Show Thursday" ootobeb evenin’ ck THE OGDEN STANDARD EXALHHER 31023 Eckener Dodges Sto rms and Fights Weather ' urges: EDTIME Hi Zep ‘ In Air Explained By Writer rlow He Handle Stories By OLIVE ROBERTS BART (Copyrighted 1929 br EA Peter ot fVl J l Jit ‘ -- f -3 T- V j i - This airplane photo shows the three hangars of the Zeppelin works’ at Friedrichshafen the larger ones being msde necessary by the in- ’ H UOTATIONS oy9 50 got out of g(TF all the men over would not f be 1 the world there run to it — left experience enough - i Ford Henry r : j --The “wisher gets nowhere where-a- s come the ‘wanter’ makes his wish — Knute for it” true by working liocknc J i “Women arc born to be lovely not (Smart common” — Rudy Vallee 6et) ! “When we say young people are worse than they were a generation ago we are both foolish and superficial or at least the- victims of bad memory”— Dr Daniel A' Poling New York minister - t v are lacking Intellectually be of people are so thousands cause immersed in pleasure or so absorbed in business that their spiritual side has become paralyzed” — Dr William Hail Moreland ' -- Ve j : - ' GIRL’S BODY FOUND NEAR WYOMING ROAD SPEARFISH 3 D Oct —The headless body of a young woman was found by hunters in a canyon near the Sundance Wyo-- C pear fish highway yesterday The head was found later 20 feet away Officials from Crook county Wyombeen ing who said the woman had dead more than a month were at-- t tempting to identify her today “ A suitcase and a pair of over alls were found near the body but held no clue to her identity Officials here believed she might have been a “hitch hiker’ 3-- J foundland" To New York from central Europe by way of the Azores and Newfoundland would strike the layman as curious navigation Bub Eckener learned the winds as a boy And when this one struck the new American ship he 'met it on the north not the south side of it Since the great circle of the storm was turning in the opposite direction to the hands of the clock the top of the storm was moving with him not against him i Checking his motors and giving them a chance to rest he drove down the Newfoundland and New England coast at 100 miles an hour He had ridden the storm— put it to work for him ON RETURN TRIP Also on the first return trip of the Graf Zeppelin® from Lakehurst to Germany in 1928 Dr Eckener utilized the storms although fog took him somewhat off his course New York had- given him a great reception and Inland cities were urging visits by the big ship but the commander was anxious to be off Ha headed back over the north Atlantic taking the Lindbergh route or the great circle course Twenty-fo- ur passengers and one stowaway were aboard Swinging up the New England - ‘ RADIO PROGRAMS i KSL 3 October Thursday 4:00 p m— “Ye Olde Towne Cry-er- ” 6:00 p m— N B C “Sunshine" ’ — MORE ABOUT CANCER LONDON— Much information is expected to be released here on cancer when Dr W E Guy who caused world-wid- e interest with hi3 information on cancer four years ago appears before the British Medical association with a new paper It is understood in medical circles that the forthcoming paper will be Dr Chrv’s most valuable discovery program" ‘ TESTING AND REJUVENATING TUBES EADIO STUDIOS Inc Phone 3215 2337 Wash Ave STYLE -- WASHINGTON -- i i ’ -- with several dozen foreign nations are beginning to pile" up in the state department basement along with some 800 other treaties which we have signed in something less than 150 years Beautiful things these treaties are suitable for decorations In any one’s homeM Foreign offices don’t Just stick a treaty into an envelope and mail it off Each document1 is elegantly1 bound in leather between boards averaging 14 by 20 inches The binding is' in the finest material Stamped in gold with all kinds the variof fancy design and ous national seals In green and gold black and gold ana red ana gold the treaties are a pile Soon the loving tender hands of Miss Amy C Holland the state department’s guardian and protectress Of treaties will (have bundled them into their buckram boxes and stood them Up alongside all the other treaties which have gone before I t-- ith rich-looki- ng i N B C program feafamous recording artists turing n 9:00 p m — N B C “Amos Andy " 9:15 p m —Studio program 9:30 p m —N B C Pacific Network “Kylectroneers" 10:00 p m— Vocal and Instrumental novelties 11:00 p m —“Snappy Syncopations" 13:00 midnight — Silent j Friday October 4 9:30 a m — N B C “Evening Stars" 11:00 a m—N B’ C Pacific Network presents beauty talk 11:15 a m—N B C Pacific Net- - work “Favorite Recipes of Mary Hale Martin - KDTL Thursday October 4 7:00 to 7:30 p m — The Montages in novel vocal duet arrangements of popular songs 