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4 IHL OCDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER. WEDNESDAY JULY 7, 1920. I THE STANDARD-EXAMINER ! PUBLISHING COMPANY Entered Second-Class Matter at the Poetofflce. Ogden. Utah. Etabllhed 1373 Member of the Audit Eureau of Circulation and the Associated Pres An independent Newspaper, published every evening and Sun J lay morning: without a muzsle or a club. Subscription in Advanoe ! ONE MONTH .Tt dg3S33feeJ ONB YEAR W.00-- Cggggl) MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Ic exclujlvely entltlod to ttm uie for republication of any news credited to It not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local nei published herein. THE DEMOCRATIC ROW Bryan's grouch grows time goes on. The "Gonnnoner" is ro einbittered againsl Wilson that he cannot on the eve of a national election, restrain himself. In liis letter from San Francisco on Tues day he soul . Was it not humiliation enough to the party to have a Democratic Jresiden1 ail silrnt in the White House and take no part in the grcatcaj mora victory of tlic generation 1 1 think I am not mistaken when I say that hv never uttered ttm a word to aid those who made the fight for submission for H ratification and for the passage of the law enforcing con- atitutionfl prohibition Was it necessary to add to this hu radiation by gagging a national convention and forbidding it to give expression t the joy that fills the hearls of a majority of the men of the land and a still larger majority of the women of the land? If in the matter of prohibition the president's offenae against the party is grave whal shall we say of his crime when wp conaider the treaty plank? He demanded that twenty-three Democrat ie senators should he rebuked, sen ntors nearly all of whom live in closely contested states. 1 where the president's attitude endangers the re-election of those now in the senate and make practically impossible the election of Democrats to succeed them! Hut the defeat of the party is of little oonsequence aa compared with the re sponsihility that our party assumes when it attempts to make a partisan issue of the greatest international question our country has ever confronted Under the pretense of devo tion to the league of nations he demands that we strangle the league, for nothing else can result from the iron rule that he enforced upon the convention. That is about the extreme m rebellions spirit for a man three times honored by his party as candidate for president. Bryan's hatred for Wilson must be intense. But the peculiar fl mental process pursued by Bryan in his criticism of the president i disclosed when one thinks how uncompromising the "Commoner1 baa been in all his policies He demands thai Wilson p-ivo way to expe diency on the league of nations ami then he scores the president for failing to be immovable on the liquor question. It is wrong for Wilson to hold steadfastly to his conviejbions, but Bryan can he dogmatic, because Bryan is right and everyone in con Diet with him is wrong. That is Bryan's view; but the peaple are tryinp of his constant lecturing. Xo one doubts Bryan's honesty of 1 purpose, his high moral suasion and keenness of intellect, but al! begin to see in the man a disposition to be intolerant. Ths Democratic row should be enjoyed by those in the bleachers and grandstand occupied by the Republicans. I CONVENTION GOSSIP Political news, even when written by the brightest of men, has coloring made to conform to the prejudices of the writer At the San Francisco convention there were keen observers who! were sending out information, and those who wanted to believe the body was controlled and dominated by the administration, freely told bf the mastery of the federal office holders and how they dictated j every move. Had McAdoo been named, they would have said. "We told you so " Strange to relate, the crown prince was not sm 1 essfu! Kvci, Palmer, that other candidate of patronage, was not elected. Instead, Governor Cox of Ohio, known to be free from special favors, was nominated. Now the correspondents, who