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Show mmmm1VtMlt'IT HUMANITARIAN II Lucius N. Llttauer. of New Tors tired tnllllonnlre glove tnantirnc-ttire- r, seventy years old, who nude a gift 02 $UXKI.(HK to aid humanity The money has been put to the - credit of the Llrtanef foundation, one of the many charitable organizations found-ed by this aged mllllonalie. I FOR DINNER-DANC- E mi A dinner dunce truck In deep rou cree Is shown here. The crepe skin is very full and terminate with a bund of shimmering velvet. The bolero Jacket of velvet Is studded with hrllllnnts. as Is the narrow girdle, Fly Saves Coconuts Ci.lo.-m,- wn tle Soat buttle In the endless war be tween n,lin UI1(J ,uset.u hug 'might and woa without liny report ot it coming to northern ems. I'rot. T A. D. t'ockerell of the University ot lolorudo tells how a tiny My ro-n-erated with man to save the coconut trees from the caterpillar. To us, for whom coconut menu merely confection, or, If we be a little more chemical minded, oil foi soaps and butter substitutes, It l hard to bring home the ImiiortHnre of coconuts for the brown people of the I'acitlc. To them the coconut tree menus both food and shelter, fre-quently ropes and clothing, and In art tfltlon, nowadays, while men's truile goods. The coconut litis been railed the most useful tree In the world, at least certiilnly It Is the most useful tree In the tropics. So when the Innumerable sluK'Ike cnterpllliirs of the moth culled levu iinna began to eut all the knives on the coconut tree In Kljl. and thrcat-ene- d to spread over the whole South J 'm l lie area, there was consternation The Insect had a host of natural enemies, hut they did not seem to be able In make any Impression ou Its swu nnlng numbers. Then one day the tiny Dies of the family tnrhlnlihis. species known a ptychnm.vla reinota, was brought over from the Federation Malay state and turned loose. The tachlnlds I have pleasant hnhlt of laying their fggs In the eggs of other Insects, and the Irtingry lltttle EHihs that hatch om of them live In the world of mil urn I omelet where they first come to larva-hoo-until they are ready to fly. The natural result Is one more taehlnld.one fewer caterpillar. Another member of this same family Ik being tried out most hopefully' now In the American com belt, against the borer. Plychomyla made short work of the coconut caterpillar. . Within few months the stripped trees were puttlns forth new green leaves, young planta-tions nre no longer pestered, and the most prominent Industry of the Soutn sens was safe again. Boy, the Time Tab!! New York. Cecil Benton has failed to sea a ripping, ravishing Venus in this country, whereas they abound in London. i .. i . . ..( , , fc&r: . il If , t 0ROIESTRA3 . CROP BEPORTS I ji 1 WEATHER CHURCH SERVICES I It " -1 . ' S . f NEWS FLASHES BRASS BANDS I (' A... FIDDLING CONTESTS SPORTS ? J., """"" "" j CHILDREN'S STORIES 1" - I GREAT SINGERS J ITS ALL TRUE when you have the right radio " ' . RADIO dwi Lring the city "up battery set. It, too, is perfected. It does mean more to The main thine is: Don't wait, farm families than to anyone else. The air it full ofwonderful pro-BU- T you've got to have a good grams today tonight and radio, lladio that reaches out. they're meant for you. Get what's Radio that sounds natural. Radio coming to you as more than that's always ready when you are. 2,000,000 other families do with , The best evidence that Atwater n Atwater Kent ' v Kent Radio is good radio that it pfi "'' really does the job as everybody. Jf "V , wants it done is the fact that it f . 3 U and has been for a long time the '' s best seller in 6of h the city and the country. After listening, after comparing prices, most people want it because they find it's the ' kind they want. From a lampsocket or from batteries Some homes have electricity, some ' haven't. Either way, you get fine " f n " . Atwater Kent performance and p I proved dependability. If you do IB not hannen to have power from a Model n,w h bMnufuiij ur m. iwnuo duo. f central station, you can enjoy the no-ia- nit. ftt40 v& itrntin nmii, broadcasting w:th the improved, Hwmiw.SA.0. tabw MdinetUjrtes tub ' powerful 5929 Atwater Keni r ,! ..'