7:30 to 8:30 p m — Studio time 8:30 to 9:00 p m — C B S Hank Simmons' Show Boat melodrama 9:00 to 10:00 p m —‘KDYL feature IT’S ALL VERY NEAT ent ’ :' i p- - m— World Book ' Man— Something About Every- thing" 10:05 to 11:00 p m— Informal siu-di- o program vorites 12:00 midnight—Signing off and time report Friday October 4 12:00 to 1:00 p m— C B S Pattern in Prlngs — variety program 1:30 to 2:00 p m —C B S For Your Information 2:00 to 2:30 p m —C B S Modulations organ recital 7 keep your complexion looking lovelier than ever before! The larie bottle of FlouihTa Almond Cream is popularly-price- d at ail dealer Ask for it Genuine Bayer Aspirin lyW it is 3 IS ' j 4 if 1 f ' - j ? ll A u s ' r npxwmu THE MJB WAY VJ f 3 V i SAVES ALL THE COFFEE GOODNESS - 1 wW0' - V The valuable aroma the delicate flavor elements are frequently lost in coffee packing methods In packing MJB Coffee however a vacuum process has been perfected whereby all the natural goodness of freshly roasted coffee is retained in each can full satisfying flavor so characteristic of MJB is V Or lookedlike - 7 i - ? ‘W 0 !lU ' MJ B i 'A T WELVEl 1 lYiiiiJI V - m-l- : easy opening cans J CYLINDEnjCD uj Coffee Is packed by twelve- S Your grocer has in tho green ond gold I VA r CUUMI2E R8 : patented and used exclusively by MJtB Co:Thee gage-teste- d - ' 3 j 4 -WL'J ’ -- ’dirty! Right at the knot POSITIVELY his chin on it Natu-sure that rally ' you wejre embarrassed ?— ' 'A 'everyonej bad noticed it ’ if you know that you could clean and pid f - press it lorhimin about five minutes? Just spread it out on a cloth and sponge It with 4 Shell Dry Cleaner Let it ‘‘air” for a few hours If you hlV the time and then run an 'i ' iron over it It’ll look brand new V ih 'A A' Shell pry Cleaner is a tnarvelous new fluid from Shell laboratories It is per- cafe— 4® explosive "fectly 11 ”1 whole necktie a a Don’t spoil let 0 :U day for you again Spend five minutes on it now ’ i-- ' ’ StJEU DftY ‘ ’ - CU- A ':J fj r ‘ ' - ’ ‘1 ‘f U cllmotid Cream TE ST VACUU M i j COFFEE - ' At ' sjoc err drug p&rtment stores and Shell stations— pint pint and with the red cans— gallon and yellow lab el— the Shelly colors - ! ) u - BLACKIEWH ITE -- ' ’ xl f ' 7 - vacuumlxers guarantee a constant I it t’-faYory freshness HI v tie m- - : cyiind red vacuum machines ownecV 1 ± 1 ) ' vv r you could clean it itiifive minutes f X always present V - i c r 3 PAIN J SfotjQfuJnc M g hVhi football game f jj — 41 '! V L ILiBecraft advertised the latest L model Maxwell for 1500 The World’s antidote for ng 'I The University of Utah defeated Ogden High school by 32 to 0 in a 1 sb ’ f i I l- -- ‘ VCIMt a leg In a scuffle t Never hurts the heart ! 11:00 to 12:00 midnight— Musical fa- wtw j - A soothing healinq y-- horir A boy took Dr and buggy and went duck hunting) John Franklin boilermaker broke Condon’s Alvyays the Same With MJB many people use slightly less coffee The lotion you apply your face powder it will citntf and t 4 CT73 -- 10-in- ch of 1 If I re-erec- ted When hour outdoor leave your skin chopped dry or horned see bow quickly Plough’s Almond Cream restore it to clear smooth beauty! And when right over this dainty j tic tne-Gra- skin lotion E© IP They keep tnem ' down In the archives room in the basement a nice (dean cool room where you couldn’t find a speck of dust Only a fewj years ago most of these old documents were lying around in the of the state war and navy building in a pile of debris But tpeir present home is in fireproof ’cases in a room with fireproof doors and floors And each buckram box one has a dust-proof its own Here you may see the very first treaty signed by the United States as suCh the agreement negotiated by Benjamin Franklin with France protection' He wanted us to preserve the Fiji in which It was a treaty of alliance We never did any- we and France agreed to help each independence sub-basem- — -- San Francisco!— President Taft ar4 rived from Portland Superintendent Manson of the from a Southern Pacific returned — B — east t trip contractor started Moran p laying cement Robert C Ny(S was brought to thl Holy Cross hospital in Balt Lake from Nevada suffering from appendicitis 1 Ry RODNEY DUTCHER J NEA Service Writer — The Kellogg always plus or minus the speed of the wind In this case the wind bad been blowing a terrific gale without any of the passengers dreaming of it so smoothly t had the ship moved i along To the 60 mile an hour speed of the motors had been added perhaps another 60 by the vicious southof missing New- west gale Instead ' foundl&nd by 100 miles as they planned they were over it a few minutes after Pierce discovered the shore lights due to tho amazing as it rode the speed of