OCR Text |
Show UTAH DEMOCRAT: Public Opinion Is No Longer a Competent Guide in Private Morals Honeybees turn on the heat in their apartment houses at 57 degrees Fahrenheit, says the Journal of Pharmacy. When it gets that cold, they form a compact spherical duster. Bees on the inside of the ball become active and walk, wiggle and beat their wings to generate heat The outer shell of the cluster is made up of bees that cuddle close and stay still. They furnish the Insulation which prevents the escape of heat so effectively that there may be 75 degrees difference between the inside and the outInches side only four and away. Thousands of dollars are lost to American beekeepers every year, however, by bees working themselves to death In keeping warm this way. By REV. DR. B. I. Bell, President St. Stephens College. opinion is no longer a competent guide in private morals. is hardly a crime or misdemeanor nowadays without its respectable defenders. What some excellent souls call drunken defiance of law others equally worthy regard as brave advocacy of personal freedom. What to some people is lying, to other good folks call art, people is playing the game. Wrhat many others as respectable call indecency. What to some earnest men is intellectual dishonesty, is to other earnest men advanced modern thinking. Some good women regard as friendly comradeship of the sexes what other good women look upon as indecent animalism. Just what Mrs. Grundy thinks is not certain. The normal restraints of public opinion no longer restrain. You can do almost anything you please and be reasonably sure of escaping public censure or social punishment. The danger is not so much that people will adopt wicked standards of conduct as that they will adopt no standards at all, but drift along, unconsciously, hypocrites, creatures of whatever crowd they are in, ethically and spiritually spineless, unworthy of their ancestors, despised by their descendants, contemptible. Under these circumstances it were better the church cease preaching in terms of Mrs. Grundy. Mrs. Grundy is different from day to day, from minute to minute. The church had better preach and adore, rather, Jesus Christ, the same always, a God whose code of ethics says merely that to be a pursuer of casual gratification at the expense of others is to be a cad, while to be courteous, considerate, forgetting ones self in being helpfully affectionate to man and decently humble before the Infinite constitutes the only true gentility. PUBLIC well-meani- ng self-center- ed Religion Throughout the Whole World Is 111 Needs a Physician It ne-lia- lf NATIONAL TICKET For President JOHN W. DAVIS For Vice President Chameleon CHARLES W. BRYAN For Governor GEORGE H. DERN For Supreme Court J. WEBER A. For Secretary of State J. W. FUNK ities. It is said that green lakes For State Treasurer JOSEPH RIRIE For State Auditor DANIEL O. LARSON For State Superintendent of Public Instruction By DR. KARL BETH, Austrian Scientist. We have organized at Vienna the International Society for the Study of Religious Psychology. Its board of directors includes Prof. Dr. Erwin Stansky, famous psychiatrist; Prosecuting Attorney Dr. Otto Nahrhaft as vice president; Dr. Paul Schilder, leading disciple of Freud; Dr. Picta, head of Viennas highest court of justice. We are not founding a new religious organization, but we are studying the existing ones. Religion throughout the whole world is ill. It needs a physician, but no doctor exists skilled in the diagnosis of such troubles. We hope through our organization to place ourselves in a position to diagnose afilictions and prescribe remedies. Our appeal is international, our studies will embrace! every line of religious thought. We have criminal experts, psychologists and psychiatrists, as well as theologians, to assist us. We hope the American churches will find in us an agent for restoring them to usefulness.' The Modem City Has Accomplished Its Work and a Change Is Coming By HENRY FORD, in Automotive Industries. The modem city haB done its work and a change is coming. The city has taught us much, but the overhead expense of living in such places is becoming unbearable. The cost of maintaining interest on debts, of keeping up water supply, sewerage and sanitary systems, the cost of traffic control and of policing great masses of people is so great as to offset the benefits of the city. Industry of the future will be organized on a big scale, but competition will force it to move to parts of the country where labor is steady and overhead costs are low. Instead of making the man come to the city, we will take the work to him in the country. Every man is better off for a period of work under the open sky, and while we cannot afford the time to go off for three or four months to dawdle around some fancy summer resort, yet we can escape the routine of the