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Show THE OGDEN ST ANDARD EXAMINER SATURDAY EVENING DKC World's Champion Santa Has 96 Children UARE DEAL FOR DISABLED 4V i Cheer to Helpless - Vet- - erans Proposed ; Dec. 24. CHICAGO, UTAH'S FINEST THEATRE 4i Christmas Plan to Give . . visit to the Drexel hospital for disabled men. Colonel Hanford MacNider. national commander .of the American legion, sent a message toj Colonel Charles K. Forbes, director oft the war veterans bureau at Washing ton," submitting a plan for lessening the financial worries of disabled soldiers. V v V s ' iw5 MAW liKIT BEHIND and "The Chr!mfc npirlt of peace hosjrood will finds in virtually every ' 4 your veterans' bureau, pital used by men. who are not; only war disabled mental Injured but whose physically' difficulties financial worries over growing, out of unadjusted compensations, prevents or retards' their recovery." his message said. "The cleanun campaign, conducted these by yourbureaii has left many of uenn-ite rases of long standing awaiting and To cheer decision and rating. reassure these men at this Christmas time the American legion submits to you the following plan for immediate action in the disposal.of these neglected or suspended Cases. BOARD PRO POSED ; "The plan in simply the iimmediate appointment in each ofregional district of boards composed. necessary with one member invested with to make bed side decisions, authority and . definitely establish ratings. In an address , at the hospital, cases MacNider cited several imwhere he said recovery was made worries-Thisof financial because possible is the thirty-nint- h hospital Colonel MacNider has visited since being elected legion head. He left for MaCTTARLES PAGE, THE WOKEi" D S CHAMPION SANTA CIVUS, AND SOME OP HIS 9G HAPPY FOSTER son City, Iowa. Before leaving Chicago Commander CHILDREN. MacNider sent the following message Then they can go fo college 9 6 and has them housed in the Sand school. to the disabled men of America: (By N. E. A. Son Ice.) if choose. founded. he which they 24. TO Home, DISABLED Dec. MESSAGE Springs SAND SPRINGS. Ok.a.. ' "To WIDOWS' COLONY. "I'll enjoy Christmas moro than you men who are fighting the The biggest and the hardiest fam Besides that. Page has established a brave fisrht asrainst the effects of your ily in the world is enjoying a ?6000 they," says Page. He is a multimilwidHervice: Our country, the American Christmas here. lionaire oil man. But once he was an widows colony. He has.in50 &0needy lit- neat Christ-children and ows their sends of comrades of 06 i little the and felt children has Thl3 poverty. your pinch legion orphan tie mas greeting with every sincere wish '"mites tofamilyn cottages. youngsters. They That's why he's devoting his fortune for your speedy recovery- and future all wrote to Santa and they'll all get to bettering the plight of other or- They'll be the aunts and couflns at the Christmas feast. Besides, ' happiness. Every American shall be what they asked for. jphans. 3 He two aso. indebted to you as long as th.e nation; They're every widow will have a big Christmas Christmas to He tr.elr years adopted tent on adding cou-firof dinner brought to her cottage. a endures and your cause shall always be Cheer by inviting them in outskirts the 500 aunt3 and put on the program, of the American ; sins to share in the party. For what's Tulsa. The J600U spent in tins Christmas His family, grew. Now It's h of the y building on party represents legion. We intend to see that you get Christmas witliout company, even in In a .comfortable of a square deal from the country you a family of 9G? old tent site. Page's , employes, the salary monthly of the San;l Springs has grown up around who tithed themselves to provide the fought for.' We would expect you t6) Charles Page, foster-fathe- r battles were our positions ggf will' look" on and show one kiddy that, house.' fund. fight our v We assume that responsibil-- , how to run the new electric, railway . Page keeps his children so long as Part of it has been used for a comreversed, Toan as a honor. eduand He' new to want with him. privilege and tell another to keep his ity munity Christmas tree for all the peostay -bat they cates them in a