the ship ' storm And now the passengers knew they were in a gale At times the wind was so strong that the ship was motionless It swung forward fighting its way The Grafs motors were Very powerful Storms in time play themselves out In a few hours they had cleared the Newfoundland coast and by noon the next day the sun had come out and they found themselves in midocean ' Dr Eckener presence on the ship is never merely formal He is the actual commander of operations No one could drag him from his great! chair in the control car when difficulties are ahead He takes hl$ rest only when things are quiet He had had but eight hours’ sleep out of 112 on tne nrsi oraf Zeppelin flight to America had had even less on the way back 'ROUND THE WORLD Again on the round the world flignt one of 'the first reports received from Japan as Siberia was crossed told of a typhoon ahead It held no terror for Eckener It was merely his oui “low’' magnified by the meteorology of the orient Like the storm- - areas of the a typhoon swings in concentric circles Dr Eckener and took out after the typhoon? it and They caught the tail of 100 mues swung down tne coast at an hour landing at Tokyo before they were expected There the Grafj harbor In a hangar which by the: irony of fate had been built by Dr Eckener in Germany and awarded on i to the Japanese to be the other side of the world The accident which dented a pow- cr car at Tokyo causing a day s delay in the start across the Pacific to Los Angeles gave Dr Eckener the opportunity to seize the tall of another typhoon which was passing up the Japanese coast and hurried the steps of the speeding Oraf For 40 hours the former amateur sailor drove his airship by blind reckoning only on three oc- - YORK— Wilbur Wright flew aEW IN 20 miles in 33 minutes in his —I aeroplane r - I ii j ‘ From 'Dor Flics - 8:30 p m artists 10:00 to 10:05 FREE let THE KELLOGG TREATIES ARE THEIR PLACES TAKING ALONGSIDE OTHER - FAMOUS DOCUMENTS IN THE STATE DEPARTMENT ARCHIVES— AND IN CASE YOU DON’T KNOW THEY’RE KEPT ’IN 1s5 mid-Atlan- i ’ Tears iAgo i selor" ' L j 20 j WSUINGTQN i SPEED OF SHIP i f so- old-fashion- ed J i prano assisted by the Evans sisters lntrumental trio 7:30 p m — Jack Summerhays Utah tenor assisted by other artists 8:00 p m — N B c "The Old Coun- ! V i' casions getting sight of the stars to check his calculations Finally not a great distance from the California Coast a Japanese steamer was sighted He hailed it by wire t 7:00 p m — Miriam Erickson i l— il ! Now the speed of an airship ( - creased size of tho ships 1 t i ' course toward Newfoundland Dr Eckener was In’ good spirits Cape Race outermost port of Newfoundland reported clear weather with a brisk west wind The passengers who had stayed up Until near morning to watch the ship pass over New York and Montauk Point had taken to naps after breakfast and risen find chicken vegetables ' salad5 cherry cobbler with champagne on-th-lunch table and a second helplng for the asking In the afternoon the sky became overcast white cap appeared fog-se- t in the ship hit a series of debumps It entered into fog 10blind" grees warmer Eckener flew evening Their through the fog until proposed route was to pass Cape Race at 103 miles offshore It was no small surprise to the navigating officers then when Commander M observer American R Pierce picked ’ up the lights of Trepassey-Ba- ! I jealousy anger and hate thefe Is only one general recipe id be applied to early training A word covers it —unselfishness Selfishness ori self-lobegets sensitiveness and from that comes every sort of trouble Touchy people easily offended people Jealous people people who I J hate easily and long 'are all primarily selfish people grownups and children alike “Hpw can I teach my children to be unselfish?" is the question1 asked more often by mothers! than almost of child any other In this matter Because it does eeemjto be training childhood to be selfish But part of not necessarily so Children would not be so selfish if everything ’on earth wasn’t done to start with to make them so A baby- a few weeks old can be very selfish 'if he is humored in everything he wants) ilTS TAUGHT AT HOME Children naturally must be taught ed in 1641" less asked his position checked it unselfishness at home Where their with the navigators strongest personal interests are will “We are Their f “Not bad" he smilod reflect behavior outside) i home at but 30 miles off? learn what they absolutely i (The EndL) is too much to expect children It who are spoiled and humored anc fussed over at home to: go out anc be generous and sporting with their friend If we want them to be fine and likable in school and oh the playground we must teach