Show - 6 ' THE OGDEN j ly the regulation of water carriers and the modification or repeal of hc clause of the - interstate commerce act ought also to be addpted by conThese three measures— highway gress long-and-short-h- PUBLISHING COMPANY editor L glasmann and manager rran Francis and D J Ureenweli Associate Editor a aul STANDARD-EXAMINE- 1) so-call- ed MX M I V "If the railway industry is to regain its normal capacity for providing (jobs and a market for the products of industry then employment dede- signed to increase operating expenses be feated as it is that those bringing their competitors under regulation e enacted The first hurdle ahead of the railways then is a legislative one which if surmounted will protect them from unjust jcompetition on the one hand and on the other from a raid upon their depleted treasuries Unless they succeed in negotiating this first bar- rier there is small hope that any other steps open to them can ' prevent general If v the weight of disinterested collapse and informed public opinion still means any- mi AN EDITORIAL BY BRUCE CATTON bo obstacle should this overcome iing figures on automobile accidents for 1934 just If some eDidemic were swnin' th immtn giving the carriers at least a fighting chance TTHE released make horrifying reading To learn that that rate causing- a million cases of illness and asnnn to regain a measure of their capacity as our automobiles killed nearly as many Americans as deaths in 13 months and knew you that had guns killed during the World war is to re- one chance in 25 of catching it wouldn't you you employers of labor and purchasers of the German demand alize that our motor traffic situation has become one that your health- department take the most drastic products of industry of our roost pressing major problems kind of measures to get it under control? And yet terrible as the figures "are we don't "This much the railways have a right to Why then be so complacent about auto accireally get horrified by them we don't really realize dents? expect in 1935 as the very minimum But that the problem is great j SOLUTION OFFERED ' The situation come home to us somethe year should hold much more for them how it is someone doesn't Luckily the traffic problem isn't altogether inelse who gets killed someone else than that There is a need for modifica- - who gets injured someone else who passes through soluble Although the death list for the country' as a whole increased bv 16 ner cnt Us th tion of the bankruntrv law th fnrilifafA a needless tragedy We ourselves— well we're the were a few states which actually reduced their f ones It won't happen to us lucky 11J1It railwav rnrnitinns ThprJ tauty nsis SO We aCCeDt these traffic intnHtv fieri iron nrHVi It is worth that most of these states no question about the enactment of this the m°st amazing compiacence--Hancalmly go along strict financial noticing laws-s- uch laws as for! responsibility up a oeam ana injury st which future ro"n iso that bid W who tihave been involved in serious acei persons the may eration will probably find the hardest single feature dents to drive until they pay any judgments against nancial structure of ipo a number of weak or of our civilization to understandmem ana prove tneu arjinty to compensate for any OtfE MILLION VICTIMS future damages they may cause bankrupt carriers remodeled and strengthThey are also! in the main states which have ened The labor provisions of the emer Suppose we start adding up the figures to see adequate highway patrol forces and strict drivers' we license laws' gency transportation act of 1933 likewise what result moregetthan a jmillion Slightly people were killed By attacking vigorously along such lines we may must be changed to permit cooperative econ- - or injured in auto accidents in £934 There are an to reduce our traffic death list There can be hope proximately 25000000 autos in use (in the United no excuse for failure to take omies the rapid extension of store-doo- r such action Figure it but for yourself The chances are Present is situation collection and delivery Of if reign the spec- - States i"1 absolutely intolerable about one in 25 that you will be killed or injured in A drastic and of preventive program an auto accident this year tacular improvements in service and equip action is long overdue ment the prospective changes in rates the