OCR Text |
Show iUi Jj, MAGNA Howe About: TRTSa MAGNA, UTAH Scenes and Persons in the Current News Russia Begging Big Business Men inj Ok aU 1 . rnxs-.w- eii I read In tho that i and there. BM Bxadlcata. WNO Service, By ED HOWE are actually a good THERE sensible features In the out here on Soviet In Ruspresent government "Set" taking the sia. The Idea that no public offthe parade In an icial should receive more than $150 old Confederate a month la sound; so Is the habit Reunions Con-h-J of promptly pnnlshing officials when 1 am sit--f Tentlon. they are dishonest or negligent. . . . JL ting here on the But the determination to live by tjf running board or Communist principles win wreck h o car with the Sovietism. Communism is so palon typewriter my pably weak In so many respects K k knee, trying to cannot succeed. The objection to few out a knock teaching of Karl Marx Is It will "Personals". I the not fit human needs. The poor man old on the hare Is entitled to Justice; bnt so Is the man who refuses to remain poor. J Grtr, (the long grey of ikring Cobbs atory And In tho human - experiment jf.tnd lta layed around there has never been found a tribe .treaty five yean after of men wherein the majority were tar. The parade la In a willing to remain In perpetual povand of town Kentucky, on erty. Nature provided means for $ the old costumeseven all to become and the and women, , isd better specimens of men will not folks often ask. consent to forever remaining unjKjgettheold clothes?" comfortable when comfort abounds jfhif is one of the big-Cf- and may be easily attained by not nnt here. There la unreasonable effort I may not ba here to see the end of the Russian mpany that has a great r&elr own, six or eight experiment but let younger men that coven half a remember the prediction that Communism must be given up there. i ni get any suit, (or Like whisky. It Is a fool; It will (0) of any time or not stand practical trial. You can say I kindred Confederate Negroes are very disagreeable In kin hundred G. A. R. S., whites for gifts. 1 bare i clothe for five hundred bothering the spent present winter In an 'g the streets. Then there apartment house In Miami, Fla, and plotter Hubbards" and have found everything satisfactory Ur til the colored women except my failure to satisfy the ibda. Then the fife and negro servants. An old fellow livVthen the old fashioned ing nearby la so much annoyed I ud "Surreys" and that he will not let n negro maid sill the hones and har-'.- a come In ; he does his own cleaning the little reviewing np, and I often go over to enjoy fiS about the only thing bis Indignation. I have been jieiinged much. There la whipped Into submission but adkaboat the same amount mire a man brave enough to resating people In it with bel In a good cause. . . . The poor 'a looking down on tho whiten are as bad as the negroes arching. Then the dogs, Id begging. About the only real ud all descriptions that vigor shown In the United States i parade. Well thata an- - during the past winter has been olutry. There la aeveral displayed In begging campaigns. ,ci with aa many as fifty Every one Is apt to be s little prejwtds of trained dogs to udiced when discussing bis own Wthan most of ns acton. case, and It really seems to me I do my share In proper giving, but tell you about the time the American system of begging ago I made a "Tramp" Much of wed a big Saint BoP seems to me disgraceful. lit! We were for a couple It Is racketeering; the selfish business of boss beggars who hide bewy up - the Slem and 1 become very hind the scenes and browbeat timid citizens Into engaging In charity this old dog. I was play-rop- e and I would rope campaigns they do not themselves believe In. Ask any American what boor, and be never decided to try he la most disgusted with, and he will probably tell you It la commita. The trainer with him tee begging. The smart French do oa ner, but knowing none of It; the Germans and Engout what in the world the lish very little. It Is an American cost, or any other dog. I weakness; one of many we all disled up courage and h approve of. but do not quit Into Bay to him, "Say stead of quitting, the nuisance la toss I will give him 100 becoming worse every day; leaders tils old dog." Well I Just lq It ere trained- - aa others are Uhad the dog, and had trained to become stenographers, i la or 75 dollars for doctors, lawyers, machinists, to pull sss. The- trainer kinder teeth,' and receive large Incomes si uld, " doubt If Tronj th e'dfsK on es busth ess. in Will The dog gets 150 Jkn I knew 1 couldent There Is more than the usual that If I had him. lately about big business complaint Just to walk around and men. A new charge Is they do not Then today I see soma manage their wives and children the old wooden side No reasonable efficiency. . W them, any color, any with foolish American does; specially slot trained much, only women and children are as comud grunt, and look like mon among the poor as among the The manner In which '"me artists are mai tela. American women muss np their Photography are the men has been the wonder of fortfrancement that this eigners since the foundation of the its republic; Americans no more assert themselves In their homes than jtls they do in politics. And look at what the politicians have done to them. . . . Americans need a lot 7 of reform In s lot of ways. ' w Inhere v are all sit-tin- g f well-to-d- lain y tloar the log ft zatloi trtth aento re exi das he a odd x sus ral fa New Roosevelt International bridge across the St Lawrence at Rooseveltown, N. T and Ct by Secretary of War Dern and Governor Lord Bessborough. 