said the convention was being dictated to by Wilson and was in the keeping of the federal forces, are informing the public that Wilaon was repudiated al San Fran cisco. The average man would be somewhat embarrassed to put forth such contradictions within a week, but the purveyors of political news are abashed at nothing They delight in indulging their like and dislikes, even though they l" bo inconaistent as to denj their own words As a matter of fact, many of the special writers arc nothing more than paid pleaders for one side oi the other, and their statements are to be accepted with reservations I EXCHANGE OF FELICITATIONS H Our national campaign is starling auspiciously. Governor Cox 1 has congratulated Senator Harding, and the scnal 11 h paid a n- J pliment to the go ernor. 1 Senatui Harding is not iuhIiii'' the mistake that did huh Ii to detract from Charles E. Hughes m 1916, who went ovei the country I directing personal abus.-. a1 ln opponent Hughes might have been elected had he been hroad. in his conception of the attitude of a presidential candidate He defamed the president, made slighting i remarks and created the impression of being ill-tempered and hyper- B critical. I' Senator Harding is proving to be the very opposite in tempera ment, lie is treating his rival with utmost COUrtC J The little men of both parties can be depended on to give voice o enough of the dis reditable, rhej will dig deep into the records I of Harding and f ox. and, if - thcr man has 8 past which is unpre- lenWisJf, there will be a great exhibition of dirty linen 1 Indulgence in mean personalities is one of tin disgraceful fea ! lures of our politics ' FIRING ON THE TURK I When will the last shot of the great world war be fired? . )ffi- tially the war ended on the ratification of the treaty of Versailles and was virtually over on armistice day, November 11, lf)S. that H. flay of three elevens eleventh hour, eleventh daj eleventh month I Tint echoes of the big mis which shelled Liege early in August, 1914, continue to be heard. The bombarding by British warships of the I Turkish forces on the shores of the Sea of Marmora, ten miles from Constantinople is the reverberation of the mighty conflict which changed the georgrapby of the world, wiped out monarchies and perplexed humanity everywhere. ; The fighting which is proceeding m the territory north of. 1 where Christianity had its birth is nothng more than the protest of the irreconcilable Turks to the uew order of things that depris jj them of the power to persecute those not of their religions belief. A The Turk after centuries of sway over subject races, refuses to yield to the domination of others. He was a cruel master and he dreads the thought of having a master perhaps quite as cruel. i VICE PRESIDENT MOST CAPABLE j For vice president, Franklin D. Roosevelt! He is a man of char acter and energy. He is much the same type of man as Coolidgc, H the vice presidential candidate on the Republican ticket, j! Whether Harding or Cox wins, the country will have a capable ji vice president one who would be more than a figure head should the presidency fall to him Roosevelt, in the New York legislature, proved he was opposed to machine politics. He fought Tammany and the Republican ma I chine, and, at the head of a group of independent legislators. blocked many questionable measures. He is as fearless and trust j worthy as his opponent i courageous and admirable. In this election, there could be e reversal of the position of I president and vice president without harm to tht country. OUTBURSTS OF EVERET TRUE Qg Nrc.CM,AN Bj THC OFFICC 1 ----' to xou, Mtsreis iRue. - ------5 HgtygvS CARP. Gx3 out AMo'THe Poor llHE DrT VANCE'S DAILY ARTICLE A A. By DR. JAMES I. VANCE. Tile iJeiio( T.iC i. .!