-- - . -j Bsttery bets, $5J 172. BoUmhoirM . , cabinet. Putli la slt Wvu? MiMlcl 40 (Uralric), $81. Tat rolt, ,io DUI. Model A KA Model 4, mxtrw 6t)c;cl ml tcroalluK current. RcquireeS A.O. powerful, S7S. Price do not Include tubes or lube ftudlrectMjrluc tub. P1 (without ubee. batteries, ' " On ine air every Sunday night Atwater Kent Radio Uvur tulen int '' ATWATER KENT MAMTF ACTURINC CO., A. Am Kau. Prartfau. 47M Wlmhicko. An.. PhlliiMpbk. K To Read More . Im to Learn More All Books at Pabllsher's Prices Well snd thm CO.D. if yen say so. DESERET BOOH COMPANY 44 East Swath Tempi St. " r. O. Box 1793 ... SaltLakaQty CREAM WANTED It le a eolvefl problem when you HeeM en ehlpplnr to the VKOOKI.AWN CREAMERS CO.. i So. Int We.t 8U Salt Lake City. ' VMa far SUpeie Tift CeMwteaJ Ciriitii Sawfce v ' McCune School of Music and Art I Facultg of Eminent Teacher ieadlns Mueisrhuol In InterroouBtain Reston Mualo Dramatlo Art Denctnc 10 MoHh Malm St. Salt Uke Otj. vtmk. Cullen Hotel Frrd J. Leoaarc, ManmKWT Paul rardo. Amt Mgr. , Meet Your Old Friends at the Cullen , . , , ( Cafe and Cafeteria . . U W. 2nd So. St. Salt Lake City. Vtak. CULLEN GARAGE 87 tt West 2n So. - STORAGE AND SERVICE ? CRISMOX NICHOLS ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS Ortlcfl and Laboratory tlt-13- 1 8. Woet St., Salt Lake ray. Utah. P. o. ' Box it. Mailing envelope and prieat tumlnhed on requeet. Columbian Optical Co. ; ' . 337 So. Main, Sak lata Gty, Utah ;; r OppoaitePoetoAle , T Lenses tfP5F Artificial Scientific Eye Examinations : Send us your broken glass for repairs. Work returned same day. Little Hotel 167 Main Street SALT LAKE CUT Rooma. Sing'e W'thont Bath, per day, II to It Koome, Double Without Bath, per day, 1.6c ; . Kooma, 8lo! With Bath, prr day, l.60to 8.i) Bourns, Double With Bath, pr lay, I2.U0 to All Depot Street Cars Pass the Hotel 1 KEARNS BLDG. GARAGE Opposite IJttie Hotel. I IBEl'BOOF. 4wDr. C. L Evens, Optometrist KYK8 EXAMINED ' Croai ayca airalshtened. (ilaasea fitted. 11 Eut 2ni Smth. SALT LAKE CITT. UTAq Pipe - Valves - Fittings XKW AND CSED FOB ANY PUEPOSB SALT LAKB PIPE CO. 175 W. Sixth South Su Salt Lake City. lh ; SERVICE GARAGE C. W. BRFWKH RAY U PEf S L'Uii'l l..r4 hli'tiACTI Oxrljr GcBor ci uo 4th rv. ami Mnia Wret Salt liibt. Adjoin In J.eWllU;ii liuI. Used Pipe, Fittings & Vafaiir Newly threaded and aeopled for all purposoa, Monsey Iron and Hotal Co. 100 So, 3rd ejt - bait l ake Cllj--. It, WHERE SHALL I I HE GO? .1 I By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Oeaa of Men, Uniirartity of $ Illinois. (i) Falkner's son graduated from hlth school last June nnd Falkner It some-- w what concerned . Tfi u ' where be ffir - lXi should send him U .y ro collese. There" Jr. I Junior col- - itge ,n F,,"!ner' SSLXe,, town, and If f 'iitl 0eorse should ;o af1,Sll' r " there he cm he I jassrr"'A'i no,,,! lusf a fe.' .vC' ne hn teen while 2 ,D ,'Kh ,r,ioo' " AfS would plense his LeiJLl t2ii25 mother to have hlin under her eye, und he could be very much bet-ter looked after than If he were down state or In New Knslund. There Is, of course, the bl Instltu tion and the sinnll college, the coed- - ilciitlonsil odlege, and the college for men only. It Is a question nil her hunt to decide t. pecliilly when the boy himself Is Indifferent. There Is. In fart, not so much at stake In maktns trio choice ns one mlk'ht suiHe, If mere Information and hook knowledge Is aH that should he considered. The boj will be taucht one place about as well as another It Is to be supposed thnt If he Is sent to the junior college he will live at home. Now the boy at home Is never so Independent as If he were a hun-dred nr a Ihousiind ndles awn. He Is seldom If ever allowed fully to exer tlse his own Judgment, to make his own d