flare of the class. Travel by airplane la Increasing rapSixteen different idly In Europe. companlea over there are niieratlng air Uni's, carrying more than to.unfl passengers s year. The routes covered hy these air Hues total S.U0U miles. And no buying a right of way, no laying rails, buliding roadbed, blasting tunnels, bridging rivers. This must make railroad executives rery quiet nnd thoughtful at times. Wlnm a really f safe, airplane comes on the e market nnd begins compel Ing In earnest with the railroads us Is Inevitable It'll have a lot of big advan-lage- s on Its side. hoy scouts now have over hoy members In the United States alone. An excellent movement, for It keeps bd Important part of the rising generation rinse to nature, Mont of our troubles are caused by living unnaturally and close contact with nature will help pull us Inn k to nor tnnl. Nature Is very kindly to us, If we only give her the chance. The fldtM'OO took out a license. Pondering which, we reflected that such a umrrlnge would tie the working of a basic natural law nnluiv evening things up. restoring the hnhincc, tile same ns big women marrying tittle men, Itcniity mating with Beast, and similar con trat of eitioihm, Intellect and char frier. Put nor philosophical huhhle was exploded when the press ageiv. reported the nuirringc called off, say the Chicago Evening Post, lie got somic free advertising. Most things of life are o slirple they are obvious, hut gener. iMv people complicate them An expert In the Department of Agriculture says hat hoe do not work more than ha'f the time, thereby showing that they know huw to Improve each shining hour a good deal belter than the poetic moralist thought. lo j i Is a game with Europe, declares a foreign Perhaps we got so little I'.ea-uout of it bie.'iuse we take I; so much les seriously than we do uur golf ami Aiui-rio- am. fmiv that d not That's why shnrt cut thinking exist. is rare. playing corn--pi'ii'li-- re Alh. -- 'iseliielit trade as ! ft nei'essniy o g politician, to ll : In Current History Magazine. with beginners, especially little Located at 1023 Elm oiks. Ave., in Sugar House. Phone of the ylajid 5184M. naturally, did not fail to take in policy between the victorious power. GERMANY, difference LAUNDRY her in the design which her captain of induatry had conoeived and imposed on the vacillating government, namely Fine Laundry work and lace . . . to evade the payment of reparation. curtains carefully done. Phone Germany before the war woe a vast firm, an immense factory, if Hyland S184M. one prefer that term, of which all the porta were closely welded FOUND. together. The mines, the factories of Alsace, of Lorraine and of Upper Silesia, were incorporated in the edifice, which woe aupported by the Found on the corner of Ninth gigantic prop called customs dutic and especially by the trust. The Hast and Twenty-fir- st South enormous structure ws bound to collapse whenever one of it pert wo Streets, one. pair of long kid torn away, or one of ita props damaged. doves. Owner may have same y applying at the Times Ofiice, The great German Industrial magnate have not understood, or else 109 E. 21st South St. have not wished to understand, the significance of the defeat inflicted on their country. Instead of reaching the conclusion that the furce of cirLODGE MEETING cumstances comjelled them to establish German, economic life on the n basis of formulas new to them, but aimilar to those of their Friendship Lodge No. 27, L O. 0. F., meets every Thursday evening at 8 rivals, they undertook, immedately after their defeat, to cony 'clock at the Lodge Hall in the Smoot out the designs that they had previously cherished, that is, to construct, Building. Dr. G. A. Allen, Noble G. A. Gundry, Secretary. by artificial processes, an industrial system so strong that it would be Grand; able to crush the universe. Makes a Good Polish. Had territory, rich in mines and factories, been taken away from The following Is said to be an exceleourcea could them? What did that matter? They procure from foreign lent furniture polish, which may be the ore supplies that were indispensable. By means of great internal made at home: One ounce of beeswax, Anglo-Saxo- works they would create economic conditions which would permit them to transport their raw material at little expense, and also to replace the factories they had lost. But money, much money, would be required for all that How could they find it? By selling, in foreign markets, mark currency, a proceeding which Professor Cased, whom no one can tax with hatred of Germany, haa called the most gigantic swindling operation that the world has When one pursue such objectives and undertakes to use ever known. all the resources of the nation to acquire mines in Austria, Sweden and Chile, to deepen j torts, to dig canals, one cannot dream of paying indemnities to conquerors. Such was and such is the part played by the German magnates. j Better Service Relieving you of all Funeral detail, i, service tee offer. Besides this relief , confidence in us, in, by our years of thoughful, conscienrio ing, will deliver you of many needless worZ' It will bring you that relief which come, f the assurance that, to the last detail, every tion will be thoroughly, thoughtfully and pletely performed - - nothing forgotte neglected to disturb your peace of mind. Modest, uniform prices prevail. Ily. 124 LEE R. FRY, President find Manager 1047 E. 21st South Hy, The Greatest Satisfaction one-bsl- is to know that accumulated SUMMONS to an Astonished World Its Wealth and Possibilities Alaska Has you h a financi barrier against poverl or sudden illness. In yoi savings account you w: find all of this great sa isfaction if you save re; ularly. . coal-min- T Eddington Undertaking Company f one ounce of ra stile soup, ounce of white wax, one gill of turpentine, one gill of hulling water. Shred the wax finely and dissolve It in the boiling wuter; mix them both at once, together, and beat until quite cold, when it will be of a creamy rouiflstcntj. In the Third Judicial District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Julia Ethel Wykes, plaintiff; vs, Fred Nelson Wykes, defendent. Summons. The State of Utah to the said Defendant: You are hereby summoned to aplllimillllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllHIIIIIIIIIII pear within twenty days after tne service