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Show THE OGDEN EVERETT TRUE The Ogden Standard-Examin- BY CONDO h KiTJ PUBLISHING, COMPANY V An Independent Newspaper V Published every evening and - Sunday morning without a muzzle or a club! Matter at ' the Entered a SscoruJ-eias- s Postofflce. Ogdsrt, Utah. Established 1870 Member of the Audit Bureau of Clrcula ,r lion and The Associated Press. t I ' MY T4tK ACoOTFRom eypcNaos THC5 fMR.ST DAY hom Coptos A LIST ot 3TJt r U7ltH school t jkjc?. THAT I've Cot m ci iV T rof HIM . . m. tV nun a r'i J rj t ii,-- . . , , , r"""? h "::pri'-iiriwM,w-i..-- r i I I - a Cii I 1 " - : -- -- TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1921. " - er ' STANDARD-EXAMINE- R r 7 1 . I I Ccy mm rpTl SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE Oelfvere bv Carrier Dally and Sun day, year.,...; 1 ...;.10.89 By Mall Dally and Sunday, 1 year.. 7.80 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively en. titled to the use for republication of any news credited to It not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news pub llshed herein. STANDARD-EXAMINE(' 1 " , ; TELEPHONE R ' NUMBERS . Classified Ad. Dept Business and Circulation Deot Display Dept. EdltorUi Advertising and News Dept.. I HetS. 5 50 ...423 . 870 "TnikjK X y i r Cam. or-- A Mam Bauancimq 3K PLatcsx sTATusrres ONE. root UJITW CHtCiJW UIMC: OKI Ul? PLC HAWS STlCKtMd ANKLeS THAT UP OH THC FRONT VviS bOR.C 77 XYJfn'A rZZS&X U om eve Got MIWC You . i. i l - I a V Ygs, I 1 I 1 w jWTW a v f V iT" I sV THEATRES -- oo- During 1920 sapphires were most favored gems. WILL THE MOTION PICTURES PROFIT. If the "Fatty" Arbuckle case bringa to the motion picture colonies of decency, then something good will flow out of the midnight horror at the St. panels which resulted in the death of Virginia Rappe. If 'our young girls, who have been "movie struck," read into the scandal all that it convey to older minds, they will profit by the disclosures. Fewer of them will desire to enter the field of dissipation until they know to where their footsteps lead. They will inquire as to whether the colony they aBpire to reach is a place of the degenerate, a palace of iniquity or a clean establishment. The peep behind the curtains should warn imany a confiding, trusting girl that to' go into certain movie organizations ia to cast off respectability and accept a life submerged in vice. Let us hope the motion picture pro-moters will see the necessity of put- uug u euu w me uifiico ui a uumuci ot their stars and will begin to demand those eccentric actors and actresses the same deportment expected of men and women In anV other caHing. S m ma ay vui u nn'pnpnnn 'a mm t a w "a o n lapb n rp ami Fin mm a m c iH r i p.iu hhiji y kiv t i o u lyi : : fpnnr lira ij UP Pa r j r a l ti - r vii-- r p Hi II Ml n ! i WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY Ladies' Fur Goats Coatees Scarfs, Novelty Pieces, Chokers and JSluffs TF 4. 1 1 ! t i I SALE PRICE LESS THAW REGULAR PRICES Oh, do not whimper. Little Man. but bear the hurts the best you can. Take ever' little, bump and bruise and net your teeth and rrln; The simplest game grows rough at times, and falls await the boy who climbs: The field of youth in strewn with pits for lads to tumble in. Life, from the cradle to the grave. ons to all '"be brave." From constantly day to day are little hurts the younrnters have to har. And ever since this world began,' both and grief have tested man. pain And none has ever lived for long who did not meet his share. Some day when you shall older grow, the fates will deal a sterner blow. ' hurts The will sink than those which scar deeper your little knee; These cuts and bruises cjulokly heal, but Time brings pain you'll . feeL And by and by v your heart.always My Laa will often heavy be. So. play the game and be a man. and bear your hurts the best you can. Stand up and set your teeth and and take what comes to you. grin Be brave and true and unafraid; 'tis out of pain the man is He only Is the victor here made; who sees his trials through. (Copyright, 1921. by Udgar A. Guest) oo f ; This is an opportunity which you will not have again this year, as it is the largest selection of furs ever shown in this part of the state. . Come make your selection for your Winter Furs from the reliable factory of William H. Miller and Company, New York and Detroit. v c3) 2429-31-3- -- n n fQcir Washington Avenue 3 the the seventh anniversary of his great defeat, since the battle of the Marne opened on September 5, and in point of fact his death does fall on the date of the last German success In the west in 1914 and indeed until the spring of 19"18, that battle of Guise, which cost the French commander, Lanzerac, his command