Show THE OGDEN TheOgden ' Standard-Examin- er PUBLISHING COMPANY J U Eldrcdge Jr A U Glamann r ' Publishers An 'i Independent Newipaper Published every evening and Sunday morning without s muzzle or a club Matter at Entered a Second-ci- a the Postoffice Oqden Utah Established 1879 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Delivered by carrier one month mall In advance in Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming $195 Three months Six months $360 $700 'One year All other states $100 a month $1200 one year " Member of The Associated Press Consolidated Press NE A Service and 75c-B- -- v A C B The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of any news credited to it not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein Cill 252 for All Departments BUSINESS IS GOOD IN GERMANY i Of all the European countries touched by the war Germaiiy has been the quickest to reorganize her industrial force and get business on a paying basis That country Is showing a remarkable revival along all lines and Is again becoming a vigorous nation Within the last few days she has launched two of the largest sister ships ever built the Europa and the Bremen They are 938 feet long with a tonnage of 46500 tons each They are only exceeded in tonnage by the two heaviest liners in the world the Leviathan now the property of the United States and the Majestic the property of England These two ships were formerly German sister ships of line seized the Hamburg-AnfericaSo :war today the during the four largest ships afloat were built At the christening by Germany of the new ships with champagne United Jacob Gould Schurman to States ambassador Germany 1 11) it me- orauuu mr iuv curu-p- a ueuvereu while Von Hindenberg himself did the honors for the Bremen In his oration Von Hindenberg said: "Seventy years ago the then young North German Lloyd launch c ed its first vessel for It gave the craft the service Now it is name of Bremen our wish to give this newest and largest vessel of Germany's revivI ed fleet to Its elements christen thee Bremen!" 'I hail th8 Bremen and the Euro- pa as new links between Europe and America I hail them as manifestations of the indestructible German capacity for work" Von Hindenberg refers1 to Germany's revived fleet In 1919 the North German Lloyd line to which was practhese new ships belong ' out wined Today it has a tically tonnage of new ships of 721000 tons with a building program that assures 900000 tons by next year The nation that thinks Germany will not be a commercial contender on land and sea and in the air within the next tea years has another guess coming German efficiency is still efficient and business is good in Germany n L T71 — trans-Atlanti- DWIGHT W MORROW A GREAT DISCOVERY The wisdom of President Cool-idgeappointment of Dwight W Morrow as ambassador to Mexico was doubted by many at the time it was made Morrow was a Wall Street financier and It was feared his banking connections would tend to make trouble with our neighbor to the south Such has not been the case Morrow has apparently forgotten that he ever had a penny in Wall Street and he has shown excellent sense and discretion and fairness in dealing with Mexico The country has come to look upon him as a good ' friend Recently Morrow traveled about the country and his welcome everywhere was cordial and sincere He has established good relations Mr Morrow as an ambassador has to a be great discovery proved 's v FIND IT'S STILL BULL MARKET f FlrtAkiC -- ib 1 TrJf5 jrfJtALUCS ! Into An open One Democratic fight ligious the manager finds this feature ofGovcampaign the opposition- to Cathernor Smith because he is a olic "most difficult to deal with:" Ill bw I Tiiilr 3AL DOROTHY TALKS— AUGUST 29 IF EVERY WIFE WERE THE PARAGON HER HUSBAND THOUGHT SHE WAS GOING TO BE SHE WOUUD NEED A SERPENT'S WISDOM AN ANGEL'S DISPOSITION AND A FOR CHAMELEON'S CAPACITY CHANGE QUICK 1 V- - VoQ WALK POUI-Tr- fe STREejf-M0SlfeP OHi A SQUARE- OF SIDEUlAU-TrU- -r TftRMS A CONTACT TbR "Trie SteUBOART WE'LL SAY l"f IS HE reason that no man ever sets his Ideal wife is because there isn't t any Buch person For men always expect the impossible of women They expect them to have dual characters that are the exact antitheses of each other and to be able to change from one to the other with lightning rapidity as the occasion may require U - ? -- itfE rf SIPEUIALK ?rteUQ3RAPtt PISK BAC In North' Carolina the campaign re- is degenerating S!3lBOA'RJ A -- r M ii rfAfrfx CdskX-fAr- fe O-fr- "ThS StSM SAYS' T SAV 4 Of course men will cjeny this but nevertheless it Is true that If each husband had hit heart's desire he would be united to a versatile lady who was a Dumb Dora and a Solomon In petticoats a ellngins vine and a sheet" of armor plate a nifty dfesser and a tightwad a stepper-ou- t and a