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Show nI . - ' , - - ---.- . il.&.1.14.44,4AAT,MVA.110,AWL,S - ' ' : '- - - ' , i - .. ,, t, 1 , ' - -' ,- i it ,, - ' i ': :. i '"' I ' , ' At, - :.:.. ., York , t 1 .11,' 4 ' , ,- 1:7 i t ; i., :: 3 , 't ' ' - t , - tI 7 ,.3 I, , r i I k - t - - t 1 I - 4 t i 4 .;t 1 Iri s ! 1 ;. , a i t 1 I " T 4 ; i I :;- - A i , ,, ., ;1 i ; 1 ,1 4- compliment is paid to efficiency of the Utah school system in a recent survey of all the states, made for the purpose of ranking :the states educationally. This extensive sur vey was made by H. E. Schrammel and E. It Sonnenbry, the former director of the Bureau of Educational Measurements, Kan. sat - State Teachers' College, and the latter superintendent of schools of Coyville, Kan. - The rank of the states, according to edu. rational achievement is on the basis of the following eleven selected criteria: L The length of the school turn in average number of days the schools were in , session. :3' ), S''.:':,' . . 1 1 ' 5 t ' k t .:. -i - 1- Irr-t-----, , -- -- . ii, . - ! .1 1 ' 0 ,1 , The per cent of the total population enrolled in public elementary and secondary ,, - I 'Jr-- ; - I (, schools. - , a. I public schools. ; 1 ' . ; t a ;;; I; .; , 71' I 4 4 - er , i." '3- - - II ! , t :: I1 i, I . ,t 1 i 4 1 :. ir 4 I , 1 , : I 1t i ,.., 7, ..."......,... - - 01 ' iP '-- - . - '1.,se'',.', 0 . j:,, - - ' ' : ., ' '''''''-., , , . , - Court Supreme 4 t: ' - Friday the lath of this month Lnuis Dembitz Brandeis . okiest member of the 'Cnited States Supreme Court, was 80 years of age, and good,titizens from all sections pttIi country sent him greetings and wishes for many happy returns. Advices from Washington are to the effect that his looks at'this timtwitielle his age, in that he would nevi be taken to be more than 65 or 70. described-wa-beina slight man with beautiful eyes and a great shock of wavy , iron gray hair, Who has a habit of getting to work every morning at S- ecioeit, his birthdays at an hour :attic only milkmen and charwomen are astir ra melittefnöoir lie after ..reading end dining and reading some. more, be is invariably off to bed at a p.m. His counsel is that of Marcus Aurelius g . - usually-celebratin- d'' resti-Chil.-an- -- ZT. ' 11C austerely.' .. - - ' - . , , , ,--- ..- .: . ' - , ' t . -- Iv, . . . "-.-- ..-.-- 1 .. ... ,, . . , r o, 114141M uIz ,, - --- , - .'.-- - ; ' wI.011,1' n 'k-oss f- tr: - I tl.T. It u tft 1 b - - .:' I. u theY.-3111- 1 , ! ) 1 ,v, "'" ' 4 FREIE SALE! DODGE Ed. Dodga Cr 808 South ELECTRIC NEW STORES Sons Electric St... St. nU Claude Dodge Electric 153 East Broadway Big Savings On Articles Slightly Smoked On New El. Wash- - $20 Off Seen oeffnl.with 20 off Hotpoint El. Ap- plionce Heating Pads Waffle Imnss Toasters : Coffea Makers Auto.. metic Eloctric I r a a; Most Everything Electrical. a trait $30 $12 off on new Elec. Vac. $13.50 Hand Vac'm Given J. - pree viol El. Vacs. $10 and up 153, East Broadway AND 808 So, State il 111 to be manageable. saving was arminPlistlecl-.tionsThe automobile industry's ' large The argument is that a small through the unspectacular. unpo- -- ,experience is concrete proof of majority stays solidly behind it. litical, unheralded and unsung ac- how the Brookings' theory has administration EVELOPMENTS following the election for its own good. It of a few engineers sigh the worked and can be made to work cannot afford to were of a character to bring satisfaction tivities and risk be- financial backing of a few rugged substantial profits can be 'ing outvoted. withsplit atttmdant damIand to the nation. These events may be accepted individualism. !earned besides. age to its own party's prestige. The saving was achieved in the as definite signs of high public confidence For it is a matter of A huge majority, however, tends automobile industry. and the man- - knos ledge that the motor carpublic corn- - !to fall to quarreling within itself, and of better times. ner and method of its accomplish. declar are ,ultimatelv making money. getting more or less be., ment conveys a lesson that bears panies That highly sensitive barometer of bustdividends. increasing pay!rolls,,yond its 'administration's control. - tng reon course the future of directly ness prospects, the Stock Market. rose to new and paying out bonuses to deserv.! This reasoning usually is sound. Its soundness. on an average. cover), in American lt bears on ing employe, la1 was heights. suggesting that Wall Streets carethe question of price. of payrolls. demonstrated In the lut .four The Bro.okings Idea. in brief. fully nourished fears were, after