2 View of the Thi Barnes, England, when the river was at Its lowest level since 1021, due to the drouth. 8 Rev. Dr. Pan of St. Louis, Mo, president of the Evangelical Synod of North America (left), shaking hands with R H. J. Christman of Dayton, Ohio, president of the Reformed Church In the United States, as they c mated the organic union of these two denominations Into the Reformed and Evangelical Church. 1 Ont, which was dedicated Fighting Chinch Bugs in Com Belt , 7 . fit 'V' 4 - "--t - . w - "j . - , , V.. V . - A- 'f ' r. r KV it . 4 " '. . c V 7 v, - ' r ' , Dr. CL J. Drake, lows entomologist, and Ray Murray, Iowa secretary of agriculture, are shown Inspecting effectiveness of the crude oil barrier against the advance of chinch bugs In the corn belt of southern 1 The picture Illustrates the effect of the crude oil barrier and of the bugs. The denuded area at the right once part of the same flourishing cornfield. Beautiful Gift From Sweden HEADS NEW BOARD Ne-ftd- Ehly the c nakt oly u mind-Unnal- f ? ly gen-Iog- r ef-hi- well-to-d- It Judge Eugene O. Sykes has- been ths newly appointed chalrman-of established communications commission which replaces the federal radio commission and also has more powers than the extinct commission dlL Sykes was head of the radio commission. -- BRITISH CHAMPION JT Thle vase of specially designed Swedish Orrefors art glass will presented to President Roosevelt by Lawrence A. Stelnhardt, Uni States minister to Sweden, as n gift from Sweden. The vase has f panels, depleting Farming, the United States Navy, Commerce and tnd try, and the NRA; symbolizing the activities of Mr. Roosevelt as country squire, assistant secretary of the navy, governor of New To and aa President Is pitiful to see a sweet little girl grow Into habits n woman A little girt unmust havst her father, trusts reservedly In him; loves him. A woman knows she must trust, love and believe in n husband and father with I took part in great caution. quite n romance the other day. On the street ! saw a tittle girl, three or four years old, walking with her parents. She was holding her father's hand, bnt occasionally let go and ran to look at something In the Once when she came wlndowa back, with her hand out, to ba led, I took It, bnt She was still looking at the wonderful windows; she thought she was still walking with her father. It was quits Then she ran to another window, and, when she came back, took her fathers hand, without knowing she had been bold with a stranger e e a , 1 have heard men say, life All my as a sort of apology: "I am not a money maker." Everyone of any account at all la a mpney maker; the rare (blng Is a money saver, j The piavlm f bare most solemn regard for Is that declaring it Is easier to make money than it Is to save 1L ... (or angles). But netting about marching ( kt you never get tired. y Jkrtul 51 old characters extras are Bitting their uniforms. I am looking one la the Httle Henry Walthal, 'lor. looks every Inch Bany an ex cowboy these uniforms and lr' nt in the bought the horses over, Ttting ready for the sown In, and In case of them Pick eza up. pth under fta ,ha1 fot Shooting" and talk with some L. ser anl Sheah K" and lota of these hundreds roll over under ext tree and talk om hoys that aan, lipi nne. or Pendleton, vr it ind wwa .mci I0 vT ther n. cue 0 "Ifc mki 1W. and dnim corps xrasent SyndKtt, Im. .... ' So many Impose on me unreason ably I am especially anxious not to Impose on others, I always want what Is JustlyTny due; I do not obon ject to this In tnyoneto Insist reyour plain rights Is a virtue: I fer only to unnecessary annoyances and Impositions. Henry Cotton, English professional, who captured the British touropen golf championship in the nament at Sandwich. Most ValaaMw Aatograpk Tba most valuable autograph In . 1 tha world, according to R. Q. Turner In the Kansas City Times, Is that of Button Gwinnett, an American patriot almost unknown outside tha United States and known '?4' to only n comparatively few Ameri( cans. Gwinnett,, born In 1732, was sn Englishman who emigrated to America when he wai thirty eight setyears old. In Georgia, where ha a planter prosperous became he tled, ahd prominent In colonial affairs. In 1776 ba represented bis adopted state in tha continental congress, with tfflving bis signature, along the to body, that of other members Declaration of Independence. One tha site tot San Francisco j Following extensive enginewing research, ? of a year later ha died, the result has proposed 1D37, Worlds fair waa choaen. Th. fair, to celebrata completl will be loo bridge duel. Alone, his autograph Gat Golden and nt u sold for $28,500. On a document Ului WM w. has It " I , with four other signatures tha of exposition. Shove with a plan commanded s price of $51,000. :Jl3Q 1 r J::r '':$ -- A'l?- -- SUfwi, Ba, M. a! J |