( svi r'eon ize the rights of the common man. It decline? to reppod the divine rights of the few an apainst the man it knows nothing of privilege Inherited or entailed. While recognizing rights. It emphasizes duties, and leaches that mon are ennobled not as they claim; iheir rights but a. they discharge their duties The democracy of Jesus Is construe tive rather than destructive. It plans to better social conditions by building up rather thnn tearing down. I' does uot commit the folly of trying to ilcht one wron b the perpetration of i dozen other wroncs. It does not sanc i tion arson and murder as methods to secure order. It does not allow a man to tear down his neighbor's welfare that he may promote hi.s own The democracy of Jcfus is not a reign of terror. It is founded not on equality but ' fraternity. Christ knows nothing of , COMMUNICATION Editor Standard-fCxaminer: The Statement! made by Mr Dunn In your Issue of July 4th about the "horse coming hack" most Interest ing and Important, and should ho hulled with rejoicing. The horse more than any other thing made our nation what it was at the time of the Revolution aiul be fore, and since, and the lack of, or absence of this animal, will In large nieu.Hure account for the change In our nation people of the L'. S.i in the next generation The difference between this nation a generation back and the indications for a generation hence is enough to make a real American shudder. Aside from the mere physical usefulness or the bond the men nn.l women of this land could not have been what they have been without the horse the hone In American history, and in the history of the people's, who wens the ancestors of those who carved America out of t'.-. wilds of natures supply of material on this continent i mean to sa th:it man's compan ionship with the horse, his using, liv ing With and loving his horse mads him the moral and physical leader and mnxier :.l liffrrent points on thH terrestilal sphere, at the different epochs; and this ancient and descend ing current of horse-niadc supreme neps flowing 'rom foreign soils whero greatness prevailed to our shor. s. k I the men and women of this country the Intellectual, soclnl and spiritual charm, and their physical and moral endurance and power. Gin you think of such history as was mad'- on the shores of the Melit:ranlan SVi. ami Imelc from thnt center of world ac tiities in all direction) being so made. without the hors as companion of anil Influence over th' man? Or, can you think oi a Wellington, a Bonaparte, a Fredric-k the fjrsat, n Henry of Na varre, or a Godfrey leading the Cru saders, without belonging to a nation of horse-loving people? Can you Imagine th' Arab, or the Cossack dis associated from the horse? Coula tmcrlcs havo had itn Washington, or its Iee, or its Grant, or lt-s Custer, or Pershing without Intimate rela tionship with the horse, through gen erations ? I cannot think of the heroic deeds md accomplishments of General David . Thomson ( mv grandfather) In the I war fo 1812. Commanding the Amer ican forcer, in terrific fighting with British -ind Indians fresh from victor-let- winning nud killing Chief Te oumseh in personal combat. If he had grown up midst the blueKnuis pastures of Kentucky without the horse in his own life and In the life of hin ances tor Yes the horse has been a large factor In civilising man; In bringing to general and formal custom the family relation, and making man love his woman and hold to his heart his child; In creating tribal arrangements and development of nations. In start ing currents of human liking oih' mnn for another, brotherly love, and In leading man to look upward for his God. The esnrnce and spirit of truly admirable and exalted manliness, com ing to its flower In Chivalrous living, loving and fighting, owes Its origin and development chiefly to that no blest of created things beneath man the horae. Well, maj the hoy weep, who is taken from the farm, the pas ture, the rgnge-awa) from the horse to the city, to the automobile, to mechanical things, to artificial living. jThe horse should como back but not the big draft horse only, the buggy- equality God made no two things alike In His world do two trees, no two leaves on a tree. Everywhere there is Individualism, and this individualism is sacred. What He wants Is not sameness, hut good will; not Imitation, but self-expression ; not monotony, but life; not all men on the same model, but every man