them to be fine and likable at home One child specialist Whose word must be respected goes so far aa to say “If it so happens that there war was us at one of time are no other children in the home any pther with England This treaty signed every effort should be made to) bring in 1778 worked fine during the Rev- a child into association with chilolution when we needed French dren outside even at! the risk of help but a few years later when physical dangers in the street and Francs needed American help it be- the chance of picking up a- vocabu came our first ' scrap of paper" Ex- lary in the alley" That is his opin it fL pediency kept us from living up towas The Louisiana purchase treaty we kept ’a its thing about the treaty but gaudy thing in Its day withoverfelt Thakoban: jpretty tooth the j great velvet covers and its the Before about it miserable lops laying network of golden sequins British seized his coUhtry because it’s-The parchment wtthin on which the hadn’t been able to pay A loan treaty was written was adorned with he made to it by some Australians scroll work and loops and whirligigs Meanwhile lay the sacred) tooth bedocuThe master a penman by and and dusty around neglected Bonament beam the signatures of chipped off at one) end though parte Talleyrand Robert Living-of came it is enclosed jin a special today ston and James Monroe the ink which has well stood the test of P°in1the good old d8Srsof diplomacy time Napoleon’s seal is on a big communications somered wax plaque about six inches m Important came from Astatic principalidiameter set in a gold box which times which po one and ties kingdoms a 13 tied to the bindings with golden here could read when a Thus cord Most of the old treaties of letter- - from the Burma of r King or importance were bound in satin everyBuchanan President reached velvet today they nearly always whh was one it treaty ‘thought come in leather who consul had American An Slam A DANDY WHALE’S TOOTH discovered In finally been Rangoon Miss in items are curious There the mistake arid the thing was sent Holland’s collection Take the big back a to Asia to- a missionary for whale’s tooth from the Fiji island M which the king of that country was translation HE IIAD LOTS QF TITLES naive enough to send to President It some-appeared that the king deof ’ Grant in the hope getting himself a4 !“Overlord of scribed thing in return Every politician re-in All the by of the Orient’’ Kingdoms Grant knew that Washington Sun-RisiPowerful! Most" ‘The quired bigger and better gifts than White Lord of “The Many a whale tooth in exchange for gov- King" titles other and varjoua Elephants" ernmental favors' a to wanted negotiate (treaty The But it meant a lot to King Thako-ba- n to Buchanan in?4 5 writing missionary and his people It hadbqen that a little) present to the eiven to them centuries back by suggested “a vep happy in Deigar the god of good and evil king would have who lived in a big cave on the bigand caused gest of the islands I earthquakes when- he turned over when he blinked his and lightning ’ "A eyes Ordinary Fiji mortals were never permitted to gaze unon this tooth But Thakoban " great was the last of the F7ji kings and doubtless he saw some handwriting on a wall for he sent the tootlr to Grant as a token of his desire to negotiate a treaty of friendship and ve 1 ) our children to avoid emotions such as j ng -3 Service Incp 4 r we wish F!the unhappy d 4 CHILDREN t Qqtsec i a WHAT TETER SAW was tilled with rabbit By HUGH ALLEN feelings In the first (Copyright 13-- 3 by N E A) over with he was bubbling place little-AfraiIS now interesting to turn from u curiosity Then he i was a the arthe business man far-fluEckener after all that Paddy re- of the financing for ranging Beaver had raid right You lines and Dr Eckmember paddy had told Peter there ener Zeppelin V of the first scolar-pilthe Forest was a stranger In the Green the v to circumnavigate dirigible Peter wisest1 the thing and that of the boy Eckener to home Hugo to globe go straight could do was For by 50 ago or 40 some years to the Dear Old Briar Patch and back to the boy we may keen away front the Green Forest referring better understand the geinus of the But though he knew that Paddy man— the air pilot who learned to meant every and earnest In was ' storms the ride couldn't said Peter word of what he On the Bay of Flensburg young make op his mind to do this until sail He this Hugo Eckener learned toclouds he had ’learned more aboutGreen As and winds the observed In the dangerous stranger these older more and grew sailed - Forest Paddy had j admitted that he to tell him but he winds and clouds began auhe hadn’t seen this stranger weather the