and made way for Franchet Q HiSperey, later Victor 01 Monuiuraii Macedonia and still later conqueror of V and marshal of France. , JJUIOW S 0O0K, My liepori ui in Eattle of the Marne," is one of the most interesting contributions to tlie history of the early days of the war, a convincing document in its revelation a-se-nse y SONQ OF COURAGE. -- oo- m m By EDGAH A. GUEST. Revealing itself as one of the most gripping pictures presented here this season, "The Witching Hour' a Para- "louni piciure oi wie iinesi graue, pro duced by William D. Taylor, caught on in fine style at the Alhambra theatre again last night. It la a dramatic offering based on the famous stage play by Augustus Thomas, and aa production, it ranks high. There are many tense moments In the picture, all of which .tend to lift it far above the ordinary screen offering. The much talked of topics of mental su.trfrestlon. telepathy and the like, enter largely Into the story, but they are handled with such skill as to obviate any possibility of weariness. Elliott Dexter appears as a gambler with hypnotic powers. The support generally is high grade and artistic. The picture is a winner. It will be shown for the last time today. oo There are 173 public and 59 ' pri vate schools in Hawaii. ! w JUST FOLKS Today . m m n 17 - know yoj "The Witching Hour1' at the Ahambra for Last Times . m mm Illi r the top price of the market for hogs m Vlt'7 M BUILDING UP A LOCAL INDUSTRY. A day last week local buyers paid - AAA (nVfrhi -- a to be shipped to Ogden and packed. This proves, first, that the local industry is packing the best the market affords, and, second, that Utah and Idaho do not supply the home demand for hogs. It is estimated that the Ogden Packing and Provision company each week pays from $20,000 to $25,000 for hogs bought in outside markets and shipped to this point to be slaughtered and prepared for the retail trade. This money should be kept at home, but it will not be until the farmers of this state and Idaho raise more hogs. There is no branch of farming so profitable as that of hog raising, now that the serum treatment is an effective guard against heavy losses by cholera. The hog multiplies rapidly and feeds on that which i3 lost in part to the livestock raiser. Raw materials, such as alfalfa and grains, fed Into the hog, bring returns far beyond any price Quotations for those products of the farm. Whonovor Utah orwl lahn K..1M ,T the hog industry so as to meet the requirements of the local packing plant, there will be increased prosperity all around. The farmers will receive the money now sent out of the state and Ogden 'will have a larger industry with moreemployes than the present nu cleus of big packing 'house. Every institution in Ogden should be endeavoring to bring about such a ' condition. Cities grow when the individuals in those cities take full advantage of their opportunity and unitedly labor in community upbuilding. x WALT MASON EVIL REPORT. hold that Amos. AlKenside is all pure wool and three fet wide I've dealt with hlni for many moons and got the worth of my doubloons He s sola me milk and melted Ice. and always at a decent price.i Men say that Amos must be watched-hmorul character is botched, and If cnanee. iney say. he'll bring .iF Ken- M V iiwii tlllll niHViij j iinvn nor? ;I ! - j hui.ii Aiker,8ide. Mho Veils ! j 0dLJ oneu; lor many trh lh'; fapSn ; i FIGHT REGULATION tery. The ooKs being printea dj me different German generals, from Lu-q- f NEW YORK. Sept. IS. Charges dendorff down, are throwing much that the great railroads are engaged tho innpr wnrklneq of the Ger- in fighting regulation by state, com- hv, man war machine. '.U'ilv" oo the annual convention of the Na- t00 tlomil ABsoclntion of Kailroad and RESPONSIBILITY , Utilities romm.Uwk.Hem. which meets STUDY THE in Atlanta. a.. October 11. FOR DEFEAT. !mNVTITUTIOiM "The transportation act of 1920." jCONoTlTUHUIN. Not up to the present has the-hi- s-' the announcement, "la Throughout the country on next Sat-- ; declared n construed as if it were entitled of the world war been available iurdav there will be general observance an act to transfer state Jurisdiction to the public as many of the big even! sjof Constitution day. In Ogden the!over railroads to tho federal govern-- r ment.' It not the Intent 'of con ,was to are be clubs of the conflict are in dispute. One and churches 'schools, to state regulation and gresa destroy Im, instance is the fixing of responsibil-- called on to help make the event the association will continue tn mtanA ity for the defeat of the German forces pressive, and the subject of the con against undue encroachment by fedpower." st the first battle of the Marne. stitutlon will receive the attention of eral The announcement