trea.'ing his neighbor according to the Golden Ilule The democracy of Jesus clothe-- men with opportunity rather than with au thority It qualities men to rule through character rather than Inheri tance. It sets brfore every man Hn open door, and leaves him to deter mine the sfze of his realm. The democracy of Jesus has one law the law of love; one obligation the obligation of service; one goal the goal of broth?rhoori By It at) govern ments are to be Judged, and in It all of them ."oon or late, must be merged To nil who would qualify for citizen ship It says: "If any would ge great among you, let him be your servant "' Rippling Rhymes by w f-. i iViHtur. i THE PELICAN. i Some pelicans around me sail as I wind up my lyre, that I may earn a slice of kale, to buy a rubber tire Th" pelican Is most absurd, It has no warb- ling skill; it is n bonehead sort of bird , that largely runs to bill. It catches fish before my door, by every artful i means, instead of going to the store (and buying canned sardines it hangs 'around in my front yard, close by Its feeding place, and doubt lers thinks an old fat bnrd should sing its oharme and grace I've witnessed many tin horn fowls in my long, sad career I've gazed on buzzards, crows ami owls. In countries far and near, Pve looked on roosters large and small, on mudhens and sucb things, the pelican outclasses all, for homeliness, by jing. And yet It thinks It's pretty fine, as graceful a-s a bride it stands befrre this hut of mine, and Berms to ;v In ' I with pride, Along the beach, and to :and fro, I watch its vain parades; as Billy as an ancient beau who ogles j blooming maldn It thinks It i a -hm ing star, pure radiance to spill; but, like 'he chap; who fix mj ear, it most ly runs to bill Copyright by Qeorge Matthew Adams l 1 JUST FOLKS Bv KdKor V Guest , AT IIOM1 I do not want to see the sights, 1 do not care about Japan Or Italy's romantlr sight A fig! say I. for Hindustan. Great wonders round the world mav be. But silll I do not carp to roam. I find there g Joy enough for in. Here in the lltilo place called home. Let him who will, take train or ship And 6mlle as he Is outward bound. I do not envy him his trip, Though he may fare the world a rou nd : I have no wish to stand and go Wild-eyed at some cathedral dome, 1 merely want to live my das Mere In the little place called home. New scenes? I crave tiie.ni not at all' New faces'' Better far the old' This humble roof and modest wall The treasures of a lifetime hold; Hero is a sweeter rest than that They find who brave the ocean's foam. And for all time I'd hang my hat Here In the little place called home Trave. you wanderer if you will. And see the splendor of the earth. No distant Journeying can fill This he-art of mine with hones! mirth. Peace and contentment da. b li Come With the sunset ami tlo- gloam, And to the end ut time I d staj Here in th- little place called hom horse, the saddle horse and (h boj pony VOLNET C. 6UNNBLL. STATE AND JDAHO NEWS Latest Items of Interest From Utah and Gem State S. L WOMAN'S THROAT GASHED Mrs. Dunk in Evans Severely Hurt When Alleged Stoien Auto Wrecked 8ALT LAKE, .luly 7 Mrs. Dunkin Evans of .Salt Iike was severely tn- J ii rod when an automobile, alleged to h;ic been stolen fiom a Salt Iike taxb-ah Company( and driven by her husband, crashed into concrete cui veri poNir Mldvale yesterda) morning. Mic Bvans. suffered a wrenched bnrk and ;i cul throat, the flesh being torn by ii deep gush which narrowly missed the Jugular vein She was taken to Mldvale following the Scol dtnt. According to the police. Evans and two unknown men vho w.re In the .car at the time of the accident disap peared shortly alter Mre. Evans had been taken to Mldvale. A search has l-een Instituted and Evuns will be charged with the theft of the car if I apprehended, It was aid. Investigation disclosed that Evans aiicd at the taxlcab company and a.ked for one of the proprietors. The proprietor was out and Evar.s stated he would eall again. The proprietor and the driver Were allel away "tid on their return discovered the ear had been taken, the police say. The