promise of regulation of railroad competi tors and the coordination of their service II with that of the rail carriers the poolin to of service and facilities and thfe abandon Another Warren Bobs Up as Roosevelt Adviser ment of unremunerative lines the financial lie's By ART H UK BIHS BANE to Change Foreign Policy of U S 1934 King Features Likely New (Copyright Idea difficulties to be met and overcome—all Syndicate Inc) Is to Make Sacrifices to Avert War No More Gothese indicate that 1935 will not be a year ing to Conflict to Protect Our Citizens' Trade A Long Swim of somnolescence in the railroad business How Not to Be Foolish '' If those connected with the industry will By RODNEY DUTCIIER f nto the the next conflict and how $3 for §333 Correspondent) to avoid dangerous frictions with manifest an alertness in keeping with the The Heaviest Chain WASHINGTON Jan 5 — Of belligerents necessities and opportunities of the situa- Why talk about neutral rights he course if you wanted to be flippant The new year 1935 latest contri tion important history will be made" about it you might say that the na- asks when no other nation recog oution of Father Time to the long nizes them 4 tizzy' s -- f j it Is just as essential that measures right" T "The Boston Globe thinks the president iiitrs a cnanenge as it says: "That sentence (in which the presi-- 2 dent expressed a hope for calm counsel J' until a new land more practical form of j &a - gen-legisiau- vf W 1 on ng The Inside of Washington RAILWAY OUTLOOK FOR 1935 "Q ARRING the unforeseen 1935 ought to D be one of the most eventful years in £Le history of the American railways" says "The railways' difficulties Railway Age y:ine fiiave been studied and discussed for sev-eryears without any concrete action hav-ing been taken to deal with any of them SNow however it would appear that there guiuji tu ue suine acuou uuring iu-Opposition to the regulation of interstate motor earners dwindled almost: to zero rhile infiuenUal supporters of such regula- -- j i — t jm rnvm i a rt rt — — —v--- j zccli wwukwj u uumutio ajiu inaction by congress of lislation estab- ! " il ODAY -- (Standard-Examin- -- er and insistence on them is chain of beads called --Eternity" likely to mean war? a week old i he case of the yawmng housewife of other Dr warren l nearly TlJlltQl TlOrinnp X WWi0 nnrrnrK n IX tTTr ilUn IlKllta the high seas he says which can Morrison 111 was the more unusual in Not Ion? ag0- - Presldent Roosevelt on rim h plans and Plans in our slow light of the fact that husbands generally do theories George p Wafrn! tion without that assertion threaten to prosperity's shore It Is progress a long -- -w who believed inflation and the com ing to lead to war tne yawning swim when you are thrown 'overmodity dollar would save our ecoboard in the middle of lake Supe- : nomic necks nor was thrown This OWN over IT'S THEIR RISK country i— Scientists tells us there will ha wvph i George F hasn't been in the pid in anotner wk of superior poara nMrf" Warrpn n dent be echpses in 1935 not counting those of a few 3?UmMed empowered on the outbreak K?e?JL r rw r 1 i f i i l 99 t i i i i i w l sions one of xiasoeens Charles Warren and the puuucai result is likely to be an entirely dif for observance of such rights If the Demgerent refused the presidfnt Big American cities New York ierent American foreign policy Adolf were prepared to welcome carriers to formunitions Hitler regulation his leading it might embargo associates insists never highway This Warren is a lawyer here who inning new the bid American to to war-tim- e them year in such fashion as carry as come ships a to assistant attornev speedily Similar-- j has been shot ept with mean looks general had ipreiore ougnt 10 convince any new year that close ps to American it its armed ports of charge enforcing our man are a foolish to loans race beings and and it prohibit keep u neutrality laws from 1914 to 1917 not irom experience Before consulting Charles Warren Americans ort its ships In Newigarn York 200000 had secured And Americans who insisted on Roosevelt and the state department loik — observing Japan's attitude engaging in trade which was danger- - tables at which they could sit and w mianignc nour "For toward naval limitation —had de ous because of war in a given area uooa reiiow" or so be would did told at their a they veloped strong