factory and the monotony of the farm by an exchange of labor. Routine of Our Daily Life By HAVELOCK ELLIS, in the Forum. M. of religion, ancient as the religious emotions are, represents a. higher stage of development. But I am sure that either the function is there or it is not there, and that no intellectual speculations will take its place or hasten its manifestation. Iteligion, like love, develops and harmonizes our rarest and most extravagant emotions. It exalts us above the commonplace routine of our daily life, and it makes us supreme over the world. But, like love also, it is a little ridiculous to those who are unable to experience it. And since they can survive quite well without experiencing it, let them be thankful, as we also are thankful. The Typical Colyum Has Drifted Into a Sort of Artificial Decadence By CLIFFORD SMYTH, in International Book Review. Mongolias Wild Dogs Fiercer Than Wolves W. E. EVANS s Belief in Vampires MRS. ANNA BRADY MR8. LUELLA C. HAYMOND L. E. DESPAIN AUSTIN P. MILLER JOSEPH HIBBARD W. D. JONES Jr. For County Commissioners Four-yea- r term Two-yea- r term H. B. AVEN No legend like the, vampire Is more common In central Europe and the Bal- It kans, especially in Transylvania. has persisted In the folklore of these peoples for ages, and In many Balkan Tillages there are persons today who are considered vampires and who not Infrequently are found mysteriously dead, with their heads cut off and a stake driven through their hearts. War and Disputes What Tully says of war may be applied to disputing It should be always so managed as to remember that the only true end of It is peace; but generally true disputants are like true sportsmen, their whole delight la In the pursuit ; and a disputant no more cares for the. truth than the sportsman for the bare. Pope. For County Attorney CALVIN W. RAWLINGS JUDICIARY TICKET FOR THIRD DISTRICT Leqal Notices For Judges Statement of the Ownership, ManJ. LOUIS BROWN agement, Circulation, Etc., Required by the Act of Congress of GRANT H. BAGLEY August 24, 1912, of UTAH DEMOCRAT THE DELBERT M. DRAPER published weekly at Salt Lake City, RAY T. ELSMORE Utah, for October 1, 1924. State of Utah, DAVID W. MOFFAT County of Salt Lake HENRY V. VAN PELT ss. Before me, a Notary public In and For District Attorney for the State and county aforesaid, RAY VAN COTT personally appeared F. L. Bagby, who having been duly sworn according to FOR JUDGES OF CITY COURT law, deposes and says that he is the Owner of The Utah Democrat and Salt Lake City that the following is, to the best of JUDGE H. E. WALLACE his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management OLIVER C. DALBY etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date shown In the above caption, R. B. THURMAN required by the Act of August 24, A. W. DUVALL 1912, embodied In section 443, Postal (Political Advertisement) Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, 1. That the names and addresses Proved Every Day of the publisher, editor, managing Constitutional rights are those that and business managers are: editor, can't he denied foa if you have a lawPublisher F. L. Bagby. Salt Lake yer of sufficient reputation. Duluth City, Utah. Herald. Editor F. L. Bagby, Salt Lake .to-wi- ed -- lf to-wi- F. W. JAMES t: to-wi- t: ht loftis . well-merit- South, . This deterioration in the art of the colyumist was inevitable. As Field conceived it, his daily column was a form of literary art, and that of a very high order. It was creative journalism, for which no adamantine rule could be given, and needing the creative genius for its successful development Lacking this rare essential, the harassed colyumist of today, with his daily stint clamoring for fulfilment, has adopted the artificially clever expedient of always supporting the worse for the better reason When even tiffs fails of its thrill recourse is had to long autobiographical dullness are details of the writers experiences that for sheer dead-levquite incomparable. Losing the pristine sincerity and spontaneous cleverness that first gave it a vogue, the typical colyum has drifted City, Utah. into a sort of artificial decadence an advocacy of the devil when that Beetles Their Victims Managing Editor F. L. Bagby, Salt must do to a Lake that the City, Utah. seeia dreary egotism clever, unexpected thing Humming birds, says Nature Magarid Business the flowers zine, be of such one extinction. can own how its After Manager F. L. Bagby, about pilferers all, ultimately bring as small and Salt beetles, flies who Lake ants, Utah. City, reEH)iitaneously witty, genuinely clever, all day and every day, without take but do not give in return. 