Show THE OGDEN STAN With ' the PUBLISHING COMPANY — I r rrnt AND MANAGER it iaM ktvjXL imTTnn Baiw ot J QrtenwU rrineii and AN IN D EPENpEXT NEWSPAPER A-- iand £nm llimu n? Tht Aoclt0 Pre serriqs ana rubUMhta Even Utmbtn of P TDt publication of all u tacluslftly tnUt diptcae crt NSA press United d to U£ t u hour-gla-ss ge ODAY oc-'curr- Morning Without Sundy CiUO 01 CALL 252 FOR jALL DEPARTMENTS The Standard Examiner's Platform Modern City and CoLntT Building A new City aigU Scnopi 150- 8uppty to Accommodate Purt W Control ol 000 Person and County Road Improve- Vigorous Campaign ot menu scenic Road to Mount Ogden and Road Crocs Ogden Canyon to Wtuex Ci nyon Another Nona and Soijtn Arterlai Hignway Lake An unproved Hignway lo Great Bait Air Rout tranacontinental a A Central Place On A SIDE GLANCES marking which one of these was have "been found It lon'May- 20 bit Dr Erkenbeck on the leg land left him a victim for three days of By ARTHUR BRISBANE lagonizing pains to be followed by seven ( Copyright 1934 King Feature !days of unconsciousness Syndicate Ine) has a death few last the Within days DONT FAIL TO SEE IT in Los Angeles traceable to the bite BIG WORLD NEWS COMPARE GOOD QUEEN MART jof the black widow spider MEN'S TRAGIC DESTINY There should be a careful investigation of this spider by the health officers of Ogden The "Century of Progress" exposi'in order to determine the degree of danger tion second year is a success big Ifrom that source and the methods to be enough to please even Chicago Anything must be big to satisfy Chicago followed in wiping out the insect Already it is Apparent that this red-oran- 'v ed fed-'er- al T l l po-jli- ce -- rE "b J PINIONS of the XlRESS Idea Hunter v With ED BISHOP SOLVE THIS PROBLEM h) The report of the Darrow committee on the NRA codes of fair practice in business will surprise nobody The country knows the codes are far "from perfect as it knows that they cloak dealers monopoly and ofteri oppress small and independent But if the Darrow committee thought so great and difficult a problem would be worked out in a few months the country had no such expectation1 It is still tolerant of error and hopeful of progress It is not we are sure ready for the socialization of in- -' dustry which the supplementary report of Darrow and Thompson recommends It is fair we think to recall that when the codes were made some of the industries were upon the verge of collapse This was and oil Something had to be particularlywetrue of coal textiles are quite sure we do not overstate it when "we say done and that what was done served remarkably to rally industry from the blues j Mr Darrow and' his committee think there has been only evil in all this but thatj is as intemperate as some of the official reto the report Of course there Jias been evil in it We joinders nave ourselves ofteh complained of it but there has also been good in it We are) moving by trial and error to a better con- ception of our necessities Ours is the great task of bringing about a better adjustment between production and consumption We are not ready after a few months to declare that capitalism is no longer workable which is ta effect what the supplementary report says The dissenting opinion of Mr Sinclair a member of the whole committee is in much better spirit Neither do we believe that the national economy would be served at the moment by indiscriminately belaboring business laws There are monopolistic practices which with the anti-trushould be stopped but the condition of business under the codes is much too hopeful to JsUfy prosecution of business men for defending themselves! against unfair practices We cannot confairness to sistently require fajrness of them without requiring them The committee 'feels that to revive such economic injustices as Pittsburgh-plu- s and the price-fixin- g formerly forbidden by the anti-tru- st laws is too great a price to pay for the partial refor it covery we have enjoyed It has been a great price but that is no reason for wholly condemning the serious effort made by congress to remedy a situation which had become intolerable r The better way to look at it is to believe that the! consistencies cf the plan can be ironed out No such gigantic remedial meas-- ure could have leaped from the brain of congress nor ever so leap Cerwill the solution to any ' such super-riddtainly Mr Darrow and his associates upon the committee know full well how deeprooted are all human customs and what a to ask that fair practice in bus! revolutionary proposal it wasiaissez-iaue ness succeed tne excesses 01 i - Ofen we run across some new feature in the manufacture of old products that is amazing from the fact that it had not been thought of before This time it is the lid to a sauce pan This lid fits down in side the pan a short distance a snug fit and is slotted all around To strain the contents this led need not be removed as the liquids