private elementary ple of Sand Springs, displayed in the day we are asking the United States irlpar of thp rhandplipr. veterans' bureau to adopt a plan, Page has legally adopted. alL of the scliool and sends them to public high public square. which, if accepted, will finally end your claims. worries over compensation The American legion reports for a neSv year's duty. Give us. your com' . ex-serv- 'LAST TIM il ii ii v 4 w a Following: ice ZJ TODAY BIG DOUBLE FEATURE BILL CONSTANCE JB1NNEY i''' a H In AMP" ARm..'SS i i ! per-Honn- i And CLEAN el In Colonel 99 66 " . idDc ; , half-grow- . ; j - ; . ; Shows Begin Every Hour On the Hour 11(2 ' M j st - j one-tent- five-stor- ; . Si j MORROW -- i'DAYOKLY j I , j . - i I mands." OPTICUS 00- - JL ' 1 - M 1 Christmas again And our spirits grow Come on, we're good little pals all to eether now. merrier, Down. drops each selfish,. conventional Time to cut loose from your dignity's tether now, barrier, folks, we're birds Hearts beat more lightly; and footsteps Old folks, or youngnow-r of a feather 'grow airier. ..:.," V Christmas is here!. glorious period," when All 'round the planet, whatever the ' " . Isn't. It, good, to be friends with hulatitude, Mortals are glowing with love and manity. ..' Practicing something like true Chris- with" gratitude, . Life for the moment is full of beautitlanity? we go back to the greed and the Must tude, ' ' Christmas again!. vanity Which have made sorrow and woe This and this is, afnong nien? happy ' Christmastime spirit how splendid a day, thrill it is! This is the dearest and tenderest folly-dat . , Let'us preserve it, with all our abilThis is the magical, mibtletod-hollyities; Hold to it, practice it. live it. until it Is day. . Christmas again": Which we have with us but once in!" " " - . W . V ei This-fs'th- ;. Abandonment of Socialism in Russia Forecast bv U. S. Reports Aban-donment'- soviet-controll- of ed . . , , , ta; statt; the- still operated by state are to adopt commercial principles paying private prod-uerand other state enterprises market value for materials and selling their products at market value. and-enterprise- s - s . , oo- - AMERICANS BECOME DESTITUTE IN ORIENT MANILA, P.T., Dec. 24. The American chamber of commerce has ed to United States, army headquarters in behalf of nearry destitute Americans, many of sixty thenf with families, who are stranded in Manila, without work and; lacking sufficient means to return to the United States. Tli a rliatTihftF nf . v oothat these men be given ..employment "by. the United States government ;Twenty of the destitute are office menand the remainder are mechanics. ' . , v ' . . -- OO- ; Laces to join leather belting for machinery are made - from sturgeon skins. e is-th- the-joll- i y, - Nt .' he year. ffiH " (Copyright, 1921 NKA Service) Their English, however, is of the American variety. Dr. Zaunius, of the Lithuanian diplomatic corps, said that nearly $50,000 daily is coming to Lithuania from her sons and daughters in the United CASH diiiihc:MfifihM ' j great role m tne economic me of Lithuania is played by the he said. "Trade enterprises, factories, banks, etc., are being established with their money." A group of them has Just purchased one of the largest textile factories in Kov-no- , which will produce yearly about 1 American-Lithu- " f anians," Russian Border. Country Is Governed by Returned Immigrants - : 15,000,000 . arshenes. (anarshene is .NEW, YORK, Dec. .2 4. The steel trade Is looking forward with optimism toward the New Year 'and is confidently anticipating a general improvement in industrial conditions and in the volume of buslnei:..- Just at the moment, however, th market i experiencing the usual holiday reduction in the demand and is unsettled. Prices have been shaded in some .ases, the most important being the reduction of $5 per ton io wire products. The pig iron market has also slowed down, although thero is no accumvilation of supplier and a better business is anticipated after the turn of the year. In copper there has been the usual lull in domestic demand, but export business has continued and the market haa been generally firm. It is said that sorre of the "smaller dealers or customs emelters are willing to take orders for small lots of electronic for January and March shipments at 13 18 cents. delivered, but the larger producers are offering nothing below the 14 cent level and the Copper Export association is reabroad at prices ported to beto selling 14 cents f. a. s. New equivalent York. Recent export business Is included in sales to the Orient, as well as to and China has bought a smallEurope, lot of casting copper at about 13 cents f. a. s. : Lead, is steady with production and" demand about evenly balanced. . 