rlslons. to come and no as he chooses, and so he loses a Kond l of Initiative and One (earns muoh by hnvlng to stand on his wn feet, by making his own mistakes, by living his own life. Only as an economic saving Is the Junior college best. I As to the merits of tl e smnll tollege as compared with the big one. It Is very much like making the choice be-tween the small town and the city The shy and the nnnggresslve might be tost in the city, and not be able so easily to find himself In the big uni-versity. As to getting more personal nttcntlon In the smnll college t hnn In the luiger one. and hetna innitht h men of greater distinction. Hint tls largely a matter of Imagination rather than of fact. The number of students for which an Instructor In the big university Is responsible Is not generally lnrg:r than those asslgried'tr'an Individual In the smaller college. In the big In-stitution the contacts are more cos nmpolltnn In character. One meets all sorts and conditions ot men Interested In every line of mental activity and should profit by sut'h Intercourse. The mornl problems are not different In one Instl utlnn - from those In the other. One does not solve the problems of sex by sending a boy to a man's col-lege. RadclllTe Is next door to Mar vard. and Smith Is t.nly seven miles from Amherst They get together no matter where they are sent It hits always been so. Coeducation neither relieves nor Increases the difficulty. It Is after all a mutter largely of per snnnl choice, and to making the de-cision the preference of the student himself should be given the greatest weight. Wherever he goes. he will very likely think It the best place. ). U2. Weetero Newspaper Union t DIPPING INTO I I SCIENCE I f Tree Branches Grow g Sideways S Tree brunches exist for the f S purpxse of bearing the leaves through which the tree breathes. 1 g The tree, then, shoots lis S branches out In the best manner S 8 to produce this rexult With S branches extended In all dlrec-- g lions the leaves are netler dh g trlhuted fur breathing and foi jf g ahsnrhlng mrlm-- i dioxide fhroiif;h S the aid ot sunlight. ; I. I Wvtrn Nrwupeper Union i i Bronx Ago Tomb Found Troycs, l' liuue. A bronre tomb has been discovered near the village of Kurbulfse. It contained a woman's skeleton with a number of funeral trappings Including three bronxe brace-lets, a bronze pin and two armlets with chiseled ornamentation. , A Kansas law prohibits advertising signs within 000 feet of road Inter-sections, turns, or railroad crossings. SUCH IS LIFE That Will Fix 'Em By Charles Sughroe A Sr HOME PRETtV PSvl M WCT WEEK VE U T&X'W fM jj ,weR,uKe Relic of '76 Must Go have been incorporated Into the pres-ent building, has been celebrated In many legendary stories of Stnten Island hfstory. So legendary are some of these stories that It has been Impossible to verify them. It was In the latter part of the Revolution that Gen. Willium Howe, commander of the British forces In the New Tork area, quartered some of his si a IT officers in the Rlnck Horse. General Howe himself occu-pied a house across the road, known as the Rose and Crown, and It was here thnt on July 4. 177(3, he read the Declaration ot Independence. At thnt time, history tells us, he remarked: "That document has been signed by very determined men." The I!nse and Crown long ago suf-fered the fate now destined for the lilnrk Horse. The appearance of the place hns changed considerably since the days of 7(1. Still standing are three of the old rooms the old tavern was a very small plate which now are utilized as living room, parlor and din: lug room. Additions have been built from time to time, among them h comparatively modern dance hall. The original wooden sign, which bore the figure of a black horse nnd which Is now so wentherbenten that only the faintest of markings can he discerned. Is In the possession of Mrs. Curry, who has refused to part with It de-spite the pleas of a number of his torlcnl societies. Il Is related that on