accident nc-or Mid Vale Is said to hae tieen unavoidable As Bvans was attempting to make a sharp turn In the road a .s. cond ear tried to drive around him. This cut off the road and the car hit the culvert. Mrs Evans was thrown through the top and the other occupants of the car landed In the ditch alongside the road. The car v.is badly damaged. i no PUSSYFOOT JOHNSON TALKS Al TWIN FALLS TWIN KALES. Ida., July 7. Pre dicting that thu people are not coin eighteenth amendment, and that the Democrats will be smothered if they attempt to open the grave of the liquor buslnesa, "Pussyfoot" Johnsoa, noted prohibition worker, addressed a lurgo gathering here yesterday. .Mr Johnson arrived here Merday by airplane from Granger, W'yo., and remained three hours. Imrlng the early purt of his otoy Mr. Johnson circled the city In the airplane and dropped literature. He talked to a capacity throng In the Levering theatre and left by air machine thi afternoon tor Shoshone, where he took train for Spokane. Dur ing the course of his remarks Johnson berated Governor Bdwarda oi New Jersey for his action toward tlrn pro hibition question. "Edwards Is by nature and Inclina tion a, bartender," he declared. 'That In the 0 CUpatlon he should be follow ing Ho stated, too. that England would be dry by 1930. "Then n no po-.-lbility of a modifi cation of the Volstead act if the drys keep on the job." ho stated. He averred also thai labor unrest is great er in wet countries than in dry. He pointed to Finland and Norway as ex amples of the benefits of prohibition. This afternoon Johnson and a motion picture operator In an airplane took views of the city. PAIR CHARGED WITH OPERATION OF STILL POCATBLLO, Ida., July 7. Charged with operating a still and having liquor in the :r possession Josh Munn and his son. BhermOn Munn, former residents of PocatSllO, were arrested yesterday near merican Kails by W. H. Miatt. assistant super intendent of the state consta blllOT) . Hoth waived preliminary hearing and wore bound over to the district court on bonus of $500 each. The still Is believed to have been in operation for several months, and the officers say that Munn was caught In operation of the plant A quantity of liquor and the still were seized. SALT LAKE JEWELER BEFORE U. S. COURT sir LAKE, July 7. Charged with selling souvenir gold coins, William SchubSCh, a local Jeweler was arraign ed yesterday before I'nlted States i Commissioner Henry V. Van Pelt. He was bound over to the fall term of the federal court. Bond of $60o was furn- I lshc d William H Davenport, local secret service operator io launching a vigor ous campaign to stop the sale of sou ' venlr gold coins similar in design to th. gold dollar which waa recently recalled by the government. PROMINENT UTAHN IS DEAD IN SALT LAKE; SALT LAKE. July 7 George C Parkinson who for more than fifty 'years has been prominent In political business and church circles in Utah and Idaho died yesterday at his home 621 I'irst avenue of pernicious aene I mia, after an illness- extending over a period of a year and a half Mr. Parkinson was born in Kaysvllle iJul is. 1X67, the son of Samuel Rose I Parkinson and Arrabclla Ann Chand lipr Parkinson In his early childhood I he removed with his parents to Frank lin. Idaho hk parents were among the vers 1 1 1 v iSttlers Of I hat eommunl -t which Is rSCOgplsed as the Oldest! settlement of white people in the slate SKAGGS BOY DROWNED AT LAVA HOT SPRINGS POCATBLLO, Ida.. July 7 Hersehel Bkoggs, 1-year-old son of M B. Skagge of Pocatello, was drowned yesterday evening in the pool at Lava i I lot Springs The boy was unable to sunn but was pulling himself across the deep part of the pool by a rope He lost hold of the rope and although Several persons witnessed the accident he was drowned before help could reach him. The father of the boy had been in the pool, but had Kone out a short t mie before I he ac Id nl SHOOTING CRAPS COSTS THIS CARPENTER $135 TWIN FALLS Ida.. July 7. Shoot ing craps was a costly proposition to A. A. Jordan, a carpenter, who ap peared In the police court yesterday and was fined $13o for his part In the guine F. L. Ashlon. laborer, another participant In the same, paid a finej of $10 1 REPORT OPPOSES TEACHER UNION Salt Lake Convention Group Recommends Against Affili ation With Labor SALT LAKE. July 7 The na tional education association's commis sion on "emergency In education"! made a cieareut recommendation against affiliation of teachers with enyl "religious, polltlr.