home body and who had In addition discovered the secret of pefpetual youth and how to conjure money out of SteMBoARP smiliaAa IU oTERAT(aU---nrf- e A viantt iA M VRifejdT 'X - r— ffTf ITS MARVELOUS &ufT It ought to be dealt with adequately by asking those conduct-to ing a religious political fight read In the constitution of the United States that part referring You To 1hat " to religion "San Nira Burmese Christian took a sacred white elephant on show to London That is profanation a bad as if you took the Grand Lima to Tibet and made him turn wheat cakes in a restaurant window The sacred white elepha'nt returned to Burma died of chagrin and humiliation according to hi worshippers Onkhe same day San Nira murdered with pickax and sledee-hammhis roommate Said AH also a Mahout The Burmese will rejoice in this "proof that their religion is powerful Nobody will tell them that their white only sacred elephant was ' Its because it backed pigment name by the way was Pa Wa The Bible says you must not make any graven image of the Deity The Koran said to have been written for Mohammed by an intelligent educated Jew and maden up of various religions went fit en farther It says you musn't make a graven image of anybody Kemal Pasha disregarding Mohammed and Allah erects in Constantinople a monument to honor The Republican rule in Turkey figure of Kemal himself stands out in a bronze group PARE C r PBA!rci: the air has married AND when anhe finds that he woman who is ordinary human an assorted bunch of limitations even as God made herj he is disappointed and feels that fate has given him a rotten deal t j f 1 ' This it what mtket matrimony tuch a bewildering propo-ti- n to a woman She naturally thlnkt that the reason her husband picked her out for a wife from amena all of the thousands of other women he knew was because he f admired her particular line Therefore she Is flabbergasted when he begins to knock it and the discovert that he detlres her to display a diametrically oppotlte attortment of attraction! It It as unreatonable tt If he expected to buy petatoei in a Jewelry V store or Ice cream at! the butcher's j 1 er There was a day in this country when hardly any young man under voting age was immune from an occasional visit to the woodshed and a sound licking at the hands of "the old man" Of late years our ideas of crime and punishment seem to have changed so greatly that the woodshed has fallen into almost total disuse Ed Howe the Kansas editor whose writings have made him famous throughout America mentions in his autobiography a few of his painful experiences on those frequent "father and son days" of another period Editor Howe says that hardly a day passed when he wasn't taken to the shed for a Those occasions are paddling now the youth of the land passes ever gets a jiood tanning hardly and most of us hail the new order as something better Howe feels that the beltings did him good and is not ready to place approval on the modern method of "analyzing" children Parents in his day punished their children today it seems to be a matter of children "putting up with" their parents' faults Some Turks will expect Mohammed to ride down on his white horse Alobraer and destroy that monumentWhen the Turks took Constantinople Christians gathered before the great church of St Sofia believing that angels would destroy the Turks at the last moment They didn't appear and St Sofia is still a Mohammedan mosque Mohammed on Alborak won't - ' appear either The Czar's dungeons where prisoners died slowly in cells below the level of the river Eva and tho execution rooms where political prisoners were beaten to death with the knout are opened e GREATER AIRPORT public by Russia's' new governaa an Interesting revelation ment INVESTMENT- Sof Czardom InAs the argosies of the air This should persuade Russians crease in" number and scope more not to bring the Czars back howthey may feel about Bolshevand more Is being spent for ade- ever ism' quate landing fields for the new In many churches service was traffic In the recent Missouri prito thanks for signing of devoted mary election St" Louis voted a the peace treaty in Paris It might have been a good idea $2000000 bond issue for improve what the peace ments at its flying field and Kan-- k to wait and see really means before praytreaty sas City voted a million for the ing tod hard Europe thinks it means that same "purpose United States in spite of it- the These two Missouri cities and self will be from now on tied If nations with a of the are for up league place Chicago competing It does mean that ' the senate in the middle should of defeat it west The idea is exlendingto the In Minnesota prohibition officsmaller towns where thousands of to padlock wet ials dollars are being spent for lights homesthreaten and emergency landing fields