Show - w v - —— — PUBLISHING COMPANY A L GLASMANN EDITOR AND MANAGER Awofctte BAltora TrinX Pr&ncla and Will W Bowman AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published Erery Evening and Sunday Momln Without a Club Muzzlt or United Press NEA ol Tn Aaaoclated Press Uemberi Service and A B O The Associated Presa U exclusively entitled to the use tor otherwise credited la tills paper and also the local news f in Be Paid Must By Carrier '3ca a Month1700By a Mail— Year In Otah Idaho Month: Advance— 5c — All Other States $100 a Month Nevada and Wyoming CALL 252 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS The A A Platform Standard-Examiner- 's Modern City and County Building New City High School government lor Ogden Water a Supply to Accommodate Pure of Control A council-manag- er 000 Persona: 130- - ' I t Road Improve- Vigorous Campaign ' of City and County menta Scenic Road to Mount Ogden and Road From Ogden Canyon to Weber Canyon Another North and South Arterial Blghvay An improved Highway to Great Salt Lake Route Place On A Transcontinental Air " ODAY law Security social HTHE new security law Is a reflection A qf the greatest single change that has com upon the American people in all their history T understand the change you need only try to imagine such a bill having been ' passed a century ago Al that time this country probably came closer to the kind of social order visioned by "pie prophets of the revolutionary period than any other land on earth It was a country! of small proprietors— small farmers small business men small manufacturers small traders Political independence had oeen won in the war with Britain c independence or something closely approaching it had developed hand in hand with! class of those days was a The average-Americafarnjer master of his own acres and proprietor of a plant which provided him with practically all of his food and most of his clothing year in and year out The towns were relatively small and they were? full of small shops small stores small businesses Hardly anyone went out and got a job with the idea that he would be a all his life the job was a makeshift a time-fille- r until the moment when he dould start some undertaking of his own Uader such conditions a social security bill like the one just signed would have beenj completely useless It simply was not needed nor could anyone in the United States of that day have imagined that it ever ( would be needed In the long run under those conditions a man sank or swam by his "own efforts If we had energy and even a halfway decent break in the luck he need not fear the poor-hou-- Central it Tllere was not a large wage-earnin- g n CLOUDBURSTS j rain is needed THOUGH it is not acceptable in the form of a flood On Bingham Thursday a storm swept over the which becanyon area causing ' a downpour came a cloudburst flooding many homes at Coppertown This is the season of cloudbursts in the mountains and campers and travelers should be alert in avoiding the deep canyons where violent storms may be expected t IN CALIFORNIA 7IGIL ANTES in j Santa Rosa Califs have V tarred land feathered men suspected ot IVtOB Thprft is not much difference between the red who preaches communism and the red who violating every law of orderly government 'proceeds to destroy by violence all respect for law -- When agitators inflame large numbers of fallow workers and create a rebellious atti tude there is a way provided by law to rebuke and punish tne aisturpers wiuiouu ic snrtinsr to mobacracy One form of lawless ness is as bad as the other and often under the guise of mob rule- - unpardonable out rages are committed MORE WAR CLOUDS PVERY day brings tne worm nearer w au X other war" of large proportions Ureat cniain may nave umv juw bluff but the bluffing has gone on until either Italy or Great Britain must back down with 4oss of prestige or proceed to war " Reports from London are to the effect that the British cabinet has decided to go to any length in an attempt to prevent war It may be the British secret service has discovered that the Italians will weaken if they believe the British aire determined to use extreme measures to- - stop the Ethiopian campaign and therefore they are employing that knowledge to gain their purpose On the other 'hand it looks as though Italy - cannot j stop In other words Mussolini cannot back down without inviting internal discord accompanied by loss of power and he is driven by political necessity to go on with his conquest in Africa where he now has 200000 men supplied with guns and j ' - -- job-lold- er se or the breadline It is almost a waste of breath to remark that the America of 1935 is not in the least like the America of a century ago or it would be wasted if some people did not still 'cling to the attiude of 1835 in appraising social legislation like the security bill The individual no longer has his old economic independence Our great" cities con-- tain f millions upon millions of people who With are and always will be the (best will in the world they cannot be anything else And no matter how industrious frugal and ambitious they may be a depression can at anytime sweep their jobs out from under them destroy their savings and leave them utterly helpless It is that change which the new social security bill reflects the greatest change by all odds which has ever come upon our peopie Our greatest problems of today all