hankerine for soma own Bhoulo: Old risk Acquaintance be For kind of alliance with the British — BQt Rav Wnrwnwhich of course wouldn't be called Good could be accomplished bv MORE BLOOD PURGING "it u that nn an alliance : Detroit News) ry-- yar a story that should run the risk of commercial wrote long ago in dner -- r loss T?e bul0Gd °£outeen more persons who had opinions con- than that the country should ?tos SPOOFS OLD TRADITION Be involved in a war to protect their X Tfr uYlc lu Known r?J? u0se 2f the "Russian communist hierarchy has Warren's ideas fitted in very wfel aiWari -e raa 01 two younsr men who de -- 4v accSdt red Klfffff t dazeAltogether ftm:deeper with that because they spoofed the Balmy v oiu AAi a uuici corner Ann u j-- ij i tt ttMii va ircis count 11 lives have hppn ecod old American trArflMrm wVitVh exaction cf retribution for the death hour pauoiopnize 1 spending a half whether that's —a bright idp We've got California weather and demanded "frppdnm nf I u uii niarnn( I iaiwc luiois vUiiC° OI NT!A 1935 (COPvriffht Tnp Rrv!ri — ve — — ' got ours: By rights we uarded as the one ma lor they inemseives" uu vne lu Witn I 11 should havegot! that heavy rain or source of friction between the Thfl AAAiAA Icini ou11 nexta xn lu'T tne lastAuVuus batcn was Nicolaiev allpo-P- assassination saw tn v Jwo j " r wave English-speakinwoKea g the two philosophers morning ucjr )fauia Z u assassin The other thirteen are said to have been7 E nations If one rollinar nvfr sun5ec ana reiic- - were to make up a slogan for the rnwm t not w"Jr' wj- with him tn in tne gutter fightina: as to which out otner political as- uiuraer yv-one warren snouia nay the check be well must Jtake only the wort theory it might ' their execu-K- n The smart "Too L Is to only way not to be foolish in fight" ?onrhah werVhot not after trial and conviction p 10 De rooiish nut Doy' anst0 new The secret proposed condemnation by drum head court- - trri w' rha?tSi Us suggested by the admhtStratioJ SUKIIUM U S R R — (UP)- ttliJU is Wood purge has aroused the severe con- j s designed both to keep us out of f d One of the strangest colonies in the he wo?dd g2nd t a- - fsun-JasScwaJeret hat orange Uar ana on in keeping world a group gL0? of 50 African negroes ' ana contribut""Buwnea wh6 were brought to this vicinit puDiicist Tf t ing editor of the Nation Ravs hA or instance Ai"" iCV¥ He's am rf as slaves for the "72 mthirn" the level of Adolf HiUer What indlctmenT m case the league of nations tworkscenturies ago tnai -a lean blooming idiots rapidlyJ are than thatrv:ConsidertagMr Villard's utter effect sanctions against an WaAlAHM t II vwu a cirCUS Offfrlnt he that has Pressed himself with sSPreme reply ??Sresscr nation by means of a Maximum Umnpr n I Smith bet that on lives negro the colony lvs - A MlwMue' would not coast of the Black country is Springlike dav f Is this vindictive savagery something inherent near would' n Sea here refuse hnv CTjunttlriA ct kill de: necessarily spoil the effort by 'de grees witn-mild ?oWa in the Abkhasian Autonomous re- - for $339 each Hundreds walked bv the Russian character or revolutionary in general? ?Onf degrees and eiements-o- f all three in It After all the i ot 1x1 e ooviei union f wieu ac me genuine bills some tered at six o'clock il an inneritance of the intolerance two centuries sinre crted "Fake" only two purchased Durlns the The policy would be flexible has ' — I chlya shift in objective It has desoendldto the ana meir on enslavement the necroes have "uvy omnnr won a $100 waz- based the interests of ot Skies were clear one year- aeo moment or on a collective effortthe lost virtuaUy aU their African cust- - f er' to not of old poUttcal and economic system alonef but or three" to you) with maxioms and lose They speak Abkhasian lvXAliy Americans wish they had or stop war men who too as - sceptical about rert n in mum temperature 40 idesreps and prevent under A them ic°n prospered lansruace tv — riwe in www revolutionary bAiv " aikckiiaaiai1! 