became He these things had seen signs of him andneeded community of the sailing thority signs told him quite all he And now we come to Dr Eckener In order to know j crossing the the pilot first on1924 people f But Peter Is like a lot of himself on and again in Atlantic the fhe wants to see things for but he the Graf crossing the Pacific on He didn't doubt Paddy world cruise wanted to see those signs So theWhen Dr Eckener was preparing Paddy had agreed to show Peter to leave Frederichshafen with the something he was asked what route he -the other intended Run across my dam to tne to take said -Jwe get end and wait there for I will decide that when “No two Faddy he to start" replied same So Peter scampered across the ready the follow will In the crossings dam while Paddy swam will select the one that "When Paddy course We same direction best weather We may the promises reached the other side he led the swing as north as Newfoundfar way a few steps along the shore land We may sail as far south as cf--the pond to a little muddy place the Azores Or we may start on one Look" he said Ji route and change to the other bePeter looked and right In the fore we get there" middle of that little! muddy place FROFIIETIC WORDS that made a little he saw somethingover a was His words were prophetic Half him It cold chili run all of out 12 hours said beyond the middle the In way 'footprint right he found from ship and a Azores but footprint that muddy place beradioed to him that a seen never land had reports as Peter such was round storm swinging up from was fnoro great nearly fore It of except- -' the Gulf of Mexico f than any other he knew the cat at Storms are not "arbitrary things ing that of Black Pussy It arisings from nowhere bound noFarmer Brown’s houseoneIn fact of Black where waa very much like They follow certain natural which he had causes The air is wanned or cooled Pussy’s footprints snerw but It was by contact with the earth Cool air often' seen In the s Is heavy and pushes the lighter larger -Peter wanner it?" whispered made Who air aside Because the -Yowler the Bob Cat" replied earths surface la of various temperwould know atures at various points the air Is Paddy promptly “I As I told you kept constantly in motion The roanywhere that trackseen him but I don’t need tation of the earth tends to set the I haven't air currents turning in great conto know that he has come to the Oreen Forest That footprint Is centric circles High pressure areas I told of “highs mean generally’ fair enough Now you know why stay there It weather low pressure areas or you to go home andover here any “lows" bring storms' The storm isn't safe for you more Yowler is very very fond areas ' sometimes 500 miles across of rabbit So the sooner you get move around “the world from west And to east lagging behind the world's away from here the better If you meet your rotation and in the northern hemby the way r cousin Jumper the Hare warn isphere in a counter clockwise' direction him" This storm reported to the ZR-- 3 NEXT STORY: Peter Sees A as moving northeasterly across the If the Shadow Atlantic was due ahead ship continued on its course it would presently encounter the south side of it head on Dr Eckener studied his charts then made his decision “Change the course 30 degrees" he said “We'll head for New-' ion of the urgency of cultivating un selfishness Children should be taught to share heir possessions with other children —toys candy books rides privileges That is! a paramount lesson In unselfishness But this phase is of course purely materialistic In playing they should be anxious for the good of a group father than heir own supremacy This Is the value of sports and group games for young as well as older children A LESSON IN GAMES taught to They should also be which thev in play games willingly do not excel themselves A boy may e a fast runner and decline to play won’t" win any pther game-hallow If it! you are trying Don’t to develop unselfishness have him divide his time And take part Just as often in those things in which other boys can beat him left out of If he seems to orbe does not get all sometimes things he dehe feels that attention the withhis serves don’t encourage sulking drawing from a crowd and and Try to get his mind off himself show him that a really big fine person is not looking for slights This sort of sensitiveness Is really selfishness To teach him unselfishness now is to lay the cornerstone for contentment later on The famous library of law and other books' in the Middle Temple London now contains something like 70000 volumes It was foUnd- - t A score oi daily home uses — cleans shoes hats ties l clothing iurs upholstery’— all fabrics |