derive from it The social' security bill is wage-earne- rs only! a first step in the necessary effort to -- cope with' them ' Borah for 1936 From Tulsa Oklahoma the state in which Will Rogers was bom J D Underwood suggests as "the high est tribute and a lasting memorial to Will Rogers" that highway 66 which runs from Rogers' new home in California to his old home at Claremore Okla be extended on to New York and the whole road named "Will Rogers highway" If every American highway with friends of Will Rogers living on both sides from one end to the other were named for him there would be many "Will Rogers" highways y You read "Borah prepares to en 1936 presidential race if his Re publican boom grows " and ask yourself what has become of the young Republicans? Senator Borah Is in the prime of intellectual power one that many intelligent Americans would select if a chance were to come in 1936 A plain American of the vanishing kind he believes that the people could rule if they had a chance and attaches more importance to the American man than to the American dollar- Under ordinary circumstances that would prevent his nomination by the ation-Republican party But these are not ordinary - corpor- At Sverdlovsk Russian government engineers digging sewers under the city find gold ore that indicates a rich gold field underlying the town The government owns practically all the city and can easily take the rest and a further increase in Russia's gold production already more than three times as great as that of the United Sates may be expected American engineers could show them how to take out the gold with out knocking down the city Those that believe in the wickedness of Russia may ask: "why does providence allow such wicked people to find so much gold?" One answer is "the quickest way to make them stop their wicked ness is to make them rich and gold would do that" Gold might not change the existing government of Russia but another generation will see another kind of government and ownership of such a lump of gold as we possess might make that next Russian government consider Lenin and Stalin "old fashioned" Providence works mysteriously Physicians at St" Vincent's hospital in New York report the extraor dinary case of a baby that lived for 27 daysappearing almost normal but possessing 'no brain Disgruntled "best minds" will tell you there are "babies' in Washington some of them professors that have lived longer than 27 days "without any brain" full-fledg- ed Judge Otis of the federal district court of western Missouri compelled by law to sell at auction homes and land of farmers that could not pay their debts not to be intimidated by demonstrations will speak in public to farmers and others This shows the right spirit: A judge is chosen to apply the law until the people with their ballots change it v' ' pro-Japane- N se O PINIONS of the Mussolini asks the French to ob tmcontrollable serve that wild tribes of Ethiopia? have' invaded TV JT RESS POLITICAL LIBERTY AND SOCIAL TYRANNY - (Washington Post) By a resolution adopted at its annual encampment! the District of Columbia department of the American Legiom went on record as in favor of urging" men of wealth to abstain from making 'gifts to educational' institution permitting "subversive agencies" to exist in their midst In such wise is an enthusiasm for freedom misapplied to strangle liberty' In his noble treatise "On Liberty" John Stuart Mill abundantly proved the proposition that political liberty alone is insufficient for man's security and ness and that social tyranny may be more grinding thanhappilegal I is a case in point legion's resolutionfor-thtyranny! The future of political Feeling a genuine concern in the United States the veterans are intent on stopping upliberty every gap by which political theories might enter But in so doing they would impose a set of restrictions on the educational institutions of the country For who is to define "subversive"? It is a vague word at best Indeed the legion by its action would itself become a subversive agency in the broader sense of the word for it would be tending to undermine one ofithe most fundamental institutions of democracy— freedom of : opinion and expression:" 'Liberty is the breath of progress Whatever advances have been accomplished by this nation or any other have come through method by experiment and by exploration ther To confine study and research within the limits- - of the ordinary and the accepted is simply to deny all further progress Although the legion resolution was not intentionally directed toward such an end in effect it could not avoid accomplishing it It is then a dangerous proposal and one which should be expunged: from the record of any truly American organization ! e un-Ameri- can trial-and-err- or -- ! French Somaliland killing 100 French subjects France will pay no attention When you want war it is enough for the enemy to kill a guinea pig on your land When yon don't want one war killing a' hundred men means to proAny time I need any tect me morally physically or poli- little In this instance France will Mayor F H feel like the negro gentleman who tically I'll quit office— refrained front entering the war "to York New LaGuardia of make the world safe for democracy' He said: "The German kaiser never There is no such thing as a strike done nothing to me and if he did on a relief jobj— Federal Relief AdI forgive him