510 Ks Daclc power through bloodshed must maintain itself &:WMc5hcfuiim minimum a chilly 19 degrees in 1929 national costumes have Caucasian SACRIFICES FOR PEACE is has been able to establish a conviction of its widomfnd Its : 1 : names 4 dance Caucasian dances and Roosevelt's deep interest in and vrthiness One would have thought the soviet caucasion Man naturally susnirWis hv in THREATENED aing songs DEER of the apparent Charles rlached this point" after H years But the espousal TSheraise is coal-blaheritance from cave davs when NANTUCKET Masai— fITP skin thirk Only their Warren theories isn't unorthodoxical Tiie comrades don't eel that they won the (respect I and to kill even'bodv wanted -ips was orias is e7body Meningitis his adherence to the mone- kinky hair reveal their of the Russian people Their government muit ?es1 itS threatening a herd of lcses ueer on that here-tProtective have l8f' character- gin Dithe themselves island of he ideas to They f tary instill terror not on their power to inspire confidence kept George Warren The pbwer wnen he fmds himself in a Vision of Fisheries and fiamn r-- f state deDartment fpllnxcs hav hon racially pure having intermarried I if Would Stalinism succeed without fW its blood o - or niwtvuti vffaIe1 JoUowing removal to a hos- - j studying them for months and de- - but little with the tribes about them I6011- 1 ir 10 Huau"W5 on detest work V impressea craze in a tie jobs? Who knows? It hasn't been Most of the negroes are employed l tried h would It the disease The deer was the proposals an nev eoli-etion the 1: iz weren t so trg Lgic that in a countrv whpro th rfotv "South Soviet y "uul"°' nearby fsm !LBUD ex- 110111 the Law John where Varren's 11 has been abolished for the murder nf rnmmnn oranre tend and sufering they suggest that imm periment in France writings I to nonsaid be in mamay a mild are trees there Vocf nf exacted for the life of one party leader This mav fit with the communicable Xorm and believed I sacrificinsr tn avnifi cdmmunist definition of equality ooxne 01 tne negroes have become but it doesn't make sense to a caused by some form of ioraze neace Whon tT tJm u : fir tim- - VV — dsmocrat invest ln s°iEt y I poisoning UtUaU my out how to keep from being dragged ' i' v al tion had fallen out of the hands of ifr — orfH o"jr i - xct of at-exc- hu-shi- Q PlWONS of the P RESS I me hitr no-wa- - t9tn -- -- — r 1 riKi f cSiSSS tflrtHnthlf610116 Rafter tn - tfwr ji deteatn jt Li? Afln&SJ co-oper- ate AUULA 111 r ZnlvrrAV rr SwT: vV-- ed ' lv WW sales trained nn th 7 iOJl A4A I ALUlt! 1 I — — a fl we got back! the dance was 1' rT- J l13' dUUiUn — Tsm T 1 a me I parked the t mm l0 fteenP°cef uubiia car where I got it and when Tom ucs presumably accurate Liaa e went so puncn me nose I "u"u Warn in nnhii tiiiti — —j tions increased rufsnrvriiu ur tpia mm I did it and Tom Dunched ZS V r nnm bo niu )vi m&HllH£ year for a long time in 1934 ex on a woman I pect to divide more than six thou a r i "Tt' oil o 8 sand miUion dollars this T- a ' A — repoixeq a A w- i - — — Alt SSSBEFS Kf- come pay money out seems to be demonstrated A 7" - 1 w w AttV M a jam and then leave the poor Sir 7' We Dig Mexico rpnnrf tho u""m llaiaW (i few ever led me Mighty boys outbreak since the dif mi I allowed If anywhere them T"ucuny oetween church and state ": to 1 began group of Mexican "Red l "17' B a "c Shirts rLeaiyi?°SiUe I0"1! and make them believe thev i""1 were Catholi wohippers when the an- cient sixteenth centurv" church was I an a it in wnicn a man ana a wo filled: killed six and wounded ILVzr thirfv man a T J ftUi- -i A vuc nca omrt a was Killed The was ever got into trouble together m uis cKuer 01 Aoam nnri 10 " and the When it came to anti-religio- us w VS " Kfn 1 fffflJ? SSKeorRMST18 mwva — VA r f V UU11£ I I Ir the I I Ohio Naval Reserve Unit Faces "Mutiny" 'CINClNNATT—mm—A ?£?n w-iu- t"r si out of it by ExplainingbWto that the woman had tempted him His whole sex had been ashamed of that episode ever since Unnumbered mil lions of men have had the same excuse since that -- time but they w-- have established a tradition that tney win take the punishment and cn a reputation because °? w" P°°r wea woman mL ifcJTTT-has dewind i Cincinnati Naval Reserve ov rp man makes-fusal of certain mSmh are members of labor unions tn J n? V7 "VL'S""" DUC "'J'1?woma? make themselves eiteihi frtv VTn v"" monev — "c" squanaers tti ff wib rcasoraers drives him haywire andniswrecks the vaf0i Repudiating the orders of their whole wnrt h ol mtut obwuci j3 ms- - tase tne oiame from SJr'trSfifSf'f'-th!lveThejse aw not things as they unit to the Ohio ousht tn h rQd u Naval Reserve they were reduced to are they are But let us youHg Inactive rank according