DeQuite' a" surprise for the Minne ploughman homeward plodtroit and Cleveland have been rac- sota his weary way or children ding ing neck and neck to have "tne from the public schools to find front and back door padlockfinest airports in America" As the ed and be compelled to sleep in the value of air transport begins the garage One way to kill a thing is to to be made clearer the spending of money for adequate facilities is make it ridiculous Seven thousand miles happene contagious to be the distance in a straight line across the Pacific ocean TIMES CHANGE Plan as able to make that trip ouffht to interest us ABOUT PLAYING CARDS But we haven't any air ministry The world's Ideas about people Our government doesn't yet real' who play cards have changed since ize that airplanes really exist This 1858 when the card player was a nation richest in the world de on private Individuals to de pariah according to Philip Curtiss pends velop the airplane We may pay for that some day and be com writing in Harper's Magazine to call on British airplanes "In 1858 if I had refused to play pelled to help us as we had to call on cards" he writes "books would British ships to help us in the have been written about me and big war What we are saving now on distributed to school libraries lead airplanes may cost a thousand dol ing bankers would have offered lars for one some fine day me junior clerkships and my wife Whatever men think of would have had me photographed- Russia a government may must ad they mlt that it is progressive with my hand on her shoulder It will substitute the metric f928 not do I if "In play cards tern which can be understood sys by I am a prig a highbrow a grouch any child of ten abolishing old and measures: affected or unsocial In other weights This country needs the metric words the man who doesn't play system but lacks intelligence or cards today is one step Tower than will to adopt ru the man who doesn't drink" Hawaii's census shows that Jap anese no longer dominate the for There "are now eign population more Filipinos 51870 of them against 51348 Japanese Whites are "few in number but collect most of the real money ' to-th- pre-eminen- A I ' me mguieemn amendment anu 01 ice cuuei uuu uiuei upyuucuia Volstead act in viewing it with alarm and abhorrence as corrupting and demoralizing one Is not likely to deny the appropriateness of the word "experiment" in Mr Hoover's characterization of the enterprise The results of the second national p611 of the of the Protestant Episcopal church by a temperance society ofclergy that denomination are striking The questions addressed to the clergymen were explicit Of the 2980 replies reveived 1389 favored modification of the Volstead act Repeal of the eighteenth amendment was favored by 953 ministers as against sa wno opposea repeal The question whether prohibition was a success from a practical point of view in the ministers respective localities was answered In the affirmative by 501 and in the negative by 1304 If advocates of temperance and moderation in all things are not satisfied with the fruits of prohibition its experimental character ad' mits of no denial of is all the it to persona divest themselves of bias Manifestly duty and preconception and study prohibition with open minds both from a scientific and a practical point of view Dogmatic assertion will get the nation nowhere What the situation calls for is light — all the light that can be applied to it Prohibition has become a" leading issue in the present national political campaign Every patriotic American wishes to vote at the November election in the manner that best will serve the Interests of his countrywhich are his own interests and the interests of his fellow Amer-jran- s Careful study of the issue is essentfal if he is to fulfill his obligation as a citizen FASHION PLAQUE OF COURSE forIt awould wife shopping ed and would marry a r or a good dime-nurse- u&xm mssm CLICK might indicate ' New York DAY BY DAY By O O M'lNTYRE ALBUQUERQUE N M Aug 29 one Approaching Albuquerque comes upon the picturesque ruins of civilization These are stretches of foundations and broken walla of communal buildings — the first of American apartment houses' It is one of the most colorful citie in the union One sees the squat dobe houses with their rlndows 'and doors painted the green and pink of poisonous wall pper Indians In their spring wagon seated by the side of their shalsvled and complacent cactus-eatin- g squaws herds of goats burros papooses in shoulder bags and circling buzzards And the train thunders into the spreading station of Albuquerque with plots of brightly tinted flowers modern flappers camera slungj tourists in plus fours Indian rug pottery and bow and arrow sellers — all like a sudden mirage In thji desert The altitudfe is 4900 feet and the air is dry and