Show 8 THE OGDEN U S Resolved To Be Neutral Studies Grim Lesson of 1914-- 1 8 To Avert War JAPAN SWEEPS TRADE RIVALS FROrETHIOPJA luwitf lywi V- - : 3-- r - - ' penetration of the Ethiopian mar keti ajSiit stands at present - The market is a tiny- one lim ned from every point of view It is essentially a price market where quality makes little difference It is a market which must undergo great expansion before it can be important Almost the entire Japanese im port total was in textiles a field dominated until 1926 by the Unit ed states and later by Manchest er's mills in India But even in tex tiles trade has fallen off Imports of all kinds in the first six months of 1934 taken as a reasonably normal year totalled 9000 tons In the same period of 1935 they were 4000 tons j! r s - DEADLY PARALLELS SEEN Those studying means' of' 'wag ing neutrality" here are spurred by a series of deadly parallels between today and 1914 They ' know that the neutrality problem the United States failed to solve: in 1914-19will be even knottier tomorrow than it was then You think perhaps - that the United States has no particular interest in Ethiopia or Manchuria or the Polish Corridor You arent in- - : Jfc St- - 17 terested -- ini'VeA 1914-'Americ- - rrri: at Sarajevo' automatically ran r Measuring World War Cost To the U S SECURITY WAS FALSE Most people felt as did David Starr Jordan director of the World Peace Foundation who wrote in 1913 "What shall we say of the great war of Europe ever threatening ever impending and which never comes? We shall say that it will nover come Humanly speaking it is impossible" The assassination of the Austrian archduke on June 28 1914 was a one-da- y sensation in the American papers Few had ever heard of EACH FIGURE $500000000 ALL THE CHURCHES IN THE UNITED STATE? on ! -- TOTAL COST OF EDUCATION FOR FIVE YEARS -- i mum ALL THE SURFACED ROADS IN THE UNITED STATES °TAi: C°r!T 0F ALL MEDICAL CARE FOR FIVE ? i hJI 0 congress and signed by the president is the final answer When this act expires Feb 29 1936 several more plans will be presented to con gress to build a complete program of ioh Ul - YEARS 0£ """s - pfrr t km fM 4 i CL11VJ America j m i i 45 Full Fifthi 11 ' iiii IrMiiuwi ijuort) ' ' a i j Provo NO DANCE PLANNED Therewill be no dance in Hnnh vme Miss Barbara McKav cave a suc cessful party Wednesday evening for fourteen friends Games were played and refreshments served tnis-week-en- Sermon To Be Read Next Year 100-Year-O- X I I I i m in rrtiL- - 1 run rinit Im Ifin Grovo's LAJIA7IVE It'i that e m bsacfy Id-ti- 'favorite- m - Avoilobl (45 TEXiCO FIRE CHIEF saves money In- - as much true o o o Ait in the preparation of tempting dishes as there is in painting on canvas And White Star Tuna simplifies the "technique" of the Art of Cookery surprisingly! There are so many different ways of serving White Star Tuna all different all delicious! It is the most "adaptable" food you ever used! And good for )0lk£Lith ks Vitamir" TA" and 'D" phosphorus potas- aim iuuiuc uddi cnccuve of nutritional goiter! "S t t W -M ' I-- "61- - 1 Americas favorite 22 years because C1or fonly the delicate ten iv uct aeiicious xxgnr meat is packed Send for Tuna Recipes' B6 New Proven to Van Camp Sea Food Co Inc Dept W Tetminai Island California A beurbon with tests A grval tt Dundee now offers men and young men of Ogden a complete line of nationallv known haberdashery at a price that will mcetthe budget of the thriftiest Drop in and see Full Fifth quart) and Full Pints 'I ' for yourself JLii-Kl5 ii j STnAicnr rye wmsmr t ii i ' h AvBebl Que Ml W f&k- - — 4UiJ Full Pint 'V ? U 1 In v wood a full year IRTISTIC'S NEWEST CREATION Dick Powell Shirts mnxvznsuY- j straight3 rnocF v ( ''-- I "! ' It AUTHlTIG rwi m ii A full-faver- sd a msflew trslfht rys sf moils8!y Uw prUs In Full fI Men's Monito HOSE Guaranteed values 35c 3 for $100 B V D Shorts And " Athletic Shirts Regular 50c values 35c 3 - AretilsbU li!!i y-- i WlthTrubenlzed collar $155—2 for $300 j Aged i """ j I Sth j TSy ii OXIIEB BIG VALUES: Cavalier Distilled Dry Gin Old Hickory Straight (if 1 HERE'S SATURDAY-- OCTOBS R i (45quortJ and 1I BCDTTDa I A W?