Show t Q THE OGDEN STAN SUNDAY MORNING JULY 11 1837 DXRD-EXAMINE- Many Famed Fliers Cheat Death IF YOU ENJOY Trails Across Skyways Blazing MURDER TRIALS YOU'RE NORMAL o Indifference Is Abnormal Mystery Story Writer Says new o YORK July 10 (AP)— If you follow a murder trial with interest you are neither abnormal nor morbid rather your interest stamps you as normal It is indifference that is abnormal These are the opinions of Francis lies mystery story writer who contributes a chapter to a new book “The Anatomy of Murder" which critically considers seven real life murder cases lies describes the famous murder trial in England of two years ago and the resulting public interest INDIFFERENCE ABNORMAL “Superior persons” he records in murder trials “deprecate interest as morbid or sensation-seekin- g yet itT one faces the corollary it is difficult to see how any normal person can remain indifferent to a trial such as this and its result One might go so far as to throw the challenge to the superior persons that actually it is the interest which is normal and the indifference abnormal “For quite apart from the responsibility we the people feelcon-as any democracy should feel cerning those who are being tried in our name and by our chosen representatives there is the common humanity which draws each of us toward another human being in prolonged peril of life LIKE SINKING SHIP “Here the popular interest in a murder trial -- is akin to that with which the account is followed of a disabled ship floundering in a distant sea Will it keep afloat till the rescuers reach it or will it sink? This too explains why the riterest aroused by a trial for mur-flis so much greater than that aroused by that of the most notorious of crooked financiers and not only greater but different for It exists on a higher plane in the human mentality “Political responsibilty common humanity a pinch of sadism desire to know the truth psychology life as it is lived by others the technique of justice and lastly the determination of organized society to exact retribution for wrong-doin- g these are the eight chief heads of the complicated instinctive popular Interest in a trial for murder and npt one of them is abnormal “With the possible exception of the third not one of them is even morbid” Rat-tenbu- ry o o er a STEELPRODUCTS o '29 NEAR PEAK NEW YORK July 10 — (AP) June shipments of finished steel products reported today by U S Steel Corp totaled 1268550 tons largest for any June since 1929 when shipments were 1385506 tons June shipments showed a decline of 35489 tons under May but were 382485 tons above June 1936 For the first 6 months of 1937 shipments totaled 7614274 tons an increase of 2582924 or 51 per cent over the similar 1936 period The top for June produc-tio- n was attributed in some steel quarters to the fact U S Steel had not been affected by labor stoppage as had some of its competitors in June — — o 8-y- ear 4-4- - Freezes Hands In Snowball Attack On Mean Porky o o COLORADO SPRINGS Colo July 10 — (AP) — Sanford Jarrell New York and Chicago news- paperman was treated for frostbitten hands today because he rescued a pet dog from an porcupine Jarrell said he took some friends out on an expedition to a snowbank on the north slope of Pikes peak while the temperature waa flirting around 28 degrees at dawn He said when the pet wire haired terrier which accompanied the group ferreted out the porcupine it was necessary to lay e down a snowball barrage to save-thdog from being turned into a canine pincushion Auto Fatalities Rise By One-sixt- h Births reported during the past week to the city health department were: Joe and Leva Mark Lalli Wilson girl Adrian L and Winifred Peters Stephens 3302 Adams avenue boy Glen J and Louis Browning Stock Fishhaven Idaho girL Donald E and Maxine Altweis Cox 2751 Brinker avenue boy DeWayne and Lila Wheelwright Fredrick 2001 Orchard avenue girl Delbert E and Marion Nebeker Cook Willard girl Fielding S and Winifred Morris Barlow Clearfield boy Lyman S and Edna Ecker street Pierce 1471 Twenty-eight- h boy Thorsten N and Grace Larson Larson 838 Twelfth street girl Benjamin B and Margaret Lowe Mortensen Logan boy Richard W and Lucille Cordon Brann-84- 9 Thirtieth street boy George T and Anona Fowler Gomm Ben Lomond orchard cirl "James M and Eleanor Skeen Jennings Clearfield boy Benjamin and Bernice Milkoff Lutzker 679 Twenty-sixt- h street boy Arthur F and Grace Buckway street Bryant 267 Twenty-sevent- h girL George H and Mary Leavitt Jackson avenue boy Virgil R and Lucy McMills Greenwood Roy girl Arsel H and Anna West Beus Johnson 2722 Clearfield boy Ezra W and Nina Gomm Wallace Clearfield girl Clifford M and Mildred Fillmore Keyes 433 Thirtieth street girl Elwood J and Lucille “ Heiner Heiner McKinnon Wyoming boy Lewis G and Faye Giles Smith Morgan girl Shildon G and Denise Parkinson Hatch 2040 Monroe avenue boy Frank K and Nettie Logan Parker 560 Fifth street girl Walter E and Lillian Jespersen street Bingham west Thirty-thir- d girl Davis Hyrum M and Hazel Lund 248b Monroe avenue boy Vernon J and Leona Olson Field West Point boy Dean C and Ireta Archibald Harris Pleasant View boy Loren and Lelah Hammon Talbot Roy girl Alexander and Doris Black Gilmore