2. That the owner is: F. L. Bagby, sorting finally to expedients that make spontaneity impossible ? el t , FRANKLYN CHRISTIANSON But the function of religion, like that of love, is not necessary to life, nor may it with any certainty be stimulated into activity. Need it? These functions are either working within you or they are not. If not, then it is clear that your organism is in no need of them at the present moment, and perhaps is bora without the aptitude to experience them. And if so, there are those who will tell you that you represent a superior type of humanity. Therefore, whether if not so, or whether so, why worry? I do not, indeed, myself think that the inaptitude for the function Twenty-Firs- F. L. BAGBY, Business Manager. The Mongols believe when, persons Sworn to and subscribed before me are about to die that, evil spirits en- this 6th First District day of October, 1924. ter the body, according to Mr. Iloy FRANK FRANCIS H. WARREN SMITH, Chapman, leader of the American MuSalt Lake City, Utah (Seal) seum Asiatic expedition. Second District commission I My expires December ' The bodies, once death has occurred, JAMES H. WATERS 1925. are placed on carts, driven over the 26th, roughest possible ground, and during ! SHERIFFS SALE COUNTY TICKET the Journey thrown off, to be devoured In the District Court in and for the 'by wild dogs. These dogs are doubtFor State Senate of Salt Lake, State of Utah, County world. less the fiercest creatures in the a Roza were Svetic, Plaintiff, against M&rko HARDEN BENNION They are indeed terrible, and of the Katallnich, Defendant, to be sold at constant menace to the lives MRS. SARAH E. 8TEWART 'members of the expedition. Sheriffs Sale at the west front door No member, said Mr. Chapman, went of the County Court House in the JOHN HANSEN out of the camp unless armed with reand County of Salt Lake, State No one In Urga, City volver and knife. on the 12th day of November For Members State House of of Utah, the Mongolian capital, dares to A. D. 1924 at twelve oclock noon of Representatives go through the meat market at night. said all the right, title, claim day, They would be seized and killed withW. R. WALLACE, Jr. in a minute If they 'ventured to do. so. and Interest of said Defendant of. I The members of the expedition on at In and to the following described ( John d. t: least three occasions came within an Real Estate An undivided ace of death from these animals. one-hal- f CREIGHTON G. KING interest in the following desProf. Charles J. Berky. the chief geolo- cribed tract of land: Commencing at MRS. J. J. GALLIGAN on the first occagist, was attacked the Southeast corner of Section 23, ' sion by three dogs, and would have 3 South, Range 1 .West, FISHER HARRIS been killed had he not had his revolver Township Salt Lake Meridian, thence North 47 handy.. He killed the leading dog and C. B. FELT wounded the other two. blit they still rods, thence North 88 degrees West to East bank of Jordan River, thence DARRELL T. LANE leaped to the attack. WOODWARD For Congress DR. HUGH W. C. CRUMP, Religion Exalts Us Above the .Commonplace some- times become absolutely colorless for a time, and it lias been found that this sudden change of hue Is due to the washing into the lakes of mud colored red by oxide of iron. Red Is complementary to green, and the result of the mixture is that the green color of the water becomes for the time being neutralized. For Attorney General J. W. ROBINSON East New-hous- e Lahef It Is weir known that the water of many lakes exhibits characteristic colors. Lake Geneva, at the western end of Switzerland, Is blue, while Lake Constance, at the eastern end of that country. Is green. Blueness implies purity, since the natural color of water Is blue. A green lake lias Its water slightly clouded with Impur- STATE TICKET ComSalt County, State of Utah, Lake City, Utah. mencing at a point sixty-eig(6S) 3. That the known bondholders, feet East of the Northwest corner mortgagees, and other security hold- of Lot Five (5), Block Two (2), Plat ers owning or holding 1 per cent or of Hill Crest Second Addition, and more of total amount of bonds, mort- running thence South One Hundred (155) feet; thence East gages, or other securities are: None. Fifty-fiv-e (68) feet; thence North 4. That the two paragraphs next Sixty-eigh- t (155) feet; above, giving the names of the owners, One Hundred Fifty-fiv- e Sixty-eigh- t West thence feet to If and (68) stockholders, security holders. of the in situated of place beginning, any, contain not only the list Lake Salt Salt Lake City, County, stockholders and security holders as of State Utah. with all of Together the books the they appear upon water conowned or in used rights, cases in where the but also, company stockholder or security holder appears nection therewith. BENJAMIN R. HARRIES, . upon the books of the company as of Salt Lake County, Utah. Sheriff trustee or in any other fiduciary reBy F. M. MATHEWS, lation, the name of the person or corDeputy. poration for whom such trustee Is actW. II. W. II. Bramel, and two Leary ing, is given; also that the said for emPlaintiff. 