declared that In his memoirs, Field Marshal von many speakers. the Interstate commerce commission, member of the association virtually Bulow claims the German armies were Adding to the impressive statements astifled the exercise of state power In defeated and he saved, the troops from as to the merit of the constitution, the settlement of controversies which evlsted within states, and that the disaster by ordering the retreat which President Harding, declares: is ripe for aggressive action took (the Germans back of the Aisne. "The trying rimes of the last seven time the association fdr the enactment by of Bulow has just died .and his death years have Supremely tested the gov- - laws defining state Jurisdiction beall doubt. brings up the old; controversy which lernmental systems of all the world, yond The association embraces all the has been raging In German military and I feel th?. we of America may railroad" and public utilities commiscircles for three years. well felicitate ourselves and give sions in the United States, Hawaii, Porto Rico and the Philippines. One of the American military critics, thanks to Divine Providence that in oo in commenting on Bulow's generalship, this test no governmental system has SEAPLANE WKECKED; saya Bulow himself belongs to the old demonstrated a greater capacity to SEVEN AEE RESCUED Prussian tradition; .he is a soldier of meet and bear the utmost stresses of the school of the war of liberation. human crisis than our own. GROTON", Sept. U.Seven His army was guilty of some of the "Once more we may remind our- persons, theeN.'t.. of them women, and two most despicable of the atrocities of selves that the constitution is strong children, were rescued from a seaplane after W. 11. the e'arly period and he was among enough for every requirement, elastic wrecked Manners, pilot ofMonday the. plane, and a those who were cited as war criminals enough to adapt 'itself to changing mechanic named Bladwin. swam more than a mile In thehadHudson On allies. the own evolutions. whole the his conditions and developing by r v?rLand were D,ed up by a launch volume discloses that he lacked a cer-- ' So on this anniversary we may well which answered the shouts and cries help. tain driving force. He saw the whole dedicate ourselves to the supreme pur- torThe plane developed engine trouble situation clearly, but invariably he saw pose of maintaining our institutions a S. landinr from it with too great pessimism.. He can- Under it and of making them In the !f ?el5ht.i?f I'000 frced feet th p"ot ml- The dJtance. not rank with the later German army future as they have been in the past, a Uf Z to.' th one watr breakingplane "commanders and it is almost certain beacon light to Illumine the way of and throwing the oc- ln8l1 th cabin. When that he will be remembered best as the progress for men seeking freedom ev- fZ? ,atut to lea. the women b6gan Mnt-miraiGerman who was defeated at . , and children were lifted erywhere." to the super- where Napoleon won his last On Constitution day, In fact all this if2?SI?!i2d. Mann" and Baldwin. Z .ln vaIn 'or help, set out victory and at the Marshes of St. week, the great document on whleh miles to the nearest Gond, where Foch first revealed his our rights are based and which shapes half th distance. our destiny, should 'be read and studsupreme, military genius. Inmen Siowed where the Buldw'a death almost coincides with ied. f0Una io b hysterical and were given medical sttention. i i j 71 - j j j ! I , be-to- ry i j - ! r!ln" Ffr!Ptons l, ZZ Thnhn.VVd TO CUT ARMAMENTS TO GOLF CLU j J of another nmoulderlng sion." hun-Jdre- d fifty members of the American WILL GIVE LECTURES legion, headed by National Comm.ir. ON PUBLIC HYGIENE der J. G. Emery, who left Augunt 4; to attend the dedication In Flierey. Arranse- Kept, France, of a monument to the A. K. V. Washington. a for nf nietitn lectures on nub. eyries returned Monday and were received; lie In cities were anarious hygiene by a welcoming committee. nounced Monday by the public health to the. rvlce. The ruurres will run for t'pmni.iruer Kinery. interest !iot ubrnnd referring In i.' about a week in each city with from t,,i? t)on of ariuatnent conference. Mild It' three to s.x lecture on various meJl-ca- l wa unreAonable to sk France to' and jnlt:iry topics, and the lecarmament without. ruaranlr , turers will Include Frederick K. Gree.i. John II. Htokes, a. J. Melauf bjin. a m4l.; . White. Valeria ..Th), mUnKr h aM W. II mterert to the veterans; Enow, W. A. Evans andParker. trr f M. J. Heleof Fr.ince who yearn for h contlnua-- ; na u. uon oi peac-- . Cl:lrs and dates so far scheduled, of diyirnimeiii the health service eald. Include: "Hut the is one which Frenchmen, burdened br Portland. Ure . and Kansas City. n j j Leaves New York After En thusiastic Welcome From All Sides ; i ( ! 