Promontory Point boy Walker Philip J and Maude Bennett Syracuse boy Lorin J and Janet Gibson Rasmussen West Weber girl Floyd C and Thelma Walters Cowan Slaterville girl David and Erma Burgi Milligan Ogden boy Herbert and Bertha Knight Burrell 615 Thirty-secon- d street girl Henry V and Vallecita Johansen Hill 2070 Monroe avenue girl Lewis J and Gertrude Morrison Wardley 2221 Lincoln avenue boy Melvin and Della Oram Spend-lov- e Morgan boy No Swimming In Stillwater As ' Gators Converge ULRICHSVILLE O July 10— (UP) — There was no swimming in big Stillwater creek today Police and the stouter-hearte- d gingerly hunted there two large Florida alligators which were released by vandals home of Earl Johnson Ulrichsville sportsman who had had them two years A third ’gator of Johnson’s was shot and killed by a man who sighted it cavorting near a swim- athe ming pool Sea Wilderness NEWS And VIEWS Gave Up Lost (Continued From Page One) Plane Crews in need of the application of the clean “paint up slogan By TOM HORNER up” The buildings — many of them — NEA Service 'Staff WASHINGTON o July 10 — (AP) census bureau today reported a sharp increase in automobile fatalities this year It mid motor deaths in 121major cities totaled 4545 between January 1 and July 2 compared with 3892 in the same period last year 3--A since 1908 but only recently has come into medical prominence - t “Some published stories give the impress that the drug Is harmless to humans and that half a dozen tablets daily will cure very serious disease' in three or four days "However more conservative observers sound a strong note of warning “Sulfanilamide may itself produce very serious injury to the blood and organs destroy-ing the red corpuscles f blood-formi- ng I As planes and ships hunted the in the business district should be “To influence cure in these refar reaches of the Pacific for improved quires large doses and all patients Amelia Earhart and Frederick J taking the drug need to be kept Noonan the “return from the Dr Browning said Phoenix Is under close observation dead” of other noted aviators was using gas brought in from the “Whether sulfanilamide produces vividly recalled giving new hope Texas fields and the city is free to the present searchers from smoke and smear harmful effects that would be recGiven up for dead were Comognized only after months or years mander John Rodgers and the In winter our smokestacks belch is not yet known but It seems crew of a U S navy seaplane too much smoke That should be probable that such a thing might be the case missing nine days off Honolulu on corrected an attempted San flight in 1925 Francisco-Ha-wa- ii Verne Warren Harshman navy pilot of the aircraft carrier Langley battled sharks as he floated in a rubber boat in the Pacific off the Canal Zone A passing liner rescued him Ruth Elder and her pilot George Haldeman had better luck when they were forced down on the Atlantic en route to the Azores landing beside a Dutch steamer EVEN KING DESPAIRED First of the “Lost Battalion" of aerial adventurers was Harry Hawker who with Commander Grieve was forced down in the north Atlantic in an attempt to fly from Newfoundland to the British Isles in 1919 For six days the world waited anxiously for word of the missing men and King George V sent condolences to Hawker’s wife before a Danish steamer brought them safely to English waters In 1929 Sir Charles Kingsford-Smit- h and the crew of his Southern Cross were lost for 12 days in the bush country A passing of western Australia h Kingsford-Smitthem discovered pilot over Timor the disappeared For six days trail-blazi- ng Sea in November 1935 LOST THREE WEEKS Arctic wastes have hidden7 the fates of several aerial adventurers from the world for even longer periods While attempting the first flight over the North Pole Lincoln Ellsworth and Roald Amund- sen were forced to land without reaching their goal One ship was disabled and the other was heavily weighted with ice and snow For three weeks no word came from the missing party until a sealer broadcast on June 17 1925 that Amundsen the men were safe later gave his life in an Arctic search for General Nobile and Ellsworth kept the world in suspense for several weeks during his successful South Pole flight flyers Major Frederick L Martin and Sergeant Alva L Harvey disappeared for three days in 1924 after crashing The into an Alaskan mountain two men struggled through the wilderness to reach Port Moller on the Bering Sea Round-the-wor- ld BALLOONISTS LONG LOST Balloonists held the spotlight of world attention in December 1920 when Lieut Louis A Kloor com- mander Lieut Walter Hinton and Lieut Stephen A Farrell disappeared in a U S navy balloon over New York state Nearly two weeks elapsed before word came from Ontario Canada that they were returning to civilization The Bremen bearing the flyers Baron Gunther van Huenefeld Hermann Koehl and James E Fitzmaurice lost contact with civilization for a brief period in 1928 on the flight from Ireland to Greeley Island WILDERNESS SECRETS Capt E J A Burke gave his life on an survey trip over northern British Columbia in 1930 Encountering a snowstorm Burke d landed his ship on a river crashing against a hidden rock Burke became ill