the occasion of a review of troops by Lord Richard Howe, brother of General Howe, n New tork. The relentless march of progress, ontll recently sparing of the older landmarks, which seemed se-cure In the remoter regions of Stnten Hand, shortly will wipe out one of the Inst remaining relics of Revolu-tionary days still standing within the limits of the city of New Tork. The I5lack Horse tavern, at the In-tersection of Amhoy and Richmond roads. New Dorp, Statcn Island, shortl-y will be razed to make way for the widening of Richmond road. Con-demnation proceedings will be started "on nd (he building will be razed when the maps are finished and the contracts awarded by the borough of Richmond. The present owner of the faded nnd rambling frame structure which housed rirlllsh officers during the Revolution Is Mrs. Catherine C. Curry It became her property after the death of her husband. Patrick Curry, who went to Slnten Island more than f':rly years ago and opened a public house where more than one not too elderly resident can recall having stnpped o partake of the cup that cheers. Since Volstead dnys the house his been maintained as a private dwelling. Iteciiuse the Intersection at which the hoiiKo stands has long been a blind coiner and a peril to motorists the Improvement contemplated by the city became Imperative. A triangular slice of hind, it will be cut Into two .i leies. one part bebig widen VlVliinond road and the other to form '"small plaza. The old tavern, portions of which v staff officer mounted his handsome horse to escort his superior nnd that the horse took fright, dashing itself and its rider against a high rock and killlns both At that moment the house. Iiiiherto unnamed, was christened the Black Horse by fellow officers who witnessed the tragedy. William T Davis, Stuten Island tils torlnn, recalled that for a short period of years prior to the of the building by 1'iitiidi Curry It was used as a post office, and residents of the rni'fll district enrnp from nmir unfl rur to receive their mall. It Is told, without verification, that MaJ. John Andre, the officer delegated to assist In the treachery of Benedict Arnold, stopps-- at the Black Horse and executed his will there before starting out on his mission. Mute "Singer" first rendition was 'Nearer My (Jod to Thee.' "Soon 1 became known and have been invited to sing and lecture In Philadelphia. Pittsburgh, Detroit, , Indianapolis and Wichita. Kan." Last year McArdle explained Shakespeare's "Macbeth" to an audi etice of Indianapolis mutes. He claims to know most of Chicago' S.ixxt mutes. McArdle, a machinist by trade, was educated at the Pennsylvania Insti-tute for the Deaf. Milwaukee. James McArdle sings, but he makes no sound.' His listeners hear nothing, yet they applaud. McArdle, called Milwaukee's most graceful deaf mute "singer,- - makes iuurIc with his hands, conveying meanings by signs. Deaf and mute since he was two years old. McArdle has mastered his nrt so that he now lectures and sings to mutes In the na tion's largest cities. Waving his arms to signify a song's rhythm, McArdle registers musical emotion by facial expressions. The expert deaf mute "singer." he explains, conveys his meaning entirely by signs. McArdle admit however, that some times he Is "stumped" by a single word having no uhhreviated sign, so he to spelling the "word. "I was fond of songs when I was small, though deaf," McArdle wrote. "1 begun to Interpret songs Into sign" when I was twenty years old. My I BRITISH GOLF STAR ' J2V"f si tzimprxmssL : --J. George Duncan, velerun golt still who has been named captain of the British Ryder cup golf team which Is to battle the outfit representing ilie Cnlieil States at in April. Old French Laws Hard on Food Adulterators A French mllkmun who wns recent-ly caught selling adulterated milk was surprised to hear from the presiding magistrate the punishment meted such an offense In the original statute, enacted under King Louis XI (1481). It provided that