3. NEW YORK. Sept. President Harding left New York today for game of golf at Plplnjt Hock and yachtlnif trip In Lon Island sound ftom which he Is not expected to re-- ( turn to the city until tomorrow. Near the president's yacht Mayriow-- . er at th I'.rooklyn navy yard wes berthed the Hrailllan battleship Min-- ; as Cleraes. which dressed ship and played the national anthem as president arrived. KI'13nY MOTOR TJUI For the third time slnce'hls Inaus-- j uration. President llardlnc was hr.j Mondav after motorinic from the tM( View Golf club near Atlantic City, m distance of about 120 miles. The president's visit, he explained.; was merely a continuation of his hnrt; , Kolflnjf and vacation trip. The pres-- a! Ident and Mrs. Harding attended musical comedy. the first Despite a drlrzllnu-r.nlmiles of the trip. I'resldent Hardhicl apparently enjoyed the day's motoring.; The party averaged nearly 4g miles' an hour. At Perth Amboy. where a stop was made, a hundred or more school children and many of their elders lined tho streets and waved flags. Mr. Harding held an impromtu reception, while the others rested in a hotel b- for taking the ferrV to btaten Ieianu wher the motor trio waa1 resumed. OIlF.F7rKl HY Wl STX.IW. met by At St. George tho party memIts received who Mayor Hylan bers on the, municipal ferry I Man-to j harbor It As crossed the 1 .. a'"" i i Helena. Mont., end Albany. N. Y.. April 24 to 28. and Denver Msy 1 to C. oo j To NKW YOKK. Hcpt. 13. 'taxation as they are. should approach Kani.. April 10 to U; Spokane. Wash, with a View to definite guam.itees and Newark. N. J.. April II to 22; inva-menace j iaTehh it at f ' j j "rhatrp'? he what thy eople s hend get nore I ! ; henfruit plain - the utore. Per- he doesn't vote their A nrore of reasons mijfht be foundway. why their rear up when he around, hut while treats me ripht T shall not rayoldto Amos him "tiood nlsrht." What other av B a pent doe not Impress m wortii a cent. RO- 'onp as n sms poo.1 and Rtraleht. rIvps full measure, honest weight. tary machine in the critical days or the and ' wt,r'" cannri ne a Judjrc lr he n moved J"" dpri?ivo battle by pVry trrudjre that .lr0ollnt may expound, with futile iif;it Up to the present, we have had a KOKsii on nr fairly good idea of what happened tho side of the allies, but the German ASSERT RAILROADS (maneuvers have been clouded in mys-- j . HARDING GOES rlIn'" uas noi neen ivia; who knowswlmt --- FRANCE RELUCTANT i th' vil-lit- s, o"'-3tlo- m mmmammrmmmm mmmmmam, m TREASURY OFFERING FULLY SUBSCRIBED WASHINGTON. Sept. IS. tertiary Mellen's offer of 1100.600,000 In treasury notes and certificate dated Feptember IS has been fully subscrib. cd. treasury officials said Monday. Preliminary reports did not Indicate the amount of the Conditions of the money market Indicated by the absorption of the heavy Jiiues of government securities at reduced ir.ttrr t rates, high officials def clared, might mean the a further reduction in federal reeerv rediscount rate. over-subrcrtptlo- mmmm wmum ; ; ( 1 . boat-Queens- YO-W- hattan the presidential pennant at thej attention of masthead attracted the .which blew river and harbor craft their whistles In greeting. President trip and Mrs. Harding, who made the back In the boat B pilot house, waved and the president frequently waved his hat, oo ASSAILS PRESIDENT FOR BONUS ACTION M rousing ViId "West Show west of the whole U a part of Peach Day round-u- p thrills. Other spectacular features are an airplane circus, performing cloud tricks; a hair-raisin- fetr President CLEVELAND.. Sept.. Harding. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon and the United States chamber of commerce, were attacked "by Brigadier General J. R. McQulgg. state commander of the American legion, in an address before the. Victory post here Monday for thalr attitude on compensation." for veterans of the world war. "It un becomes any president to characterise as 'menacing the efforts! to obtain a bonuau for the men, who fought to preserve the nation he temporarily represents," General( McQulgg declared. General McQulgg also outlined plana for & campaign to put over bonus legislation by an amendment to the Ohio constitution at tho coming election, which he pointed out. would b the first time Ohio service men and women had had a chance to show their hands In politics. "ad-Just- A u ! OW I 1 few si ed g "bust" "with" watermelons and peaches galore; the final baseball clash of Boxelder'a great season; bands, parades, carnival dancing. You will have the time of your young life. Railroad rates on all trains. Free camping grounds. good ..e old-fashion- ed Peach Day Begins at Dawn COME EARLY! 1 r j . . TOMORROW if n. |