flow out a small through the slots and ed spout at the side — an easy task one-hand- i ' If you know of some novel idea actually being worked help spread then news by sending full details to Ed Bishop care of this newspaper Further information on any idea published here wUl be given to anyone enclosing a self -- addressed stamped envelope (Los Angeles Times Syndicate) SOlHEYSAY! ! st !' ' to'-pa- - full-gro- o'j— -- — I wn le I It's just about time for me to get out of the game— Babe Ruth There ii nothing in a democracy above criticism not iwn deNRA and if there could b mocracy would cease to exist —Clarence Darrow that is 4 ail -- jj Americans twelve to fifteen years old had recognized him appointed him their guide without pay and kept him busy for an hour explaining everything to them while his dictracted secretaries tried to remind him of important business appointments Mr Ford told them "These boys are more important There is nothing serious the matter with a country when the young people are interested in new ideas" Mm mi iw'imfk Ih&mM V fflj 0M ill W' iil ' 1) l§ M Scotch Inhibitions stiffen atv —Anyway I toyed with a $10 stack at the small stake table for pikers watching it fritter away and feeling the customary dunce Chasing1 false rainbows is not my metier For a day ot so afterward I am seized by a penurious pout Ten dollars would buy a couple of dandy ash-grshirts I like to acquires shirts instead of losing them Kj : ay j Old Tia Juana has shaved Its prices and due likely to the you know is getting the big play Its open-frosaloons cheap gambling are going holes and honky-tongreat guns Vice has the old Bar One-stepbary coast to the bar for a fiery vino and a sinuous aenorita is tugging at an elbow sleeve with suggestions for caper Back of the main street are crib-lik- e hovels leprous spots on tht tierras templadas The ladies are neither young in years nor wickedness They are the same wild crea tares-wh- o trail the bandit armies hardbitten frowzies with morals of the minx n derful "Century of Progress exposition" this summer See what has been done in the past century of progress See your country coming and going and ask yourself what the next century of progress will accomplish when this little depresshall have been sion stomach-ach- e forgotten ks open-handedn- an THE NEW DEALERS UNOFFICIAL OBSERVER OTHE tellsv of an Really big alliance of arms between Soviet Russia and "capitalistic" France The same old story as in the days of czars France and Russia uniteo with Germany feared by both between them This time France has an alliance with a real power and France will probably this time as her joy ' with formerly express " " friendly loans not should worries but Germany be surprised Chancellor Hitler's denunciation of Communism invited alliance that Russian-Frenc- h ROOSEVELT"ment when the NRA was organized A year before Baruch had stated EFFORT was ima political that such an organization Widely regarded as would Americans and that possible Berthat wizard it is noteivorthy never in the anything nard Baruch backed the wrong horse nature ofaccept a economy planned In 1924 1928 and 15932 The first way time he tried to nominate McAdoo of This howeverhis was only hisdesire passionate concealing he time second failed the —and mobUize industry on the lines of tried to elect Al Sriilth— and faUed to own dear demobilized war inhis to block the the third time he tried He is an dustries board sixty-seven- g" some-othe- r queens with foolish unfortunate Marie Antoinette who asked "Why don't they eat cake?" when told the people had no bread Contrast her with the ancient Queen Dido reputed builder of Carthe thage who raced up and down had who Aeneas after beach yelling left her then stabbing herself to death And Aeneas was not even her husband Or contrast Queen Mary respectfully and distantly with Catherine the Second of Russia who knew intimately young and' old gentlemen exceeding in number the feet on a centipede and she made them all rich at the expense of miserable slaving Russian Moujiks Of course Catherine did many fine things For instance she purchased at a high price the scientific library of the philosopher Diderot in need of money and told him to keep it with him in Paris until she could decide where to put it She never decided while he lived and she bought and preserved intact the six thousand volumes of Voltaire's library after his death But morally she left everything to be desired Happy the country with a king and queen like George and Mary working hard always behaving well eager to carry out the wishes of the British' people I observing world-wid- e preparation for war and no disarmament says "If I must fight I must" and gets ready wastes no time sobbing or sighing Before nineteen forty beginning at once he will spend one thousand million life on fighting surface ships and the same huge sum on fighting airships "Many's tragic destiny