ministrator Harry Hopkins With the' gathering "of scientists I'm going hunting for betrayers from thirty nations in Moscow Rus Col sian or the Democratic platform— professors have ' demonsrated Theodore Roosevelt Jr- the fact that Sbvietism has intelligence enough to feed and encourage If great moral issues are treated science as it does literature The rashly and clumsily we may with richest man in Russia is Gorky the the best intentions plunge the writer "Visiting scientists from the world into a great catastrophe— United States and other civilized Sir Samuel Hoare British foreign countries compliment Russia on her admirable" laboratories Walter Dur-an- ty secretary who writes from Moscow This country stands for sanity— thinks some undeserved emphasis has been put on the achievements Queen Wilhehnlna of Holland — of modem Russian science lie says is The Key brothers of Meridian while "Soviet interest in sciencecan Miss could have made 20 round wholly true a Russian engineer trip flights from coast to coast in a run American engineers ragged in modern transport in the time they theoretical argument hut an Amen can could make a train go while the remained aloft on their recent Russian 13 making plans" endurance flights " sifter - ? — — record-- breaking er I— old iMclntyre NEW YORK Aug 23— Thoughts while strolling : Good word for pain in the neck—caxbunclish The soap box orators are now up to 72d street What became of the brown straw hat? Country boy's notion of a city slicker: Charles I Scott the -- J a - name for insurance man Bang-u- p ' an ashcan concern Tip Top Add meringue names: Radcliff Romaine and Claire StNoble For the next Jeeter Lester in "Tobacco Road" — Ewing Galloway Walter urt Damrosch seems always lost in ab straction Memory: Walking on tne tering dialect comedians and one picket fence to show off before The remaining steadily in harness Con-- 1 Only GirL Neat 'writing name Rob temporaries sucn as koid is Dill Wagner Weber and Fields Sam Bernard Sing alikesr Helen Morgan and Louis Mann Bickel and Watson and Winnif red Shaw And Glenn I Mar Cliff Gordon have passed from the tin aviation pioneer is a ringer for scene by death or retirement I am Gerald Breitigam One thing about wondering what a modem audience's Roxy no one ever heard him whine would be to Cawthorn's Hal Phyfe and Jack Dempsey have reaction most hilarious that brought the same cat-lielide The Times down the house caper Victor Herbert's in book critic Robert Van Gelder i was a Fortune "The Teller" It Those fleet - footed flanneled delivered in German couplet young men who cross town for the turals: "I had a little bird andgut his tennis courts before sundown No name was Enza I her cage" opened one can hunger me up for food like and influenza" People shrieked and Bruno Lessing So even the great beat the backs of neighbors pewed Patou had to hang up his shutters in front Another roll in the aisle in Paris Strong faced mem J Au- was when he tried to provoked brey Smith and the late Ernest Tor- - nounce "vicissitude" growing sopro In rence orchestra that clement the solemnly ' Jim Flage Longest Morton Downey and Peter Arno raised umbrellas in sudden defense Those oxygen service shops open 24 One of my erudite correspondents nours The chiropractors now three - stumbles in the spelling of two com sheeet their virtues on paratively simple words He spells iiope jane cowi never uecomes a prayed praid and despair despare blonde Never saw a night watchin a brave moment I cau-Recently man reading nor met a man named to the derelictions his attention Cedric curious as to the why His answer is direct with simplicity:! Just like The most commercially successful my way oetter ' modern poet is Arthur Guiterman O yes" it was Cawthorn an ex He has an office where he turns angler of striped bass in real out in a workman-lik- e manner son pert who first perpetrate a gag life nets for all who pay the price In that still bobs up in the funny pa- c his 60's he is a vigorous exponent a Over stage mantle was of life a woodsman ca- - pers ana sneuacxea a sturred mounted" noeman and mountaineer His sum fish 10 feet long Gazing awhile mer home is in the Green Mounexploded: "Whoever caught that tains of Vermont His most widely he a liar" is is "Death and General ke f ft I Mi ' V'St'S"": ' r eye-lash- Hi i Yli'W'iiT'7 "ittP!"2?¥4 vmf- :-- L - : - - 1 1 es: - xrY BY vou win from Br goes Stroud's-wif- e toward paying something on his bill" of V CBAN£ -- NOBTHWfc STERN UTJIVERSJTV : out-do- Jilted? Your romance wrecked? Sweetheart dead? It's a terrible feeling But the secret of emotional balance and happiness lies in facing each issue and adjusting to as it arises A new and love can deliberately be built up anew and even overshadow all that went before A-17- -- g-i- ng - her friend Just would not let her say no SECOND ROMANCE The man was qu:et unassuming and tall Not handsome but with nice teeth and an engaging grin Some weeks later she met him by chance on the street at noon and he took her to lunch She learned he was a young physician They went to the opera once after that Then spring came He had to drive to Benton Harbor Michigan one Saturday during apple blossom time and persuaded her to go along They picnicked and had a jolly good time Dorothy gradually began to en Joy herself and really looked forward to these outings She began to type the monthly statements for him and when a client