heady like tangy wine" Meeting every train are tubercular convalescents bright-eye- d with the hope of seeing someone from home to relieve the monotony of their isolation The city's population Is near 40000 A few miles from town are Indian pueblos— cliff dwellers snake dancers and sun worshippers Hv ing precisely: as they did years before the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock There is an ineffable eadnesa about their shy yet engaging hospitality toward their conquerors ill Attracted by a beautifully colored clay vase I inquired' of the bronzed salesman his price There was the despair of utter resignation in his "Pay iwhat you like It no matter" Xlttle Indian children with f uU skirts and hair too sit about in dull plaited apathy In their glorious days Albuquerque wa the- hub of the Indian country - They- fashioned town? and cities with stone houses four stories high irrigated fields and built ditches with the precision of skilled engineers Then the white man came And today they are almost aliens In their own land ? pre-hlsto- rc Gallup NI M is one of the high points along the old Santa Fe trail The air is so light that during an influenza epidemic several years ago fhe town was almost decimated lit has often been seen In moving pictures as the locale for those wild western frontier dramaa Roaming wild dogs come down from the hills foi scraps from the diners and sniff disdainfully at my poor little frightened city-bre- d pooch He never looked such a cissie before I The only faux pas so far on the was inj? noticing the slpn: trip "Dansrerou nrtr in lean out dows" aftei I had done my lean- ji Arizona's Idistant back erounds or beauty lunroll beyond Gallup Puffs of white clouds laze through skies Of laullte And there are endless miles of dry river beds Scattered across the desert waste are primitive houses whose Open doors and Windows reveal bricrht walls of coral lemon yellow and orange Sandy cliffs rise to ma jestic grandeur and fall away to endless vistas of sage brush and alkali dust AU of which sounds as though 14 inight have been tak- en from a descriptive railroad folder And maybe It was Flagstaff Is a western town run-pin- g true to! scenario and wild west story writing form It has it wide main street facing the railroad depotr with ' Its Commerce hotel pool hall bank Bright Angel short order restaurant curb stone hitching racks spurs chaps neck bandanas legs curved to the saddle and exposed I Tonight we cross the desert with its mysterious silence and creeping shadows And tomorrow morning we will be among the blooming flowers and snow-cappe- d peaks of southern California What noj climate! (Copyright! 1928 by the McNaught Syndicate Inc six-shoot- jj PEEKABOO OFFICER NEWTON' Mass— While police of two cities- her parents relatives and friends' were frantically hunting for Pearl Gallagher she lay peacefully sleeping behind the bath tub In her home She fell asleep after hiding there for fear of a A NEW NOTE in fall umbrellas spanking as a result pf dropping is the introduction of the gather- her baby brother VPearl woke up ed border The natural wood han- six hours later found her "CQUch" dle harmonize!! well with the Ha- uncomfortable and moved to her vana brown taffeta bed where eh© was found j 1 - urgess B EDTIME LUXE1 By RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer 29— up to Washington Aug the politicians feel that nothing is too good for the women After that it seems to be different As long as there are votes to be corraled their sex with its 25 or 30 million possible ballots is the equal of the male in every respect This will be the third presidential election In which the ladies have been permitted to function Meanwhile they have een put o!n a more or less equal footing on both the Republican and Democratic national committees with one woman member for every man member given vice cbalrimanshlps and had special jobs created for them to encourage them: to roundup "their sisters party standard The candidates 'never neglect to make soulful appeals to American womanhood and the party platforms continue jo felklate all concerned on the fact that the sexes now have equal frights Many earnest gals go out and work their heads off in every state for one slate of candidates or the other Isn't it wonderful the way women are playing a bigger and bigger part in national affairs? under-the- -- in and done for In the matrimonial bargain v fv ' " ' 'i ' DRAjCTICALLY every man for instance ' f i wants his wif tn lAnV imfn V him and tn he rimpnr!nfllm U advice and to regard him as an oracle He likes to feel that he is far wiser than she that she leant upon him and would not know what to do without him He likes to have her come to him for money ' - Stories FOLITICAIj CANDIDATES SEEM TO FORGET THE LADIES' IMPORTANCE AFTER THEIR