is war" says he and tells Italians to prepare for long hard times to meet the war bills At least eighty per cent of Europe wants peace and does not know how to get it Man's "tragic destiny" as Mussolini says may be war for the next few years or generation or even centuries but centuries are small specks of time In the life of the earth and the future cf mankind We have been beating cheating fighting enslaving biting and eating each other for half a million years but there are hundreds of millions of years ahead and already there is improvement! Civilized men do not collect heads They do not burn captive kings alive as Cyrus was about to burn Croesus or force parents to look on while their children are tortured to death or stretch men on the rack for religious differences or saw them in two lengthwise for revenge "Tragic war" will disappear as cannibalism slavery the debtor's prison and other horrors have disappeared ! nomination of Rcotfervelt All in all it was a period of miss-e- d opportunities Hver consulted him about organising the Reconstruction Finance corporation but did not appoint hfm to its chairBaruch had hoped manship run itie Democratic to He tried be known that "Ras-ko- b let it and party and I" had landed and had the situation well in handl But he had little sense of the i larger tides of politics He was reai:y to back any "safe" candidate Governor Ritchite of Maryland (who had been one of liis "boys" on the war industries Ixwrd together with George Peek JRfcigh Johnson and Herbert Bayand r Swope) was probably his choice — but when he eaw that Roosevelt's sttar was rising he hesitated and wap Host He did not wish tb Ibis left at the post by the man ivlhom he had called a "stuffed shirt" and he realized that l"932 would "be a Democratic year so he pre tended to be "neutral" He encouraged ar&i Democratic candidates in public nshile he tried to lobby the sales tax: through congress and demanded a balanced federal budget He shidi'like a skittish horse when he war listed among leaders but Mr the Roosevelt and Howe Icnew what he was doing and were (not deceived by his protestations of friendliness For Baruch was in the fight to "stop Roosevelt" froim the start though he was quiet about it and his friends— including-' Hugh Johnson—fought FDR at!' Chicago to the last ditch When McAdoo switclj ed the California delegation to Rlwsevelt Mr Baruch was caught ou on the end of the limb but he clai nbered back swiftly and fell into liiie with the humiliating knowledge hat another and greater Wilson had' come along and that he descendant rof a prophet had recognized him PEACE OFFERINGS Roosevelt allowed Baiich to make his peace and accepted' his three contributions to the campaign: A lot of money General Johnson (Mr Baruch's speech writer kpd research assistant) and tireless stiassurances to Wall street that Roi)sevelt was as conservative as John W Davis heartRoosevelt used Ban rending concern for tihe federal budget as political carflion fodder atpermitting Barney to pntpare his intacks on Hoover's "uncontrolled anti-Roosev- elt -- ir-h'-s flation" through an unbalanced budget When the votes wert counted Baruch was rapidly mentioned for secretary of state secret! iry of the treasury ambassador to Qlreat Britain chairman of the Ametlcan delegation to the world economic conference federal railroad and" a dozen other jilt edged jobs He was offered little and got nothing ' He was however origtajvlly slated as chairman of the American delegation to- London but swhen the time came he was didclf 2d out of the Job as Hull wanted to go and that blocked Baruch who was for a high tariff and "soun4- money" both of which were "out""! so far as the administration was concerned Baruch however was permitted by Roosevelt to enjoy oni? big mo- - arch-sentimenta- list and he felt for the good old days of the World war outfit much of the naive nostalgia which ordinary Americans lavish on their colleges- - To Baruch the NRA was much like a class reunion and loved every minute of it he ' Yet he was not consulted about the drafting of the bill and was not asked to administer the act Moley imported General Johnson to Washington to help prepare the measure without asking Baruch's permission Likewise Barney's old "classmate in the war industries board George N Peek was put in charge of the agricultural adjustment administra tion because of his own work for the farmer and in the Democratic campaigns of 1928 and 1932 and not because of Baruch Barney was pleased Naturally when the newspapers carried tales of how the "Baruch men" were tak ing charge-o- f the two great experi ments of the new deal but it simply wasn't so and he was furious when Peek j was plucked out of the AAA after the conflict with Tugwell Baruch has no use for college pro fessors— least of all for Tugwell A POLITICAL AMPHIBIAN Nobody but Baruch knows where he stood when the 1929 crash came but by