(P9 iiky ill and a grtot valusl In JIMM i ' V 1 j " and quality with C°L?ffre for whiskies at twice the price Convince yourself I nounuor stiiaigqt WniSKY v Aiinmrmnn THE OPENING OF A NEW DEPARTMENT OF or u f I T 8 STAGES! GASOLINE increases miles per gallon ld -- esios go innu TfceHrst im th Dry Stare the first 94 hours Th second ttas Wtry 8crtion Star from 1 to S days Th third th Mueoais eeeretion Btaye td time to stop a cold is In the first stare Take Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine It does not cold but treats It as merely suppress the — Do an treated it ejsouja Internal ln- reeuen At U orusfists c — i ' - I - Vaste Qensahon s nca S-lme- i even" Hides the second larcest exnort commodity have fallen 15! per cent in price Moat ana sneep skins Keeping- tneir volume nave cone off 40 per cent And the! story is the 'same with beeswaxj leonard sKins ana civet trie only other articles worthy of mention! vr Red Label for Bourbon - V and tefreshments present were Mr and Mrs Floyd Barnett Fred Wood rhariA v rvu Virgil Peterson Henry Burrows' Peter Winter David Petersen lan Braithwaite Walter Wangsgard axm jvmv ana Mrs Johansen Mr J and Mrs Charles Mortensen Mr and Mrs Herman Larspn nnn Harry Olson are visiting at Boulder aam Max Olson son of Harry Olson was quite seriously injured when he was kicked on the head bv a hnr Jle Is reported as recovering ivirs vnarew Peterson of Alberta Canada is here visiting her narpntx Mr and Mrs Peter Niipn Ui Peterson is here with her threp nic est sons who will attend school at the Brigham Young university" at 100 Proof Get a bottle today — i university Straight Whisky Take Your Choicer1 Black Label for Rye Avoilobls In Full PlnU end ' co-e- ds i-MO- i ingredients — distilled in bv Oct 4— (UP)— "No ! PJTTirJWK a: 1E11E Made from the world's finest - SURPRISE PARTY MrsJ Leo Johansen was nlMcorf- ly surprised on her birthday by a group jof friends Cards were played Tex - i Ti30i?A' aturday - m student boy or girl will be permitted to sr£oke on Baylor's time' President Pat M Neff :said In explaining the dismissal from their jobs of three from the on which they were working Jobs part time while attending' the Baptist -- ( es a? HUNTS VILLE Oct evening in the Huntsville amusement hall there will be a wedding reception for Mr and Mrs Gilbert Wangsgard - Relatives and friends are cordially invited and specifies that Americans saDing mittee is hopeful He admits the on ships of those countries do so at new law is neutrality incomplete their own risk but believes it will be highly effective CITES WORLD WAR LESSON These provisions boldly attack two Pittman believes that "we will of the practices that helped get the avoid another war because we United States Into the World war learned our lesson from the World friction for neutrals There is an even' less definite un- Senator Key Pittman chairman war" "of the of neuderstanding oi tne senate foreign relations com The I r hi trals than there was rights in 1914 Such ilM j ! m WACO - a i 00 Great quantities have been pux icu uns year— 10000 tons fnr the first six months or the same as- lor au or 1934 -- ut it is only war iear wnicn prompts the shin menis and they are waitinz ' at Djibouti for buyers If the rrin drops further exports will be fruitless and the crop will rot or as in jurazu- De purnea ane coiree situation' tells Just iuwut tne complete export storv-- a yearly total of around 30000 tnns oeing maintained even under dtps ent conditions but with an average to 33 per cent The price arop oi peak year 1928 showed 5Ot)0O tons imported against 30000 exnorteri but in a normal year they are about pr- Wi v1i irrr? raiiiTR f NO BUYERS AT MARKET f ' ? i 15-0- w War Tomorrow- - courtesy The Foreign PoJiev Asaonatlon ' i Party Held On Birthday Max Olson Kicked In Head Surprise - This chart graphically shows the enormous cost to America of "taBT aU the social expenses Tshown tSI S??vW?r' aactive part in the conflict cost us 25 billions bur un- billions With interest charges care Sf hnSdiriH?