paid a bill they'd go to a movie or have sup per in Chinatown At the end of the year I heard nothing from her After 18 months I met her by chance on the street There was laughter In her eyes and she was gayly' hanging on to a young doctor's arm At the end of two years I received a wedding announcement In a jolly feminine fcand was written "You win!" "I never was happier in my lifel" Another life salvaged from gloom and wormwood and gall She has two adorable youngsters now and Is active in church and Y W C A -- concerned f This overcoming involves not only continuous training in speech The stutterer has failed to learn to speak correctly and his errors of speech have been intensified by long misuse of the tissues of the body involved in speaking In many instances a complete physical examination will reveal 1935 McNaught Syndi- ' cate) : Honolulu May Haye New Lighting System -- ( or -- I Full 100 Proof (Not a blend) I 1 v VTfc V nt difficulties of breathing infections in the throat irritations involving the laryngeal cords or similar dis turbances One of the modern steps in study ing such cases is to have a phono- graph record made of the speech as it actually takes place and then by analysis of the record to select the most obvious faults and work upon them first Ts Jr SAVE $10 NOW : ADVANCE SHOWING and sale of the 1935 models of the original and only genuine Ileat- rola Heater It pays to buy the genuine Heatrola because ' only the genuine has the Intensi-Fire-A- ir Duct the Feed Door and other fuel - saving labor - saving features It pays especially-: well to order it now — while the great annual August Sale is being held at Boyle's the exclusive deal- ers because you et EXTRA DISCOUNTS UP TO $10 plus BIG TRADE-I- N ALLOWANCES! SO don't delay— buy now and save enough to heat your home for a whole month next winter" In the 1935 line there's a size to fit every home a style to please every taste a price to meet Ped-a-Lev- er every budget BOYLES : An interesting observation made by a distinguished physician con HONOLULU— (UP) —Honolulu cerned the general mental habits of often called one olthe worst lighted the stutterer He pointed out that rit ! ps is exDerimentiruz with - a new people who stutter inerfere wih sodium-vap- or of street lights themselves not only when they talk to determine Iftype shouldl be used they but in many other activities of life extensively in modernizing the city's as well system Sometimes their muscular move -illumination traffic safety: comHonolulu The ments are jerky They will drive mission recommended installation of a motor car in an interrupted man two of type lights ner rather than smoothly as asso at busy intersections to test their elated with good driving Musicians who stutter sometimes efficiency'' Some - experts said sodium-vapbecome obstructed in playing cer lights were advisable because they tain notes Occasionally such per don't glare and are economical sons stutter in their thinking and is reported to have exCalifornia find themselves confused success with them In perienced should All these facts emphasize the necessity of a thorough physi- highway illumination cal study of every stutterer and inBrazil expects an unusually heavy dicate the various measures neces cotton cure crop this year about y to sary bring (Dr Crane will give personal at tention to inquiries about psychoin care logical problems Write him of this paoer enclosing a three-cestamped addressed envelope for re rlv) (Copyright 1935 by the Hopkins Syndicate) SPECIAL : — " work One advantage of this procedure is the ability of the teacher of speech to make another phonograph record some time later and thus to be able to measure definitely the " amount of the improvement J S Greene who has given intensive study to the speech problem feels that practice in reading tion aloud whether by the individual or Usually persons who stutter are by a group is a valuable exercise highly emotional and stuttering be-is It serves to take the mind of the always intensified when they come worried or irritated or when for any reason an emotional disturbance occurs On analyzing the background of those who stutter one finds that the childhood has been marked by incompatibility between parents by incompatibility between children and parents by wrong relationships to nurses teachers or tutors or by some other similar failure to establish normal emotional relationships Therefore the first step in controlling any attack of stuttering is to find out the emotional difficulty that is at fault and by explana-io- n or understanding to relieve the stutterer from his mental stress However even after this is done there remains the necessity of overcoming a bad habit so far as the actual process of speech itself is (Copyright individual away from the problem of speech and at the same time calms his emotions and lessens his fear that he will not be able to speak correctly 3: and a broken heart? T have nothing to live for" Dorothy said in a dull restrained voice to join BUI" "You have "I'm a useful and happy life ahead- if you but look forward instead of backward" I urged "Be a good sport and follow this prescription for a year Then you can join Bill with a clear conscience if you so desire for you will then have made an honest effort to do as he would have wished you to do" never be happy "Oh I could again" she protested wanly "Let's make a wager I urged Diagnosis: Dorothy