to E a folks alone w urnt www AilC ngni Ones "WUl Stav rfffht AWb4 wiuumuucf — — land the wrong ones of f if-f-f CANADIAN GOLD DOWN will make a mM n w x a kjiii — luj'i — Hroaiifi- - tnev aiwava hauo " tion of gold in Canada in Sentm "Just — —— x liub tare lvj per amounted to 244180 ounces as i have you associate with v 'wlulo om uunucs i -t enmnaroil with — in vitimiuiiaei saia stUDDorn- rather August and 236526 in September ly J343 tne Dominion Bureau of Sta- T won't do it replied Lucv ii wiea J :"w a ir":r v wv I a--l - - - v - i- again" Canada averaged $3418 per ounce is too hir tne month's output was worth $8- (Copyright 1935 McNaught syndicate) Break the Tyranny of UQCOQf ROLLED COLDS : eTruHt — - I onffi " ve thfii4 -- 1 — r i!?Ur!stei1 fi "JS AaAt&ij A Vhen Colds 1 ck itlt 1 ' - Ahrin nrew fcVAULXl Deionsed to Tnmi Hnwarrt nnrt IE a igSS I - 7?' SSflS? Tw SJSS it - Strange Negro Tribe Found In Soviet " Aru lfS?XeSt v ' S tht SlvwtJ'i15 '' 1 i af uu 3 — t far-reachi- i t- i — ( i t--- ' j ! t - - " i - d democracy has been shoved aside' for other forms Coming from "Mr Roose- velt it is a challenge" The New York Herald-Tribun- e says: "President Roosevelt's message to congress' exhibits his leadership at its Z best and at its worst It is admirably nd encouragingly phrased in every tern of ' gerierahty It is depressingly vague in almost every detail of action ' i anai execution 1 -- - government might arise) j representative is being read in the countries where IflF? e dollar-Franc- - sented" H - ISO- The San Francisco Chronicle refers to the president's appealing personality say ing: 'President Roosevelt's message was written with his usual tactf ulness and delivered with his usual charm The skill with which the president avoided alienating either the business or the antibusiness forces is notable Practical- ly events and not salesmanship will termirie the merits of the goods vvmvM JANUARY itiUUmHU "Did you so to the country club "I have heard some rumors rabout with young C&rmiehael last night?" him" said Father sternly demanded Father as his daughter Aren't rumors came down to Sunday morning' the"Now 'let's see things which make runs on breakfast "Good mominj Judge P replied banks and ruin fine institutions You are a banker Dad Lucy emiling at her father and needlessly? should I think that you of all men mother never would eondemn any one on "I asked you a question I" said a mere rumor" rather sternly "I insist on tht right to select "I didn't realize that you were quite so much in earnest" said his the people with whom you spend daughter apologetically "i did go your time" said Father firmly to the club with Jerry Carmiehael "Did you Jcnow that I have tasted last night We came in the front gin?' asked his daughter quietly door He danced the first and last "What?" exploded Father dances with me and there was noth T have tasted gin repeated his ing out of the way about any of daughter "Before you condemn as a rumdum let me add hastily "I do not care to have you as- me that I tasted it only once and didn't sociate with that young man" said like n and have never tasted it "He is a nice boy" replied Lucy again I hadn't forgotten that you had commanded me never to touch caimiy alcoholic liquors although of course that command had made me all the "You cannot do it" and do not be more curious and I had to taste the asnamea or your ignorance dreadful stuff to find out for myCover your confusion bv tellinir self her about the original wise old "In common with' all girls and Rothschild supposed to know more boys of the prohibition days I have about money than all others been with people who drink I am HC intended to leave his fortune not afraid of liquor I don't like conservatively safely invested to re it and will never drink it but I main intact forever He ordered in had to make that decision from my vestments made exclusively in "ba own experience and not- - from parsic Donas" or tne Austrian empire ental experience As long as I the German empire French repub- have mentioned I might as well gin lic and British empire add that the few young men of my The German and Austrian invest- acquaintance who take gin on parments have been wiped out every ties are quite as often ginned against win as ginning They buy it quite as The investment in French bonds often for as they buy it for has cut down eighty