-0i° widows and orphans and pensions the war now has cost us at least ' 55 billions al-exc- ept - ifti S& From eMsisBHBBHMass ed w " iw w ri V'Hi iqi ' KANSAS CITY Mo Oct 4— (UP) commission as- a Kentucky colonel— unsolicited unexplained i had John Cannon worried today Because he a negro realestate dealer is a good Republican CLd to be on the staff of Gov Ruby Laf-- f oon a Democrat — well that might bring about political complications John feared — His war-desper- ate ifi 'i(f0 4 00 I jri TOTAL FIRE LOSSES FOR TWENTY YEARS country - a!R a'BL FOR SATURDAY Ousted For Smoking Un the Job Co-e- ds Colonel Commission -- m Rep Maury Maverick of Texas for instance plans a law that would prohibit export of any material declared contraband by any fighting - mi - HVS almost as hard as wacinsr 'war feenator Gerald Nye of North Da Koa thou6 he believes the pres- uib most import-$400an "tuuamjr Job of the last conCTess would stm further limit foreign loans ready restricted by the Johnson act iuans co aeiamters Present neutrality act ad- mlttedly a hasty job does two tnings: First it tells the world that thP United States is going to make a determined effort to stay neutral no Blatter who fights That definite Knowledge has already had a re- straining eiiect on the European situation Second the art nrnhihitc rt?rw ""X" sales of munitions nnrt "imir ments of war"- to fighting countries I ' was ablaze few people believed it White could have any direct effect on Minister of the church th America The New York Sun well time the Rev White reauested that American the sermon on temperance be read represented thinking opinion when it said: "There is iuu years later It will hp TPSrt nn notning reasonable in such a wariia home Sunday next summer as mat ior wnicn Europe has been making ready and it would be fol rights were then believed fairly well- ly for the country to sacrifice itself ueiinea NEUTRAL HAS NO RIGHTS to the frenzy of dynastic politics you will find well-versToday and the clash of ancient hatreds which is urging the old world to men in Washington who will tell you that a neutral has no rights destruction all today that a at STILL WE WENT TO WAR is likely to respect country no Such words are beiner written to rights in other words neuthat the day But the important' thine is tral country is unwilling to tnat months after the Sun wrote for And when you fight for fight npn- them in 1914 the United States was tral rights you are no longer at war The mere fact of essential Indifference to a war is no What neutral rights are worth er any guarantee that you can long stay insisting" on at the risk of war? neutral That is the studied There are other ominous comDar- in the capitalquestion inbeing the of today hope lsons In the summer of 1914 slack perfecting better to Insure plans were times coming on as today neurality in the future easiness is still far below normal line political situation was some- - NEXT: that ZZZl? ?rn' what similar Opposition to a re- - nrnhaM Things' n akiuu w una to draw the United States in uuj5eve"S m to a war and how similar incidents : " I?fe5the conntry to war in 1914 against neutrals perhaps j more strongly than they were in 1914 boats bigger and better universal radio have linked planes countries closer together increased the contacts and possibilities of -- strip! "Finest Japan Sheeting" ine reason for the decline of There is too imports is obviousmuch No one cares uncertainty to put too big a stake! at risk Extension of credit has ceased rTskrinsance has : ones pes cent a year to three per cenij per six montns in Addis Ababa six per cent per six months in tnej interior and double fpr Ital ians American share of imports for ithe entire vpst i± $200000 of which $150000 renri- wnuea ipeiroieum products ahd automobiles Tt: wniiM Vnro sunk to 'almost nothing this year for the extraordinarv nur cxiuie oi iw trucKs oy tna govern- ment all intended for the army which has given a $200000 tntati t lor six months Exports have been hdmRfrunoby the slump in world prices par- ticularly in coffee the great mon- ey crop despite- the artificially low oi tne silver thaler — It sells price u ioou to ine pound instead of nic iu wiucn wouia De its proper Pnc vunee is tne me blood of py- ports ana fctmopia's chief contri- wwtiwii w mc uuu An Aran imt- end has it that Egyptian Christinn monKKs settled in Kaffa province in the 3rd century discovered that tneir cattle became frisky and sleep less alter eating a certain