VOTES ARE COUNTED ' (- clear up the eUuation if when a man went he would pick out thfe type Of a lady he wanthighbrow or a moron or a fashion plate or a cook Or a toul mate at nisi needs and taste But the matter Isn't at simple at all that for the trouble la that a man Isn't satisfied with hit wife makings good ton one of thece county Ht wants her to hit on all elghtj or else he considers her a failure and feelt that he hatcylinders been taken if - PROHIBITION s DOROTHY DIX - REMEMBER THE OLD WOODSHED? ix talks Dorothy i WW -T- rock-boun- AS AN EXPERIMENT (Chicago Daily News) Whether one agrees with Mr Hoover ithat constitutional and statu- x -- THE By "Ahern I 1SPARKS 6F rAlvEUIiVE e BMAMA-fHA-f r"ROM MY BRAlM ! w IJf like" GHAjiLi& rfeARKEAj-T- b MAifeRf AUZE By ARTBTUH BRISBANE Co) by the Star wor(Copyright 1928"solid south" The hitherto ries Democrats and the "solid d Republican" state of Pennsylvania worries the Republicans A surprising poll taken In Texas nominally 4 to 1 Democratic shows Hoover and Smith running even in a straw vote O pinions of the Press ' LAVS AUiyf MAP -- Trie So How Solid Is the South?— tho Elephant Died — Exhibiting' the Dungeons " WEDNESDAY EVENING AUGUST 29 1928 R OUR BOARDING HOUSE "Today" In the early June of 1924 according to a current bulletin of the Cleveland Trust company the average price of 228 stocks composing the price index of the Standard Statistics company was just above 100 Ever since that time it has been rising irregularly until in May 19 28 it was above" 220 The bull market is four years old and seems destined to continue as such into 1929 Business during the remaining months of 1928 says the bulletin probably will be better than it was during the corresponding months of 1927 This forecast is based upon the key industries of Iron and steel automobile construction and other factors Car loadings on the railroads and coal production are be- inning little by little" to produce fecords better than those of the corresponding weeks a year ago The agricultural outlook is good with weather conditions promising large harvests and with farm prices at higher levels than last year Increased sales by the mail order houses and the farm' implement manufacturers are reflecting the improvement in the purchasing sections power of STANDARD-EXAMINE- v PETER GETS SCRATCHED - By THORNTON W BURGESS Who never thinks to look behind Is little better off than blind: —-- Old Mother Nature The real reason that to many mn refute? to give their wivet an allowance la not to mueh because they pegrudge them the money at because they get a klek out of their wivet having to icome and beg them for every penny they get It maket them feel that they are a benevolent Provldenoe to their wives the eource from which all blessings flow 1 HUT while men want their jwives to be helpless and dependent they also want them to be efficient and ?They want their wives to be able to handle their end of the partnership competently They want them to be good and thrifty managers iwho can get the most out of a dollar and who know how to save money f ' I They want them to use Intelligence and firmnese In rearing If misfortune eemea they do hot want their "v their children wivet to be mlilttomjt' around their necktTheVlwantithem to have courage and Initiative and to be able tb put their ehouf-de- r to the help pull the family wagon out of the mire a-- : wheeljtnd $ ! j 1 1 Pcter Rabbit was absorbed in what he was looking at Do you know: It what that means? means that he was tio interested in what he was looking at that he had forgotten everything else Now it is bad business to become absorbed in any one thing when there! pmy be danger around Yes sir it is bad business Peter found ltXout that day It happened when Peter discovered ope of the kittens of Yowler the Bobcat playing with a leaf In a patch of "moonlight over in the "Green Forest Peter had a't known that there were any Bobcat kittensV over there This was ith© first Bobcat- kitten he had lever se en So just out of sightl in the Black Shadows on the edge 6f the moonlit space Peter sat staring with round-eye- d wonder at the little Bobcat playHe quite ing in the moonlight forgot everything else and this was a very foolish thing to do "It's a baby Bobcat as sure as t live!" thought Peter "It just cannot be anything else My what a funny little fellow he" is! He coat has a spotted coat Yowler isn't spotted like that Perhaps Mrs Towler's las I have never seen Mrs Yowler" As a matter of fact Mrs Yowler looked very much like Yowler - 1 i But after the votes are counted and all the male politicians prepare ' to line up for places the ladies generally are taken for a sleigh ride and dumped into a deep snowbank If a singla one happens to get a finger into the gravy boat it becomes a national sensation aad everybody beats