March 1930 when Hoover was to prosperity Ba ruch announced that a world-wid- e depression of several years' dura tion had arrived basing his opin ion on the "over production" of a large number of basic commodities He continued to be a bear though his friends assert that he put all his money into government bonds in preparation for a long decline in prices If this is true it explains his strong devotion to the balanced budget and his equally strong fear of uncontrolled inflation Nobody knows how rich he is though he came to the rescue of a lot of his friends during the Hoover panic and a goodly number of sen ators and ap parently feel indebted to him for reasons best known to themselves For if he was a bear on com modity prices he is a bull on politics and probably feels that he has never got full value for his huge political investments In this he shows him self to be a lamb what the politic- - © GDEN ed cul-de-s- 20 Years Ago From our Files Weber county clerk has issued £ marriage license to Charles P Ells worth of Ogden and Margureate Neal of Plain City Weber county Sixty girls and twenty-fou- r have graduated from the high school boys Ogdeh Examination of school teachers will be held in the Ogden high school building June 1 2 ac light-drench- ed and 3 All cars leading to nearby pleasure resorts yesterday were filled with people Thousands of pleasure scek1-e- rs spent the day In Ogden caijvqn T The annual Memorial day Vet post of the gram of the A Women's Relief G and R the who a ians call "fat cat? pays good was held at the Pythian corps service bad for money It Is unfortunate for him that temple on Grant avenue he has never hit on the "bear" tacA special summer school In man tics of minimizing instead of exual Roosevelt training and sewing for students aggerating his' influence cannot be termed an ingrate if he of the city schools will start next uses a 16ngj5poon in supping with Wednesday in the Ogden high a man who called him a "stuffed school building shirt" until he got the Democratic nomination who pretended to be It is reported that there are friendly when he was trying to stop eighty graves in the potter field of him who aspires to be as intimate the Ogden cemetaries The gravel with Herbert Hoover as with FDR are in remote places who represents big business and Emma Lucy Gates Utah's grand speculation and who stands for almost everything that the new deal opera singer has been engaged td is against sing with the Ogden tabernacle Baruch has not yet sensed the dif- choir in the near future She J$ ficulty of serving Wall street and now in New York City filling an Washington or the incongruity: of engagement extracting a fortune from political economics at the same time that he The Ogdeh union league baseball se poses as a disinterested and team won the last game of a BfiJes providence above the dust of at Glenwood yesterday a battle Still he has his uses and the Salt LakeparkCity team wk'a they are not confined to campaign 11 to 5 score of contributions In spite of his economic dogmatism and doctrinaire A large crowd witnessed the racidealism he still has good ideas and events at the Fair ing he is an excellent negotiator If Other sport contests were grounds on the there is ever that world political program such as baseball foot races as the conference which looms up and wrestling only alternative to world chaos he would be a perfect choice for deleThe summer garden of the Elks' gate as no foreign statesman could la Ogden will be formally lodge or nationalism make a dent in his at the rear of the home on shake his sense of world realities opened avenue June 10 A' program Grant be Hence although he will never will1 be never will given new deal he part of the be altogether out of it He is a po' Mrs Mary Alice Clark died today litical amphibian at home in both years elements but unable to live per- in Liberty She was forty-fiv- e Clark wife Andrew of of old the either in manently Eden (Continued Friday) —f — Copyright Simon & Schuster Inc Employment in Austria is and The Register and Tribune Syndicate Dix-Log- an yoo-hooi- ng all-wi- -- r i - ' minima iiiii m u mi i nn i in INhi III ' au V v -- narm r C ?' fc'SX ' ' f : j V v - ' :: - j i o heads they want done and ' broken The brutal fighting the Kilkenny cats tails tied? together thrown over a clothes Ifcne They tore each other to pieces although was not ifiere gets the no scratches Similarly Union and n!4-all- er men clubs aaj d shoot each other although the' owners" labor leaders and labor employers are far from the scene arul are not scratched That would seem silly tofcjin angel locking down non-uni- on 1 AND THEN lliSMOICED s t cat-own- " V lea - Press of time prevented calling on a friend! of mine and my fath ers u inred lieniung wno always renews my faith in the miracles As a boy I recall the town him off for what see to gathering was then a trip few had taken— to California He