finally promised and she faithfully lived up to the prescription First she immediately enrolled in business college taking a stenographic course after which she procured a position in a busy law office Meanwhile she took charge of a group of girls at Jhe Settlement house For the first few weeks she did her work like an automaton There was no smile on her lips no laughter in her eyes But time passed and she began to enjoy helping the little waifs at the settlement She occasionally dropped into my office for a few minutes I noticed a renewal of her interest in life She began lunching with the girls in her office and went to an occasional party At the first such affair she was an extra persuaded to come only because' the husband of her girl chum had brought an unexpected man and or quoted poem ng Case Dorothy and Bill were a young couple wildly in love with one another They had been married three years and were ideally happy It just made folks feeLgood to see their devotion to each other and their delight in one another's company Then an automobile wreck left Dorothy a widow People wondered if she could ever reconcile herself to Bill's loss Would she go crazy or commit suicide or die of grief di : Psychologist G£OCG£ 0B biU-boar- ci ase Record s HEALTH TALKS Walter-Kumal- o ft - -- style expert complains that wear Americans sport shoes with business Great Britain woulcU rejoice if the United suits It does seem silly to don a business arrive saying: "the time has States were to join with her in browbeating suitljust to drop in at the office on the way to paper come Get out" ' seems too much like the ex the Italians but it wouldbe a blunder on the jlinks It s — perience of the gentleman sitting in our part to get involved in this controversy a condemned cell The Democratic contention that oppofor back of it is the intrigue' of Europe head of the Chief In the past we have found the British nents favor a return to the horse and bug- Amakolwa tribe' offers to take a diplomats clever manipulators laboring to gy era may cost Roosevelt the pedestrian crowd of Zulus to help Ethiopia beat By DR MORRIS FISIIBEIN Mussolini Too bad that Walter who '36 vote our in other In one the force against play may call himself chief of the tribe effort to maintain the open door in China of Amakolwas only by the grace of EMOTIONAL TROUBLES BACK OF STUTTERING around when the Mussolini loves grand opera according Britain was not the British suddenly fell away from us pious English took Zululand from Is the great Sympathetic Understanding quietly giving the Japanese to understand to afnews item Right now he seems inter- his ancestors and sent Overcome Small to Habit Needed to Zulu captivity king Cetewayo and that the United ested in an African aria they were Percentage ' Cured During EleCurious by the way that the between States was proceeding in its own way to mentary Edncation British see no resemblance because Italy Rockefeller kin: reports Jus Greenwich Italy taking Ethiopia make demands which were not in harmony At least 20000 children in the wants Ethiopia and Engiana ror with British policy That is characferically Conn home robbed of jewels and cash The merlv taking Zululand because United States stutter Only one of 10 recovers from this difficulty durEngland wanted Zululand European diplomacy which has much of culpfit evidently is a disciple of Huey ing the period of elementary educaLondon rs ter succeeded in building up railroads commission merchants long strings of middle men and banks the farmer is puzzled He could hardly be ex pected to have a really submissive friendly feeling when business-lik- e gentlemen with pencils and pads of 'teryj mil "I PfeSH ' till ih II 'r W City on a Gold Mine Baby With No Brains Putnam an effort Lloyd- George reputedly reads when fatigued AtUB when Jed Eilev was am ending boarding-schoo- l nearChi- cago he was editor of the class pa-pA poem KIley wrote about a kitten Inspired a in an other class to poetizing Kiley printed the first effort The years rolled by Each almost forgot the other un- til a recent day on a Washington D street when they collided Ki-- 1 ey had been chasing around the ' country looking for health and windinz ira in nosoltai rt Tiarf touched low in despair when he came upon his long-ag- o friend He was whisked to that friend's Virgin- a estate wnere after two months rit mmnTptA rsfc ii-- v wait ered The mend was Jay Jerome Williams known to the radio and newspaper strip as Edwin Alger - By George Claris YTfc A Rogers Highway Fall River Mass man jailed because he Nevertheless having the roof sold your head and your farm un bit his wife in the arm Probably told the over der your feet after you have spent to pay for the little woman she looked good enough to your life working own build up the to house and and eat then tried to prove it wasn't just flat- farm to realize that he has only j SIDE GLANCES By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright 1335 King Feature Syndicate Inc) eco-no- m " j A double dealing and endless skulduggery This! country does not want to see Ethiopia crusted but cannot afford to enter into the filth Jr pool of European politics in order to prevent the rape of that empire Insist on Nj "jslonogram No 6- - whis- honol and ah key rre ored nam© is sl ssl When-buyi'n- g - : gill 'iYpurcan t go wroni ask for "when--yo- - ' ' ' T fli©n©(SilfRl(f)' AT BE SURE IT'S No 6 Q |