the drum in celebration of this new recognition of the way American women are forging ahead and takiog their beside th men places ' Your correspondent can think of Just about three women In the government service occupying 'really large and important jobs They are: Mabel Walker Willebrandt one of several assistant attorney generals Civil Service Commissioner Jessie Dell and Chairman Bessie Parker Bruggeman' of the United State Employes' Compensation commission Except for these women and perhaps a few holding minor positions1 the plums of the Without the least warning Peter national patronage orchard appear was knocked flat to be regarded as forbidden fruit himself for their sex Baby Bobcats always have spotted coats just as baby always have spotted coats One hears vague rumors that Deer! When that baby Bobcat was Smith or Hoover would appoint the grown to size those spots woman cabinet member first but would have full disappeared mostly they're quite unsubstantiated AfNow never entered Peter's ter looking over the roster Of the head thatIt there might be other executive departments as now con- baby Bobcats No sir ' It never stituted one almost wonders how entered his head ' If it had he the government gets along with so probably would- - have looked few women Tho president's three secretaries except for three and secand his executive clerk are all men retarial posts clerkships Owing to the tradition of feminine Of 250 administrative jobs in the tact and diplomacy one might ex- department of agriculture the five pect to find a few women in state persons operating the bureau of department jobst but of about 50 home economics are women There such jobs considered important are also two librarians And two asenough to list in the congressional sistants to heads of bureaus directory one finds only two womAnd in pages of names of en to be among 20 or more assist- departmentfour of commerce officials ants to the solicitor the name of but one woman apSo many women these days pears— a librarian hardl the family budget that of labor Finally the there ought to be a few in the actually has twodepartment "manned"' bureaus treasury department but- - there completely by women — the womaren't Clerks and stenographers en's bureau and children's bureau of course as in all the departments So'much for the departments The Of civil service commission has two but we're not thinking of tho 115 administrative or executive women assistant chiefs of division Jobs listed for the treasury and its but In the general accounting ofnumerous subsidiary bureaus — In- fice interstate commerce commisternal revenue customs ' budret sion bureau of efficiency board of public health and so on — we find mediation federal reserve board that Mrs Brownie Kerr is chief federal trade commission clerk of the budsret bureau and board and countless othershipping miscelthat Mary M O'Reilly is assistant laneous groups women in respondirector of the bureau Of th mint sible positions are "as rare as hot dog stands in graveyards It's no surprise of course to check up on 75 different offices There are four women among 4J5 bureaus commissions and divisions members of the house and none In of the war and navy departments to the senate Three are widows who find only three or four women em- took their husfeand't jobt Funnyi ployed as private secretaries or li- isn't It that with the politicians brarians working the women for all they're sea"-so- n g Of 2$ department of Justice worth during the don't give them" a few posts listed Mrs Willebrandt is the they sole representative of her sex: In nominations! i the interior department Mrs Mabel If you want more evidence of the the women get when p Le Roy Is recorder-a- t the gen- recognition eral land office Mrs KatheHne it comes to the big object of poliCook Is ninth division chief in the tics to most politicians- look at the bureau of education and there are federal Jobholder outside Washintwo women with sven men in the gton-— judges district attorneys board of Indian commissioners But collectors of the port postmasters the other 135 Jobs are held by men marshals and the like - am " vote-gettin- : - ' self-relia- ' - 111 el j j THERE are other njen who fall for morons A girl make! a hit with a man because she is little and cute with the tricks of a pet kitten He finds her mistakes and ignorance amusing She talks piquant baby talk to him and he can listen by the hour while she asks him: Oose lambkin is 00 and is 00 utterly surely sure that 00 will always love oo'se sweetumt?" is - 4 So they get married but Sweetums boret him to tears when the continues to chatter at metninglcssly at a canary bird He geta fed up on baby talk at toon at he would on a tteady diet of ehecOlate eelalrt and he yearne for the plaini roattbeef of Intelligent conversation and for a Wife who