427 Attorneys paragraphs contain statements Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. bracing aflants full knowledge and 11 Nov. 1) (Oct. and to the circumstances belief as conditions under which stockholders ASSESSMENT NO. 2 and security holders who do not apTintic Empire Mining company. Inpear upon the books of the company under the law's of the as trustees, hold stock and securities corporated of state Utah. Principal place of In a capacity other than that of a business Salt Lake City, Utah. bona fide owner; and this affiant has is Notice hereby given that at a no reason to believe that any other of the board of directors person, association, or corporation has meeting on held 10th the day of September, In or the indirect any Interest direct A. an 1924, D., assessment of one-hasaid stock, bonds, or other securities 1 cent per share was levied of than as so stated by him. 5. jTh&t the average number of on the outstanding capital stock of the corporation, payable on or before copiep of each issue of this publication sold pr distributed, through the malls the 5th day of November, A. D. 1924, or otherwise ,to paid subscribers dur- to II. J. Fitzgerald, treasurer of the at No. 409 Atlas block. ing the six months preceding the date company, Salt Lake Utah. Any stock upthowp above is (This informa on which City, this assessment may retion is required from daily publicaon main the 5th day of Nounpaid tions only.) 818 Bees Work Selves to Death VOTE FOR HONEST GOVERNMENT A. D. vember, 1924, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, will be sold on Monday, the 24th day of November, A. D. 1924 at 11 oolcck a. m. at the office of (the company, room 409 Atlas block. Salt Lake City, Utah, to pay tbe delinquent assessment, to- gether with the costs of advertising and expense of sale. H. J. FITZGERALD, Secretary. 409 Atlas block. Salt Lake CKy, Utah. (10:411:1) SUMMONS In the Third Judicial District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Wilma Gull, Plaintiff, vs. Leon Gull, Defendant THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action Is brought; otherwise, within thirty Dollars $18.65) Eighteen and with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum since the 14th day of May, 1924, together, with plaintiffs costs and disbursements herein, and $10.00 attorney fees. This action is brought on a written contract for the sale of certain articles of furniture sold by the plaintiff to the defendant under the terms and conditions set forth in said complaint. 65-10- 0 " BEN E. ROBERTS, . Plaintiffs Attorney. Dated July 26th, 1924. - P. O. Address 920 Boston Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. (10-4:11-- 1) NOTICE Notice is hereby given that on the 15th day of September, 1924, at Salt Lake City, Utah the Solomon Shoe Company, a corporation engaged in business at 1075 East 21st South Street did execute a written assignment to the undersigned making a conveyance to all of its property located at the above place of business for the general benefit of creditors. Notice was further given to the creditors that persons having claims against said Assignor do exhibit such claims with the necessary voucher verified with all of the creditors to the undersigned at 1075 East 21st South Street, Salt Lake City, within three months from the first publication thereof. J. S. BARRETT Dated this 1st day of October, A. D. 1924. First publication Oct. Last Oct. 4, 1924. 25, 1924. SUMMONS In the Third Judicial District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Doris Culton, Plaintiff, vs. Charles F. Culton, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. Plaintiff brings this action for the purpose of securing a decree of divorce from the defendanL VAN DAM & DRAPER. Attorneys for Plaintiff P. O. Address 419 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, (SepL 27 Oct. 25) days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will PROBATE AND GUARDIAN- Southerly along East bank of Jordan be rendered against you according to SHIP NOTICES River to South lire of Section 23, the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said For Further Information Conthence Blast to place of beginning, acres more or less. Court. containing 37 sult County Clerk or Situated in Salt Lake County, State This action is brought to dissolve Signers. of Utah. the bonds of matrimony existing beNOTICE TO CREDITORS Purchase price payable in lawful tween the plaintiff and defendanL money of the United States. Estate of Ernistena Weinstein, Deverb l. McCarthy, Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this ceased. Attorney for Plaintiff. P. O. Address 1008 Kearns Building, 16th day of October, 1924. Creditors will present claims with BENJAMIN R. HARRIES, Salt Lake City, Utah. vouchers