00 Lenlne has taken the ban off whito collars in" soviet Russia. Which may mean that the government expects to take over the laundries. Toledo - - three-fourth- s . . , Vllna-territory- TO GREET YOU ; ' , NEW PRICES ... - - - " - one-fourt- h g .......... ..... .... g . d ss. -- I r... .-- - Scandinavian Organization oo El Monte Commandery No. 2, Knights .Templar , At Third Ward Meeting House Monday, December, 26th, " ; Beginnip g at 8:15 JP. M. V cere- The Christmas mony will take. place Christmas morn ing, at ,10. o'clock sharp.. Be prompt. so .thai those, desiring may attend church services afterward. Full observance- - . Everybody Invitee! I I - 'desired, HAiuiY i inwiN, " ii. c. .; 1310 v . fa wLmJiMMmj T1' " mSm0 5-- SHOWS P. M. 79 Coming Monday Till Thursday Xiloria Swanson and Wallace Keia I in .Hi Mt (E TT o P TnT73TT 7irir . 1 c 99 WWQJJ Note These Low Prices: me .r.X j. j Is . . , :'f ft., ...im lie . -- . , pre-holid- ay under-ministe- ; sSmjr "In I Me . - . -- 1 . 5-Pa- ... fr"f of a yard of KONO, LUhuaniaJ Dec. . 24. The about "main street" of Kovno, which has al- cloth."),, In the ordinary calls of a few days ways resembled, to a certain extent, at Kovno, found the the that of a wild west town, has become director of thecorrespondent town's biggest bank more Americanized than ever. Dozens had been- a resfdent of Scranton, Pa., nf fhf men now ' nlavin? nrnmment the manager and president of the larg- tradlng concernwere both Ameri- roles in the Lithuanian "government (est can citizens of Lithuanian parentage and in business here are Lithuanians and the r ' of foreign af- Blade. who have been in America 'and re- fairs had been a Chicago lawyer. birthland since the The hotel' porter had been a coal turned to the'.r ' won It3 independence. ' Some miner in Illinois and the passport de: csuntry their ipartment of the newly opened Ameri of the business men still retain " American citizenship. Mere strlctly can consulate here, was Jammed with American. type clothes are noted in Lithuanian-American- s daily, naturalLithuania than - any other country of ized and 'carrying American passports, . ' Europe. seeking" renewal of these documents . . With MONEY SENT HOME. which proved their American citizen' Lithuania-- exclusive of the disput- shiphas about 2,500,000 ed 00 lnhabWants. At least 100,000 of these have been, at one time or another,-ITOY INDUSTRY IN America while, according to LithuanEAST IS EXPANDING ian statistics, nearly a million of LithEffective Dec 24 uanian birth or parentage are now residing in ..the. United,- States'. The NEW YORK. Dec. 24. New York, country being almost exclusively agri- upon whomthe American' Santa Claus HUDSON cultural, they do not usually congre- depends for" of his wooden in cities. those in Among gate toys, imports more than half of' its large America, however, are many coal'min-ers- , trinket-makinmaterial from other 4- - Pass. Speedster . . . . $19)5 distributed7 about the Pennsylva- states, says the New York state col5- - 7 Pass. nia and Illinois mining fields. Touring. . . 2025 ; lege of forestry.. The "smallest; Lithuanian village The toy making industry here has 2595 generally boasts at least one English-speakin- Increased about 130 per cent since the Cabriolet t citizen. Languages come war crippled the, business in Germany. . . 2875 easy to them, as ' their mother tongue, Toys here are made for the most part Coupe 2950 it is claimed, is the nearest- - modern of hardwoods obtained from waste of Sedan from larger industries, such as furniture approach tp the ancient Sanscrit " which all Aryan languages sprang. factories. Touring Limousine.. 