and Ger-man-Iri- sh That destruction can go on to e defects can be These a dangerous point and might easily eliminated and they will be produce a fatal anemia At a reception to Clarence Fors-lin- g Furthermore its use as a medigiven at the Country club cine is limited to a few diseases on Thursday near the close of the day the assistant chief forester “Other very promising drugs exin charge of research standing on tremely useful if judged by their the veranda of the club house and immediate effects have had to be looking over the city remarked at discarded because of their remote the grandeur of the scene dangers He was from Washington a city “Time alone can tell about sulof charm yet he saw In the panorama before him a picture of rare fanilamide beauty and he confessed that it “In the meantime conservative beckoned him back physicians are using the drug careone must view fully in selected cases where it is To see Ogden its in it entirety and avoid the indicated too close-u- p that brings out the “AH persons should be warned grime of the street of the possible very harmful efAt this time of year when the fects of with sulglow of the twilight hour is on fanilamide and should be taught Ogden as seen from an eminence that unless given in proper dosage is a place one should be proud and at proper time intervals it is to call home not only dangerous but vauleless” man-mad- JUST 22 TO BE SOLD r T f Choice of the Values Up to $10900 Tomorrow Entire Lot at self-medicati- on Artists from distant shores who have studied its setting have been fascinated Engineer Leaves Idaho State Post states” 4“Sulfanilamide is the name of a THIEF’S FACE BED new drug that has had much adTOLEDO (UP) — Police looked vertising during the past year It is also made under the trade names for a thief with a red face when Edith Billingslea told them she Prontolin and Prontosil and had slapped before he escaped a man who leaped from an automobile and grabbed her pocketbook and “Newspapers magazines have carried stories about it and the marvelous results it gives in treating certain diseases - '‘Sulfanilamide $5 Down Delivers - f- Ogden is held in the lap of the everlasting hills which form a crescent with Ben Lomond on the BOISE Idaho July 10 — (AP) north and Mt Ogden to the east — Ira J Taylor state public works director accepted today effective The mighty peaks look down on July 31 the resignation of A D" a city marked by great rows of Stanley construction and maintentrees well kept lawiis and gardens ance engineer In the highway of roses and other flowers where bureau people call it home Stanley Taylor said has accepted "other employment but probably I have been talking with a medi- will be connected with road construction in Idaho and adjoining cal man and he tells me: These sample living room suites are not to be confused wjth those ordinarily sold at this figure They are of superior construction built to sell at a much higher price but included in tomorrow's event at a special price reduction to clear our floors of this merchandise We would suggest that you make your selection early because when these suites are sold the sale ends It's the opportunity of a lifetime Early Buyers Gef First and Best Choice! OUR VERY LOW TERMS NO INTEREST ADDED NO CARRYING CHARGE On Household Furniture has been known died as Emil Kading engineer and Robert Marten a prospector battled December snows and starvation In a weary trek through untracked wilderness A rescue pilot Everett Wasson finally sighted their campfire and directed rescuers to them The uncharted earth may hold the key to other mysteries From inland Canada reports are received periodically that Nungesser and Coli French war aces who disic appeared on a flight still live and countless are the rumors of a “devil-god- ” of the Amazon jungle whom many believe to be the missing Paul Redfern two-mon- th ATiTiRESS trans-Atlant- IVON’S WATCH REPAIRING ill-fat- ed pontoon-equippe- All Work Guaranteed Special Watch Crystals 75c Watches and Diamonds Just Below White City 3134 - 25th StreetgESSSS VETERANS INVITED SALEM Ore (UP) —Gov Charles H Martin a retired major-generhimself proposed organization of a committee to invite retired army and navy officers to make their homes in Oregon instead of California where the majority now go There were 3370000 sheep in Canada in 1936 as compared to 3568600 in the preceding year al DO YOU REALIZE? Thaf your child is growing up? Make a 4-4- photo record today Keep him young for- ever with an Eastman Kodak FRENCH ASTHMA FORMULA liberal Supply Free During the World War the development by a French chemist of a formula for overcoming the distress caused by the spasms and paroxysms of asthma brought such amazing results that its fame quickNow ly spread all over Europe introduced in the United as States n th Treatment This amazing preparation acts to overcome choking and feeling of gasping suffocation that accompanies n asthma The Company 275A Montrose Calif are Dept anxious for every sufferer to try this treatment They will send a liberal Free supply to anyone who writes them Do it today TOMORROW ONLY Bel-Di- — The R Bel-Di- An outstanding special for tomorrow only! 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