-il or economlcl group In a report presented to the' association The report read by Georce I . Stray-, er. of Columbia university, vice-president of the association, said "Teachers as a unit cannot fedt rate i with labor aiui m tne time hope to keop the confidence ol the whole people." It described stcp3 leading to thel drafting of th. "Smith-Towner bill" toi create a department of education with ! Its head a member of the president's! cabinet, and made an argument In be- ! half of the measure. It is a sound principle which pro i poses that the wealth of the nation be put baek of the education of all tta i children." the report declared I Touching on salaries the report as- serted fl.SOO was the minimum neCOs oary for "existence" without provi sion for the future, and declared that $1,800 annually was necessary to as sure the average teacher economic In-1 I dependence. It added that 10 to 201 I per cent addttlonul must be paid If the teacher Is to have opportunity for "cultural growth." The report said It' was an error to draft the ablest of! our class room teachers for admlnis-j tratlve posts." The question of affiliation of teach-' : ers' organizations with labor bodies brought on a colloiuy in the meeting of the national council of education, in which Mrs. Susan Horsey. Nuperin-' I tendent of schools of Los Angeles re I f erred to Miss Murgaret Kaley of the' Chicago Teachers' assoelation as a1 soap box orator." BOY KILLED Bf mop sun Hartell Morris of Mapleton Fatally Wounded in Accident MAPLETON, July 7 An "unloaded! gun" claimed another victim yester day when Hartell Morris, :i -year-old (.on of Daniel Morria. farmer, wus shot and fatally wounded while lie ami la companion. Kenneth Hatfield IS, ( were playing with a .32 calibre revol ver. The boye, it is said, did not know, the gun was loaded It was discharg ed and the bullet entered the nei . ot the Morris boy. severing the jugular I vein, A physician was Immediately j called, but the little victim died before I he arrived CHURCH AUXILIARIES 10 HOLD CONVENTION SALT LAKE CITY July 7 The I correlation committee of the general board today announced that conven- j lions of all aiuularles of the L. L. S. church will DC held in the S5 stakes .July :il and August 1 The conven-, tion will take the place of the stake j quarterl) conference for August, Sep- ! tember and October and will consist j of the departmental sessions of the t rellei society. Sunday school, primary, religion classes .ind Young men's and Young W omen s Mutual Improvement association. The programs for the conventions are being prepared b the foiiowingi com mltteee: Kcllef society, Clarissa S William ami Amy Brown Lyman. Sunday! schools. Dsvld it. McKay and Stephen L Richards V. M M I, A.. Edward H. Anderson and George J. Cannon;. Y. L M I A , Ruth May Fox and Rose VV. Hennett; Primary aesocla-l tion. May Anderson and Ann N'ebe ker; religion classes. Guy C Wilson and John Henry Evans. THIRTY-TWO ARRESTED IN GAMBLING RAID SALT LAKE. July 7. Thirty-twol nun were taken In a Rambling raid conducted by the police at " l r. West Second South street last night Ac cording to the police the men were dlscoveied "shooting craps ' and play ing poker by P K Brown of the antl vlce department. The men made no resistance when the officers entered through the doors and window-. SON DROWNS WHILE PARENTS ON TRIP BRIGHAM CITY, July 7. Word reached Mr. and Mrs alter Kelle hero osterda that Royal Kelley their son was drowned In an Irrigating canal at Reiser. Idaho, Bundaj evening, Th boy WOS 3 years Of age and Waa alone when he fell Into the water Mr andi Mrs. Kelley are former residents of, Brlgham City and are visiting here Wt'XTHV, THE LAWYERS AGREE OKLAHOMA CITY. "When the lawcrs agree there's no room for ar gument," declared Judges A N. Mun den here and dismissed George E. Williams charged with reckle i drh lng Opposing attorneys looked at tin automobile Wllllame was said to havo1 damaged. "It wasn't hurt much" th. reported en chorus. p.v THE INSPECTOR WASHINGTON, July 7. Wool Kg I growers of the west now know what I the cotton farmer of the south nuf- m jfcre,i back 111 1914 when the bottom mr1 fell from the price of cotton KL1 "in .Ma JO the pnee of wool dropped Bpi from 86 cents B pound to HO cents, HE and at this low price there was no K! 