to the undersigned at 1109 Sheriff of Salt Lake County, (SepL 20 OcL 18) Deseret Bank Bldg., Salt Lake City, State of Utah. Utah, on or before the 16th day of SUMMONS By F. M. MATHEWS. A. D. 1925. In the Third Judicial District Court February, . Deputy Sheriff. JULIUS ROSENBERG, J. W. McKinney, Attorney for Plain- in and for the County of Salt Lake, Administrator with the will State of Utah. tiff. annexed of the estate of Date of first publication October Myrtle Fames Lonsdale, Plaintiff, Ernistena Weinstein, Deceased. vs. Clarence Lonsdale, DefendanL 18, 1924. Last Nov. 8, 1924. Alexander ft Budge, Stewart, STATE OF UTAH TO THE THE. SUMMONS Attorneys for Administrator. SAID DEFENDANT: Date of first publication Oct. 11, In Third Judicial District Court of You are summoned to appear with- A. D. 1924. Last Nov. Salt Lake County, State of Utah. 1, 1924. in of after service (20) twenty days vs. S. Sarah McKinley, Plaintiff, NOTICE TO CREDITORS this Summons upon you if served William E. McKinley, Defendant. Estate of Mary J. Turner, Deceased. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE within the county in which this action Creditors will present claims with is otherwise within brought, thirty SAID DEFENDANT: vouchers to the undersigned at 308 after defend and (30) days service, You are hereby summoned to appear Kearns above entitled action. And in case Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, within twenty days after the service the on or before the 15th day of Deto zo of afilure do will your judgment of this summons upon you, if served A. D. 1924. be rendered to cember, you against according within the county In which this action demand the of the which W. E. TURNER, complaint, is brought; otherwise, within thirty been filed has said with the clerk of Administrator of the Estate of days, after service, and defend the court. This action is reto Mary J. Turner, Deceased. brought above entitled action; and in case of w. cover a J. bond the judgment dissolving McKinney, your. failure so to do, judgment will be and contract of matrimony now and Attorney for Administrator. rendered against you according to the heretofore between Date and of frist publication October 4, you exist'ng demand of the complaint, which has the D. A. 1924; last Oct. 25, 1924. plaintiff. been filed with the Clerk of Said II. L. MULLINER, Court. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Attorney for Plaintiff. This action Is brought to procure a Estate of James Green, Deceased. P. O. Address 820 Continental Bank judgment dissolving the bonds of Creditors will present claims with matrimony heretofore existing between Bldg. vouchers to the undersigned at 1109 First publication Sept. 20; last OcL plaintiff and defendant, and cancelling Deseret Bank Bldg., Salt Lake City. a certain separation agreement here- 18, 1924. on or before ' Utah, the 6th day of tofore entered into between said Re-pecti- parties. LESLIE FRAZER, ' Attorney for Plaintiff 630 Judge Building, O. Address P. Salt Lake City, Utah. (Oct. 18 Nov. 15) SUMMONS Court of 8alt Lake City. City Co-o- p Furniture Company, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. L. S. Mollerup, DefendanL THE STATE OF UTAH TO SAID DEFENDANTS: You are hereby ' summoned to appear within ten (10) days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this' action Is brought; otherwise within twenty (20) days after such service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure to do so, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court and of which a Copy SHERIFFS SALE In the District Court of the Third Judicial District in and for the county of Salt Lake, State of Utah, Walter L. Kirk, Plaintiff, against Cannon and Cannon, a corporation, Zeno G. Logan, Eugenia Silver Cannon, C. J. Jensen and Mrs. C. J. Jensen, his wife, Defendants, to be sold at Sheriffs Sale on the 3rd day of November, A. D. 1924, at the hour of 12:00 noon of said day, at the West front door of the City and County Building in Salt Lake City; Salt Lake County, State of is hereto annexed and herewith serUtah, the following described prop- ved upon you, and will take judgerty In Salt Lake City, Salt Lake ment against you for the sum of - ve December A. D. 1924. WALTER J. GREEN, Administrator of the Estate of James Green, Deceased. Stewart, Alexander ft Budge, Attorneys for Administrator. Date of first publication Oct. A. D. 1924; last, Oct. 25, 1924. 4, NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of G. M. Kelly, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 1109 Deseret Bank Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 1st day of 1924. December, SALINA KELLY, Administratrix of the Estate of . G. M. Kelly, deceased. Stewart, Alexander and Budge, Attorneys for Administratrix. Date of first publication Sept. 27, A. D. 1924; last October 18, 1924. |