It a companion and not a toy 1 VET he doesn't want a practical wife either Ha doesn't want her to and discuss the Einstein theory of an evening at home nor f titheupwant does to have to listen t6 the household and the high cost of living Nor does he want a wife who is budget Sensible and always expects him to be and who look upon him as a ca$h instead of a man and who thinks it foolish to tell her husband register who is getting fat and baldheaded that the stiU regard! him aa a sheikand dangerous to women j j j Every man wanta hit wife to be devoted to him He wanta-tfeel that he fiilt her whole horizon that there It no other' &n i" the world for her but him and that her Interest and hope and detlre centert areund him- But heevery doesn't want her tcrbe demanding or jealous ©f hint He doesn't want her ' to keep too good an eye upon him He wanta her to leave him free to eome and go without asking too many question o - TVERY man wants-hiwife to keep her good looks' and io be attrac- tively dressed but few of them'want to pay the price of beauty shops and dressmakers and milliners Every man wants hit wlft to be but not many of them aver think bright and fresh and about taking their wivetentertaining to places of entertainment that will keep them pepped up and give them something f reth to think and talk about Every man wants his wife to tet a good table but most o£ them want them to do po without running up any bills r s And to It goes and therefore It it no wonder men are disappointed In their wives since what they want It a! wlft who it a tteel cable camouflaged as a clinging vine a bowl ef Jelly that at timet it concrete a rubber ttamp that hat Individ- -' iiality nd character to It a fool who It wist a practical woman who khowe how to be a baby-tallady THEEE are mighty few women who can fill the bill! 1 DOROTHY DIX (Copyright by PubUc Ledger) k around a fittle bit At it was he remained absorbed In watching this kitten plaking in the The kitten was havmoonlight ing a wonderful time Peter felt as if he wanted to go out and play with him But he wasn't foolish enough to do anything of the kind He Just remained where he was He remainright ed right where he was and he remained perfectly still PeWithout the least ter wat knocked flatwarning Yes sir he was knocked right over Not only that but a lot of tharp claws pricked his skin It teemed to him as if they pricked him all over Peter squealed out with pain and surprise right and fright And he kicked My goodness how he did kick! He drew those long hind feet of hit up and shot them out with all his strength When Peter kicks he can kick hard He kicked hard now And Peter was lucky Those two hind feet of his landed in the stomach of the sisterright of that little Bobcat he had been It was she who had watchingShe had teen Jumped- o nPeter Peter when he first arrived and she had stolen up until the was' near enough to Jump on him Eh hadn't made a sound' Now that little Bobcat really wasn't big enough to kill a full grown Rabbit Her teeth were not yet vb!s enough to do much more than hurt but they were big enough to hurt and her little Claws were tharp enough to scratch and the made the fur Of course the kitten who fly had been playing in the moonlight stopped playing and came over to see what Wat going on It was perhaps fortunate for Peter that he succeeded in landing that kick In the stomach of i - ( that little Bobcat Just before the other one reached them The little Bobcat let go and squalled Peter scrambled to hit feet and dodged Then away he went llpperty-llp-perty-laa fast as his legs would take him He wasn't a second too toon The tquall of that kitten brought her mother Mrs Yowler to the scene in a 'hurry but by the time the reached Peter had disappeared He there ran until he was out of breath Then he crept into a bramble-tangl- e and began to smooth his coat and lick the placet where those sharp little claws had 'scratched him T W Burgess) (Copyright The next ttory: "Enough of the Green Forest" lp int PEKING- PRESERVES - a HISTORICAL RELICS SHANGHAI (AP) — Peking once tho proud capital of China now subject to the authority but of Nanking is not to lose all its historic relict if 'the nationalists keep i control The nationtliists have ordered ' that all objects of historical value ' in Peking including buildings of almost'every kind be protected ty soldiers until the nationalists have an opportunity to permamently provide for the objects of interest Peking is crowded with buildings varying In age from a few to hunMost prominent dreds of ycats amonsr them it the temole of heav en the summer palace and the forbidden city" Itself which was formerly the home of the emperors Many of these buildings are in bad' repair but the nationalists promise to restore themj for the benefit of Chinese and also for tourists |