shrnh uut oi tneir experiments and ps- pecially out of the coffee culture oi xemen in Arabia where seeds crew the uaai Deen transported present beverage "Coffee'l is sim- posed to come from "Kaf fa" and certain it is that vast virein fnr ests of coffee trees may be found aii over tne province coffee? which stood at 15 cent American a pound in 1928 is nnw aown to lour or five cents The to 20000 ton average has not diminished since thenJcrop but th price is ruinous Negro Worried Over RECEPTION SET either the archduke or Sarajevo It couldn't be important ror nearly a month America for got it and then suddenly about SANDWICH N H— (UP— Tmii July 25 the papers blossomed with White has a church sermon Europe at Point of War I" preached In the Methodist rhnrrh Even when on Auc 4 all Europe here August 24 1836 bv I £2 it for- understandings it' knew?1 nothing The people the newspapers govern ment officials 'even the state de almost qually partment itself were " ignorant ' Today we knoyr a little more about such things but not much : ten-gall- a ward" to explode all "nations at once Of the : secret" treaties : alliances What Neutral Rights Are Worth Insisting On At the Risk of War? ' 1 T" O f It would have been even worse I All: S1nances for extraordinary 'imports Laws i o oeai Mil except oi gasoune m expectation of war: of Conflict Being By a special arrangement the govSought ernment bought 5000 cases on condition thai the company With war clouds lowering over which closed the deal import and store within the country i for later Europe and Africa the most vital purchase 20000 cases —five years question facing the American peosupply for the government or two ple is "Can we keep out of conflict if it comes?" The grim lesyears supply for the enttte nation son i of 1917 is before congress as forms ithe basic Gray sheeting import article flimsy transparent it seeks a way to insure neutralstuff no heavier than cheesecloth ity The perils that face this used by Ethiopians for their toga-lik- e country and the efforts that are sham as and the all -- concealbeing made to avoid them are ing body and head wraps of the told in an enlighteniner series of women Even imports of this comthree articles by Willis Thornton from 3200 tons n&a service staff correspondent modity dropped during the first half of 1934 to 2382 this being the first of the series tons so far this year The gray sheet: By WILLIS ing constitutes almost the entire THORNTON textile import and it is completely NEA Service Staff CorrMmindcn Japanese WASHINGTON Oct 4— With Eu TENTS FROM JAPAN rope in the midst of the worst war In a few special1 textile wares scare since 1914 U S departtheiiUnited States and Great Brit- ment experts and state consressional ain still can compete but they are! friends of peace are hard at work only a tiny fraction of the total on further plans to preserve Amer Even the canvas tent in which the ican neutrality emperor opened the EthioDian ' - - - v 'Well neither " were you' in 1914 nor were the people who were your present age m 1814 America was utterly unconcerned then- - with the network- of diplomacy which had divided all Europe into two armed camps' well before knew' nothing of the train of 'powder which once lighted - 'f 1 935 h ' fcv By EDWARD W BEATTIE United: Press Staff Correspondent : ADDIS ABABA Oct 4— UP— Out of estimated Ethiopian Imports Of i $5000000 for 1934 a total of '$3000000 came from Japan These iigares tell the story of Japanese — V FRIDAY EVENING OCTOBER 4 "break" that came-witEthiopia's eiiort to assign oil and minera rights to a mysterious British and American syndicate shows how hard it is to foresee neutrality emer gencies in advance But even here the definite "will of : the - American people expressed through congress in the neutrality act was a guiding light iorthe state department iMijuksmmm" 3 Total Imports Estimated At r$5000000 With 5 From Islands STANDARD-EXAMINE- R v ft V for $1 y - Hand-mad- e Regular 55c— 2 95c for $100 PAJAMAS Regular $250 values Dundee price $135 1 tor $300 Sweaters The very latest Reg- ular $295 values at $195 " !v-- Dundee's Famous Hats Now $295 r Fifths Full Pints j and' Classic Cordials' 24G1 TIElS values Washington Ave : - ' " |