of thissummons upon you, if Disclosed served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure to do so, judgment will By J. J. UNDERWOOD, in Alaska, an Empire in the Making." be rendered against you according to The years that have passed since Alaska came into the possession of the the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said United States have disclosed to an astonished world ita great wealth and Court. This action is brought to recover a Its auriferous gravels have yielded untold wonderful possibilities. udgment disolving the bonds of treasure ; its colonies of seal ntd other mammals have loaded the markets matrimony heretofore existing bewith valuable and beautiful furs; its seas have given up their wealth of tween you and the plaintiff, Romney A Nelson, Attorneys for food fishes ; its barren tundras have presented us the nucleus of the reinPlaintiff. P. O. Address, 1115 Deseret Bank deer industry and taught a lesson in the civilization of savage tribes; its Salt Lake City, Utah. Bldg., its excess of all returns in expectations; agricultural possibilities promise unmeasured timber areas will furnish wood pulp and lumber long after other forests have been exhausted ; and ita undelved suggest e national opulence beyond tlie dreams of avarice. It may sound like a wild dream to say that within a few year, European immigrants, instead of landing at New York, will land on the Pacific coast, to make productive the unoccupied areas of land in the Open an accoui at this bank today. iniKfflHW! wms u g n h&u sieiif i? SfILmnKWCITV.e UTAH GEO. A. N. J. HANSEN, Pres. JOHN F. BENNETT, Vice Pres. GOFF, Cuticr Sugar House Hy. 1830 es West and in Alaska. But it is a dream that likely will come true, for Alaska is capable of raising every pound of beef, every sort of vegetable, and every pound of butter or other dairy product that her people will need till the white population increases to two hundred times its present number. iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmi Are Yoy Going Buck Shootin Fifty Millions of Farm Loans With But Thirteen Defaults in Six Years By GUY HUSTON, President American Association. Out of $50,000,000 in loans made in Iowa and Illinois by the Chicago Joint Stock Land bank, only thirteen defaults have occurred in p farmers are the deepest sufferers now, because they six years. have not been able to take advantage of the new economic of modem farm equipment. Ninety per cent of the borrowers among the fanner are carrying on in good shape. The fanning business is not as bad as painted. Mora than 50 per cent of the fanners ara clear of debt and 90 per cent of the other 50 per cent are in good condition. Only six per cent of the land classified as agricultural land is real plow land. Only 25 per cent of the land in the country is agricultural land, which is valued at $67,000,000,000. The estimated value of crops this year ia about $8,500,000,000, which is not such a bad return, even with labor costs taken out. The farmer with a 240-acfarm, worth $50,000, with dod breakers and modem equipment, is making money. The small farmer, on land less valuable with no machinery equipment and small production to the acre, is in a bad fix, but so are manufacturers in the city in poor locations, ill equipment and lack of knowledge. re Iff So See Our I manl-fcs'atlo- d Lawless elements In Chinn obtain more leniency, perhaps, than Is their due when they attack foreigners, on the theory that they are centuries In civilization nml cannot he expected to know better. The attitude la uncomplimentary and unjust to the educated and responsible Chinese, d -- OF Winchesther Winchester If Someone Would Invent Solar Engine of Five Per Cent Efficiency By EDWIN E. SI.OSSON, in Science News Bulletin. The greatest waste i our failure to utilize, not our carelesmes in of utilization. We waste 50 per cent of our petroleum through of our coal irrational and competitive drilling. We waste of But we waste all the unshin before its energy gets into the engine. that fall upon our arid region land, and that mean greater low of coal. all oil and from our The we richest than get region in th energy According to an astrologer, one's United State ia Death valley, Californio. If some one would invent a success In burrowing money depends dar engine with an efficiency of even five per cent, it would odd incalr largely on when Jupiter Is. This probably will set a lot of people to culaldy to the wealth of the country through the utilization of the wondering where he could have been. wasted eunbt am that fall upon our arid land. is Here a prize bigger than any grasped by coal king and oil magAn optimist Is a man who wears a nates. But white suit and carries a fountain pen nobody comes forward to claim it Yet very likely the that Is so cor.t rnci cl that It can't knowledge necessary to achieve this supreme triumph of chemical li'.ris has a municipal pawnshop ami nnnoiincc ll will loan on flivvers, which must he owned unmoMgugi-- hy the borrowers. That plan wouldn't ftiuount to much In this country. y. Complete Fresh Stock iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiminiiiiiiiiiiii il. that not only leglil-"u-t- e hut 'icv-sarMuch ns we mny dislike it In soice of Its cruder nnl may resent it If It ll thrust upon its on the slopes of a Cumbrian Mountain, nevertheless we ought to recognise Its proper use it I the news of business, snys ihe lam don Dally Chronicle. The more efficient It Is. the better for our orld trade. piny a German Magnates" By JOSEPH CAILLAUX, Miss Mary E. Hodsdon of St. jouis will conduct a class of wenty piano pupils, specializing Part Played by the One-cro- pretty midget, weight 55 ixiuiidx, snnouni'Pd that she would marry a man who tips the beam at 2tKJ. They prif.-- l; Such Was and Such Is the PIANO INSTRUCTION - fuel-proo- A din niniinniiiiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinniiiniiiiiiiiniitiiiiiiiiiimmnniiiiiiiinlllllttlllllM- method two-thir- eak. ds engineering is already in existence somewhere. If it ia not, there is certainly enough brain-powin the world to The only three things entirely cmty solve the problem if it were set to work at it. We are all of ua the ire s vacuum, Europe's purse aud the jtooiw because of this waste of ideas and inventive genius. Dense when the wife Is awty. er See Us FIRST Granite Hardware Co. SUGAR HOUSE |