all, largely of economies. of salesmanshiPin that if money wages are forced .years. whole thing iii worth I up too had a Roosevelt President there will be an synthetic. Even more heartening reports fact, the as an example of what,000nomic rapidly, studying breakdown because the ,thumping majority in the seventy.: come from the steel Industry. the most imt an can be done in Amerx ti! without iarticies absolutely oversold will have to bear an !third Congress; government aid sod in spite of gm' 'increaaed price. if. however. real: wheiming one in. the seventy-fourth- . portant of those industries basic to the pros' ernmental interferences- wages are increasedwhich means: perity of the country. He never lost control, either, but hock In inlIk Meng war purchasing power by a re-had some trouble. Milliont of dollars art to be added to imately 3,250.000 cars sold SPPros' to the adding duction in the prices of articles American public and the total cost tttat wages can steel payrolls throughout the country before Ihe Now itIt is larger yet. It in increase Doe will he follow that was S2.925.500.000 while in the :real income is buyanto the con- Dec. 31 in the most complete readjustment given , more from the unmanageable. there naunten -year ending Nov. in 1936 . I White; House. than before? of wage .and salary schedules made by any !were- sold Just about the same, Favors Wider Market It WOULD follow if the presi. large American industry in recent years. noinber of new motor tars at a .10- Now, there 1, no intention had skimped through rather in, 'dent tel cost to the American People Approximately 450,000 workers are expected of only S.10v3.500,tato. EverybodY tho Brookings report to convey the mod era dtelv at the polls. still with mathat but wages ,a money impression to benefit. of should 1111 COnreOe that this not rise. On the enntrary. jority on Capitol MIL Although no indication has been ,given 1637.000,000 has been accompanied the argument ia made that they I Rut It did not come out like that. improvement in the 14hotild likewise be increased whey- - I The victory distinctly was a as to the average amount of the pay and Iby an actual :quality of the American autorno- - ,ever poasthie, hut not at a rate presidential victory. with nearly mark-uboth in speed and comfort. that Increases the cost to the cols.! all of the lesser victors having slid salary increases. it is believed the Ibile, most in some of the lower brackets, to which spein on his coattails. people sill be surprised sumer faster than all the Ito learn that this has been brought of consumers ran meet thosegroups! (Copyright, 1916) cial consideration is being given. will be as costs', about wohout ruttmg the total:out of their aliges. much as 2.5 per cent, while that in the higher number of persons plved and Obviously, it is contended. the brackets will probably scale down to 5 per without any appreciable difference:way to bring prosperity is to Ago the payrolls. !crease the purchasing power of as cent or less. Nov. 1110 17. Friday. 442.000 Men EmployPd t many groups as possible at the, The uhes of Joseph HillWage and salary Increases affecting the Thus. in 1929. there were time. and this cam best be; otrom. organizer of the Indusuellare of ;WI' a million men are important, 000 men employed in Hh motor 'lone in many cases by reducing trial Yorkers of the World. 1936 in and of were there articles the industry, bought so! who was shot a year ago by prices not only In themselves, but also as a reflec442.0n0, !that the Individual family can buy the State of Utah, after trial tion of a condition which offers substantial As, for the payrolls. the figure other articles with the savinga. and conviction for murder. will i for 1928 sax S712,0oursat! and in Thus. motor can have become ground for hope. be distributed in 600 parch1934 the payroll reached $736..000. an indispensable part of the budg-- . ment packets to the delegates won and is still ieui of the American family. Motor of the I. W. W. at its tenth angoing flp Here. then. se liae an increase cars would lis bought nosadays! nual convention Sunday at ChiIn efficiency without a drop in even at the but those; cago. prices. payroll or number of employed hut people who would be able to afford S. COBB, the humorist, is not al- 1 with a diminution of price to titc!them would not have as much, FORTY lEAR S AGO A 1111 American people and a better prod- ;money available for other porTuesday. Nov. ways funny, but he hit the nail on the tict for the 'price than ever before. ichanes. City Engineer Kelsey head the other clay in boasting of the pure Whit sort of