waved wanly from a pillowed chair on the back platform as the local rounded Fox's dairy No one expected to see him again But in middle 70's he's in such perfect health that like Sir Oliver Lodge he dances in the evening with grandchildren Agua Caliente In old Mexico Is now directed by Joe Schenck A of Norma Talmadge surrounded by a flashy fierce black scowl of bald and bar-bar- is hills We lunched' in the patio of the gambling ca sino where a Mexican senorita a sort of Sophie Tucker version of Gus Edwards' Armita arriving on a don-ke- y fandangoed to castanets and music of a string orchestra The casino is busiest week ends when the movie crowds fly over the border to make merry Plenty of the gar-mouth- ACTIVE IN "STOP Queen Mary of England celebrated th her birthday with all all Britain her family around her enand the rest of that "far-flunmore her many terprise wishing happy years Queen Mary has always set a good example most important in every mother queen or washwoman Contrast Queen Mary with Bernard ©aruch Is Widely Regarded - as Political Wizard But Facts Show He $Jas Been Poor Guesser s bou-galnvll- " world-new- s ess We intended to bivouac at beautiful Coronado Beach for the night and be lulled to slumber by J£e surfs gentle pounding But moonlight was superb for motoJg and a toss of the coin sent us on Until one has seen clumps of spangling the green wim pled valleys in a sheen of moonbeams one has missed nature's most exquisite stagecraft So until three a m with! space as a living prcsence I built my fanciful hacienda half hidden In myriads of nodding purple flowers Doting upon a future dotage as it were So tranquil in deed that Once or twice I almost forgave the son of a muleteer whq gypped me out of ten bucks across the gaming tables Almost but notf -t quite 1934 Syn- McNaught (Cops'right jdicate Inc) San Diego is not its economic best with the fleet away But it is too highly geared to suffer collapse at this evacuation It Is merely not as lively especially at night as when sailors are ashore We passed the flying field from which Lindy took off for his immortal flight The wide dome of clear azure is always dotted with planes the air filled with the engines' far away shucka shuck buddy?" BX nt i 'Would youie'sbe interested in a little business proposition Do not fail to visit Chicago's won- ycrs sort of gambling But when in Rome SAN DIEGO— I wondered motor ing into this thoroughly sun --kissed Ederi dreaming so beautifully through long golden days- if it ap preciated the exploitation in Max Miller's "I Cover the Water Front locale of his yarns In Paris there would be a Place Max Miller San Diego has little metropolitan gar nish Rather a look of fierce residential respectability softened by the most even climate in America One is en gulfed 'immediately in m freely Im parted sense of soothing quiet It is a lowered reality of dreams to which I hope Fate billets me comes time to cover my typewriter At least a few months each year Every street is awash with sun light and every lawn a blaze of flowers Humanity is not scurry ing like frightened ants People have an honest languor that comes only with content When there is work to do they do it without fussi Each day has individual tranquility spir itual stimulation The high state of civic conscious ness is expressed in the beauty of its parks pin neat highways and suddenly glimpsed vistas greeting every turn In the noonday shim mer it seems a great opaque bubble that might burst with the evening clang of church bells mid-Victori- Bad news of strikes and other dissatisfaction continues Troops in ToLet's not blame NRA for carry- ledo again firing on the mob rading out a congressional mandate — ical rioteers in New York City fightGen Hugh S Johnson ing police Some news is better The Minnenever I got justice in my life— apolis teamsters have Adjusted their Mae Murray screen actress difficulties and the other important strikes are settled The excessive use of lipstick has How amazing that workmen of greatly increased the world's troubles Lipstick is not healthful for different beliefs union and nonwomen It is not safe for men— union should Insist on settling disU S Senator M M Neely of West putes with clubs guns and bricks when the vote could do anything Virginia V i kr - Mussolini THE Post-Dispatc- MS New ed weu-car&er- gamblers about along with touts one scees at Belmont Havre 3fi Grace or wherever horses run Th® inevitable gleaners among wastrels picking up crumbs - year's greater and better exposition will eclipse the first year in attendance and in every other way number of farm mortgages THE totalin the United States Alduring the The day before the opening Genfred P Sloan Jr president of six months ended April 1934 was 353748 eral Motors company gave e dinner amount 242882 of this men which were at and for important for $857466304 of matters discussed ably loans amounting to $600574439 were made importance to every humangreatest being Thus these in this country You will read more fov the federal land banks banks nave aone auouu u yvi wcuc ui iuc about that in this column hereafter 'farm mortgage business in this six months' Henry Ford was there to inspect his new exposition buildings Before period The remaining 30 per cent is he realized it half a dozen young I !