anyone who sold watered milk should have a funnel put Into his throat and his own milk should he poured down It until a doc-tor certified that he could not, with-out danger to his life, swallow any more. Sellers of state eggs were to be put Into the pillory, nnd their eggs given to children, who would be en-couraged to pelt the wrongdoers with their own unsavory wnres. Those who sold adulterated butter were to stand In the pillory with the butter on their heuds until the sun had melted It all I If there was no sun, they were to be fastened up In front of the fireplace In the Jail to undergo the same In-dignity. Succeed Wife) Cleveland. Ohio. As national and Ohio secretary of the Daughters of America, Mai C Ituth, Vniingstown. Ohio, succeeds his wife, who tilled the two ollices continuously for 33 years He whs elected to serve four .veil ra. 'he ' unexpired term of his wife, who died December 8. Policing th Arctic The unusual diameter of the work performed by the members of the Roy-al Cnnndinn mounted police Is Indi-cated by following the experience taken from the recent annual report or tne operations of the organisation. In his 800-mll- e patrol from Ponds In-let nt the northern end of Baffin is--, land to Fury nnd Ilecla strait. In-spector C. K. Wilcox met a Bve-da-blizzard so severe that for two days he wns unable to leave the Igloo which (he Eskimos hud constructed. It was so cold that the kerosene froze and had to be thawed out by the native oil lamps. On one occasion he climbed H frozen waterfall. Dog Awarded Met?al for Saving Life j " (Hi''' ' t j yl0$( :t .ill r U V""' 't - f f i O , : ' - j if-.- : 1 .,Y, A'..-.-.,-J.vM.- , l .r,. J,., .. miS5TSfZ. ft itlLfay Sirs. Edvln O. Lewis, wife of Judge Lewis of riillndelphlu and vi.-- iiesl- - ilent of the Pennsylvania Society for the reventlon of t'ruerty to Anlmuls. fastening a niedal on the collar of "Beauty," i German sheiiher.l dog thnt saved the family of Alfred Boysen from asphyxiation In their home. Elisabeth, thirteen, and Alfred Boysen. Jrn eight, whom the faithful pet rescued, proudly view the decorating ceremony. - s . ' Couldn't Budga Mule A freight pulled out of Vilas, Kan., and about a mile from the station the train came up behind a buggy being hauled down the track by an old gray mule. The engineer slowed down and whistled, but there was no driver to hear. The mule declined to change his course, so the engineer backed the train to the station, uncoupled and started after the mule nnd the buggy. A brakeninn flagged the wandering animal, led him from the track nnd the engine went back and got Its train. Former Mexican General Now Salesman in U. S. Del Rio, Tcxis. Rafael Cia Del Castillo, a former general in the army of Pancbo Villa, now Is engaged In peddling electric equipment here in spite of the fact that he is said to own one of the Dnest houses In Mexico City. He is also a nephew of the late President Dlas. Since his flight from Mexico Castillo hns been working at menial tasks. Once he was employed with a crew of laborers on a dnui und another time at an Ice bouse. Lott Watch Turn Up A Londoner visited a large watch repair!? establishment, nnd during the course of other business was of-fered a second-han- silver watch, which, he was told, had been left for repair over two years previously, and had never been claimed. He bought It, nnd his surprise was unbounded when a close Inspection (to say noth-ing of an Inscription Inside the case) proved It to be one which be had lost .hen In France in 19171 Fiddler Presents His Little Bill D06HAB TH rMm DOWN TO fc 1 I iimirriim! ratcliffJ DRM JiM Imn HIM HOT TO 5T0RE M' GET fflsL VonJ soMtrnm for fltSft III I : Mayba Truo I 'Ts sho stupltl?" "My dear, she thinks an ottoi'us ! r.n eight-legge- cut." 4fSLvAsJ I"'1' "inn hi get! 1 r'&l! "Ke' m:,Mn,t ",,s ,Vffi4 li'krf Is iiltncelhei tMi iifiii M rf' I to this tMirld That Baby "They tell mo jon kins with your fyrs open." 'Yes I always look be-fore I lip." Life. , , . .A ,.,. |