'takers. Some buyers were offered 10 Wr- ccnta a pound for wool. B' No more enlightening exp rlent e Hi has happened Mnce the Federal Re- Br?iJ serve System was created than Ihlo HpT condition of the wool market. Wool ttf '' ii. ncvei been flnani ad through s ie B' reservi banks, bul through lot i he Jl, wh urn financed the bustnt through Chicago ami Boston banks. 'JJr And right now II all thi busini 9 of the countr were in as bud shape I $i a: m the wool-growing industry, tho I i& nation would be In the throes of one B of the worst panics in its history. The cotton crop of the south Is I - Esl ing f ''''' through the reeei By bai I and cotton is sun aroum: iV eeni.- a pound. For eotton to be sell- IJ ing for more than wool is mon un- 1 usual and the reejKin m probablj to the fact that private capita' has I ,!,' b ii unable to kill both l he ma i ! '- I .'- ol tht In dustr) Conse- ISiii Ciuently two crops is adeiiuatc proof that the Federal Reserve bank) are 3i In some mc.-usuro "panic proof." S-ij AS a result the National Wool I Bel Grower..' association Is In a mad 19 scramble to get the Federal Reserve I3k! Board to taU.- over the financing of IJMj the woo! crop and to get the banks fuSti of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming I'tah, fljjlll Colorado, ,e Sdexlco, Arizona, noith- ern Texas, Iowa, Oklahoma south- neH crn lllnols, Ohio, New York. S". st B21g Virginia and PcnnsyRania, to loa-ii Wwfil ' receipt for k tt rod ool ; As a result of the plan being worked Hii out ni Lhal of getting western banks H'k to finance the v i through ih Fed- 'V eral Reserve hanks, wool grow, is A "' Boston financiers will lose control of -i the wool Industry', and that It will be centered In the west, Just as tho T&i' eastern financiers lo.it control of cotton. Kgiii 1.41st ear cooperative societies Sli vhijipeil about 6.000.000 pounds to 9 Chicago warehouses But eastern (V bankers have refused to loan money r8& I " 00 TODAY !N HISTORY SLIGHTLY JAZZED t One hundred and fifty years ago I M?-; there was organized in London a club I gfe, thai had tht Ii ibi: of entinL' macaroni mP'K- a dish Lhen little known ''n England I L This club became a synonym for fO- I of- pery. TIip Macaronis wore an "Im- I SRff; nn use knot ol artificial hair on the E" back of their hcSds,'' on which waa perched a very small cocked hat. The? ifr1 carried Immense walking sticks with Klrc long tassels and hev wore theif BCT! clothes as tight as was humanly pos- wlti sible. Many n Macaroni that has had WtU to semi out for a shoehorn before he P , j could et Into his now Sunday suit. r The Macaronis lasted five yejOTSi f:P until 1773. when they took up some other foppish i .'I r.nd sapp-ari-l. dlW 1 Their .Pee-, aa tat as can be deter- -JH mined, on American life or literature. BV is confined to one line In Yankee jjs Poodle; BlUCk H leather on hi- hat . and called ii macaroni What else I could "macaroni" be bill an allusion H 10 the fops of London? Ri : SUBMITS REPORT ON fil ''; STATE SURVEYED LAND SALT PARK CITY, July 7. Lands surveyed In Utah during the flsi u v oa r which ended J in BO mounted I r to 317,784 acres, bringing the amount SsaLt! of land surveyed in the state to 3T.- fiRsSk' I'jo.iHi ii res according to the yearly Tptsllf's' report of i r. Thorsen. i nltod States mkjfi, $ surveyor general for Utah More than '. half of the unsurveyerl land Is used H'rfT?' for grazing purposes, it is said. atrt' t DEMAND "WHISTLE" II Reg. U R, Pat. Office "Hoot the Substi-toot" . ;j lllTWi.'.lfli3!AS'MiPT i