(St i t - 'FARM MORTGAGES WATER FROM T1IE LAKES among individuals joint stock land is to begir the work of tapping the IDAHO banks commercial and savings banks and in the region of Yellowstone nation- 'trust companies insurance companies and al park as a source of relief from the drouth 'receivers and conservators for banks in the which threatens to destroy the crops of order named the Snake valley The great increase in the number of There is a greal storage of water in the land bank and the land bank commischain of lakes in the Jackson Hole counbe opposition sioner loans is a dominant factor in the try and although there will business written during from people living near the lakes Idaho hew farm mortgage months The total number should proceed to do whatever is necessary :he last several all lenders to release the wa :ers in order to prevent Df farm mortgages written by throughout the United States has increased a great state disa ster nonth by month The number of such oans made in October 1933 was 27989 for GOVERNOR ROlipH 66658546 whereas by March of this year MOMENTARILY word is expected telling number had increased to 86876 loans 1V1 0f the passing of Governor James the for $210502882 Rolph Jr of California" who has been givThe greatest number of all farm morten up by the doctors recorded in the six months prior to ' The last bulletin from his bedside said gages this year according to the estimates April his pulse was strong That has been char- Df the farm credit administration were in acteristic of the governor He has had a the seventh farm credit administration disstrone heart for the duties of public office trict Michigan Wisconsin MinNow that he is fading into the realm of nesotacomprising and North Dakota followed by the the unknown bo his friends and his ene- fourth district embracing Ohio Indiana mies will agree that his great source ot Kentucky and Tennessee the eighth district his been has sunny success and strength ncludmg Iowa South Dakota Nebraska and as been buoyhas He always disposition the sixth district comprised of ant as a boy and as genial as one in love Wyoming Ilinois Missuori and Arkansas with life He has been an ardent lover of California POLICE AND THE LAW and has ever tho ight of his state as the THAT story from New York of how thirty all in state test and things grea biggest policemen proceeded to clear a courtunion of the states of the jeight forty good room of radicals helps to explain why there That gave him the enthusiasm which helped are radicals to endear him to :he people of his state "Reds" are manufactured when the His career was unsullied until near its proceed to be brutal tyrants disregardclose when he gave endorsement to the San rule of fair treatment of men and Jose lynchings anc: thus brought down upon ing every women at their mercy his head the censure of thousands accomThe statement is made that a woman was panied by the ha shest of criticisms down kicked and otherwise misHe was preparing to retire from public knocked treated by the police although she was life when stricken making an effort to comply with the order to "move along" BLACK WIDOW SPIDER The police can do much to create respect black widow spider has been found in or destroy respect for the law and th refore is to be guarded A Miami university student ate 15 ham against because it is most poisonous as has health of board state the been disclosed by burger sandwiches in half an hour and still to as a issued warning of Idaho which hs 'some of us can see nothing in a college its venomoua uaiuxe luuuwiug education Idaho View Grand in on doctor a inflicted Five greyhounds in Texas dropped dead People of Boise have been instructed o beware of danger lurking in dark places in basing a rabbit and they couldn't even ome back home to boast how the big f cl basements cellars attics and closets This warning was issued after discovery of a ow got away from them number of the spiders in and around Boise The middle west was blanketed by a huge as well as in order western Idaho cities In the home town of the doctor who has dust storm from the dry prairies Dillinger been bitten many of the glossy black spiders must have skipped again NOT miX Louis If I gougey By George Clark WSlTZe' JUL I dis-jtribut- ed IMPATIENCE THURSDAY EVENING MAY 31 1034- - PARD-EXAftllNE- R WHEN YOU FEEL your energy sagging light a Camel Camels help to relieve tiredness and irritability You can smoke Camels steadily Their costlier tobaccos never interfere with healthy nerves uitUu W7f-ljiiu- ll |