cents on the themselvesthe girl reduced the value of "Poor Jerry did get mixed up: in the franc from about twenty cents a mild sort scandal with a girl to four cents In England he fared but I know and I am quite Jerry a little better The Rothschilds are to believe the girl was that ready no longer "Europe's richest more to blame than he was Atl least one Jialf the time when a ar feirl do some silly thing boy In New Vorfe' a notorious addict the and leads- the boy instead of girl ana peaaier or drugs recently ar th the girl although boy leading ived- from Chicago is caught with he always has to take the rap y°nnS women eighteen and "in your young days Father adtwenty years old daughters of re vanced women were fighting for spectacle families with men They got equal rights One of the girls when detectives tne vote to and the right to took her from the man xrahhpH own right but there was one property herself in the left breast and is exwere smart thing they enough never pected to die ask for or get That thing was Both were held bv their kppnpr to the right to take an equal share in a grip stronger than any chain of the blame with their men friends of iron a grip called the drug haba man and a woman it that once it fastens on a victim get Whenever a into jam she always hides does not let go behind the fact that she is only a Hassan called "the Old Man nf woman weak poor and was led me Mountains" AH she is to do is on rylnl widespread teavc to whSe Ukeit naml we gTouf (he word "assassin") kept his hold on 4 -- J ul) six-hou- " -- A By rtOE FULKERSON -- LIBERAL C0M3IENT REPUBLICAN papers the country over V received the president's message with comment generous From the Los Angeles Times came this statement "On the whole it will satisfy the country that a good deal of the unsound advicq that is being given the administration by its radical fringe has fallen upon deaf ears It indicates in some respects a tendency toward the TJttrN unday IVIorning Oreakfast - As Improved Highway to Great Salt Lake A Central Place On a Transcontinental Air Route T 'We'll Have To Hurry To Get There On Time' and waterway carrier regulation and fourth an independent newspaper modification-w- ill section Published Ertry Evening and Sunday Morning Without a greatly alleviate the railways' diffiaiuzzje or a uiuo culties they will not cure them all Indeed fiiemoers oi The Associated Press United Frees SKA these measures" continues the Railway Btmca and A J3 C J? Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to tne use lor Age "would be more than offset if legislarepublication of ail jxtw dispatches credited to it or not wwwwwa crcauea in tais paper and also to local nsvs tion proposed by the railway labor organifi'i? zations were enacted These measures inSUBSCRIPTION PRICES £7 carrier 75o a Month By Mall— Must Bt Paid In ? AdTance— 65o a Month $700 a Year In Utah Idaho clude provisions for the day the wj wjgmicg —a utaer states iiou a uontn 'full' crew and for limiting train CALL 252 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS lengths to an uneconomic maximum "Purported to be in the interests of railThe Standard-Examiner- 's Platform way labor these proposal" says Railway A Modern City and County Building A new City High School Age "would accomplish the ruin of the Control of a Pure Water Supply to Accommodate railway industry by increasing operating vuy persona Vigorous Campaign at City and County Boad Inaprove-and expenses by $600000000 annually ments would result in the wholesale curtailment Scenic Road to Mount Ogden and Boad rrona Ogden viuajruu 10 newer w&nyoa of services with a consequent decrease in ' Another North and South Arterial Highway (long-and-short-ha- 4 R VlCKS THREATEN A-TRO-riOL "At the first sneeze or nasal irrita- tion quick! — a few drops of Vicks Its timely use helpi: If a Cold STRIKES VlCKS VAPORUB At bedtime massage throat nd chest with VapoRub the mother coldst Through Standby in to prevent many coldj and to" the night treating its famous poultice- -' throw off colds in their early stages vapor action gives soothing relief EUILD RESISTANCE TO COLDS — by following the simple health rules that are part of Vicks Han for Better Control of Colds The Plan has been clinically tested by physicians and proved in home use by minions (Full details of this unique Plan in each VicU package) Va-tro-n- o |