3235 . of the material used is bass wood, which goes into wagon ESSEX . bottoms, dominoes and A B C blocks. Sugar maple becomes checkers and wagon sleds; birch is turned into diRoadster $1295 fferent sorts of games, and white ash 1295 Touring ;is utilized in the manufacture of gar den tools. All of the woods take part Coach ,. . . . :'. . 1575 in the ' making of email" parts of big v. gifts. 2125 Sedan One-thir- dmM Prices Steady . . '. WASHINGTON.' Dec. 24. Socialism in Russia is predicted by recent changes in the economy policy of the soviet government. According to a review of the situation on the basis of statein, that country ments in ' the press issued by the commerce department. PRODUCTION DECLINES "A new economy program, the department said, is being, evolved by the Bolshevist; leaders, lightening, the restrictions of Communism and aiming of priat the partial vate trade and industry, and at .in creasing the incentive to of industry Communistic management .production. in. Russia, it added, had resulted in a great decline of production and a general disorganization of economic .life. Lenine in a speech irr .October, recognizes the defeat of Communism,' acand is quotcording to the department ed as saying: "The substances of our new economic policy is dictated by the. recognition of the fact that we have suffered a, powerful defeat and commenced a systematic strategy." 3IUST PAY AS BEFORE The main features of this new.pol-icy- , the department reported, include the partial restoration of freedom of trade in agricultural products; abandonment of the practice of un- 01 laDor ana tne restricieu substitutionrequjsmon of a fixed labor abandonment of uniform .wages for employes of the same graoTe io enterprisesoperated by the state, and the substifme service renaerea; leasing to private individuals of certain industrial estab- - In Her Newest Picture 1 STEE Export Business Keeps Copper MarketJFinn and v i MAY McA(D) mm WILD CLAIMS MADE FOR LEPROSY CURE Kaisha, a Japanese corporation, cession to build tobacco factories In has offered to guarantee the. Far East- Siberia and the privilege of establishS. U. 21. The WASHINGTON, Dec. ern. Siberian republic an annual In ing tobacco farm3 in the Amur region. public health Bervice haa felt It necessary to prevent the too optimistic and extravagant claims recenny apin regard pearing in the newspapers to the curative effects of chaulmoo-gra- . oil derivatives on leprosy. While of the oil and of Its derivatives use the has resulted in a considerable number of apparent cures, it is as yet too soon to tell whether these win be permanent. The ethyl esters of chaulmoogra oil, the use of which has largely supplanted the oil itself, conatitute a most valuable agent in the treatment of leprosy. In treating young- persons and Vi those in the early stages of Iho disease, the Improvement has been rapid and t triking; in older persons and older cases it ia less so. Of the cases paroled from the leprosy stations in the Hawaiian islands so far about 8 per cent have relapsed and returned for treatment. .This was to be expected; and on the whole the results have been so favorable as, to of the disease hopeful. But only 22-23-2. HOLIDAY EXCURSION RATES - make-treatme- can tell. (time ' -- nt iDeccmbcr 00- TO STOP COUGHING AT NIG I IT hi When anyone is snfferine from a or has a cough! (bronchial affliction Ithat lingers on and grow worse ai(night, the losa of. sleep tends to weakth" sufferer nd grows more Ir. i the longer it. is neglected. IM, Suier, 647 LongrDrooK Ave., fcirai- oley s Money ford, Conn., writes: and Tar has given me great relief from a severe attark of bronchitis." No medicine stands higher throughout the nation as a family remedy for colds. coughs and croup. Sold' everywhere. AUveriiseraruu -er-iio- Ic--n F.O.B. OGDEN come of . 50.000,000 gold rubles In pa; INVITING OFFER MADE. Teba-ki, ment for a tobacco monopoly, a conCHITA, Dec. 24. The Chosen Limir, JANUARY 4TH. ( Ogden Motor Car Company 2345-5- S Hudson Ave. OO ; North Dakota is, not - . - Onc-Hdl- Fare f 4 3 .... nonpnrtlr.m when it conifx to the nonpartisan i league. Sew- York Kvening I'out. '.. One and. Bcrvecn all point on the Union Pacino System where fh one way fare does not exceed 325. OO; Minimum Far, 82. oO. W." H. Chevers, Gen. Eccles Bid. Ag., 213-1- us 1-- I 4 1 |