phenomenon is this?! What the motor industrv really to the city council a air of Los Angeles as compared with the The anis er is to be found in !has done is to put 1437.006.000 that report on plans and costs of chnker-ladefour hook.' remarkable into have automobile gem proposed improvements in the publish- might atmosphere of 'the drainage system west of ,the by the Brookings tnstitution ,purchases ilito the pockets of the .many other cities. within the last two years. where- - consumers for purchases of other city. including the extemion of the Surplus Canal to Great "Take Chicago," he admonishes, "where lin is offered the higgeet single pro- - article. Lake. The estimated cost Salt the weather bureau, if so inclined, frequentof the canal was 135.000. of a soot. fall Or ly might report forry YEARN AGO Pittsburgh, where a chap comes home for a Friday. Nov. 17, 1871 Iveek looking as though he'd been cleaning C. R. Savage local photogNew York is Out a soft coal furnace. rapher. has taken a umber of views of the interior and exto brag on, either. Leave a snow-whitterior of the Salt Lake NO. 8141 pupnut over night and he could pass for a Morley. Settlement. which lies Da mation." !within the boundaries of Hancock!, - LIMA. aituatsd in TAma town- -- u co, Illinois. was also known as the 1 Cobb says that heating engines would Is Hear Creek Settlement ship. Adams County. IllinfliL the in fuel used cost by if produce such saving they just over the south linen( Hancock saint, in la4s. proper smoke consumers as to pay for themCounty, and about 15 miles in a, selves in about one year, but he thinks posLINCOLN WARD, Granite Stake. straight line south of Nauvoo. Lima sibly citizens fear they might collapse their was a neighborhood in which quite!consista of Latter-daUinta residlungs and choke to death if they should a number of Saints reskied from ing in that part of Salt take City, I start breathing something remotely resent1819 to 1846; most of them, bow-- , Utah, which is bounded on Wing clean air. ever. located northeast of Lima ht,north by Ramona and Hollytwooctc I. 1.11.4- .the extreme wuth end of Ilanco4k .Avenues (or Richards Wards. east': Wa looked for some reference to Salt Lake City among those he-- enumerates as County in what is now t MO: by Eleventh East St or Sugar Walker towntibili. on and around a house Ward); south by the Park smut freighted towns but perhaps he has GARAGE Os neker viRited us in the winter time. Let us townaite wiiitti had been surveyed city Branch of the Denver ift and named letrome. This little Grande Railroad (or Forest Dalai hope. before he does so, that those patriotic. 11113TER7 situated 2 i miles northeast and Highland Park Wards). determined women who have undertakett s of Lima. also called Morleyicwest by Seventh East St. (or Wellscampaign of smoke abatement wifl have sucSettlemorrt. thus named in honor, Ward). In ign a massive building Sow us owe mow sposiost doom ceeded in making our fair city as clean and of Isaac Morley. the pesiding erected at a cost of 9225.000 was kkol ibot withstood Church officer in tb locaifly. A!constructed on Ninth 'East St... be, wimor wiadswhistos soollsor free of grime and soot as Lop,Angeles. 'stake organization embracing the tween Hollywood An. and Twenty-Sabits In Lima and vicinity (both:firet South S- t- to serve as a chapel -One's heart. Is happy only when It Is In Adam and Hancock counties) :for 'the Lincoln Ward and also es! was organized Oct. 22. 1840. with the Granfte Stake Tabernacle This biameless.Goethe. KElat GARAGE Isaac Morley as president and is One of the finest houses of worGardner Snow al bishop. At a'ship in the Church. Yes on Uwe or Ur gpalowe tar Any man may make a mistake. hut none conference held at Lima. Oct. Lincoln Ward Is an outgrowth of tols go IPS dinng..on4,,Wonoc. 'I represented.the-Rklbards,Wattddbut a foo wiU continue in ,It.,..Cicero. JIM. the. branch-wa- s. " at 11; '11;iet oreassis. tosolay 424 members. Yelrome. or ed In honor of the late Preswas hoof district settlemenç nearly all Abraham Lincoln- -a To hualtiess that we bore, we rtoe'he-::- - Morley's burned tett by the mobocrats In'of that name having previously the 1945. fall of and the were Saints been In to 0I ntablbhed times, and go it with delightShakesthat OttIZISOCSoll an compelled to leave 1w 'follow- - ;Stilt Lake Cit. The word part was or-- I peare. Dec. 9. 1928. with ing year. 10 litIrs. I new town ed 'Dogs was out on th e Old.Rich. Sneigrove as bishop.. 'Cliatio;etis . Re owittio boar, slow to to thirnsite.' Irhkh in' ISIn ionsixted ed Dec. al. lino. on which IfientIMILIES4.K&S.111 In UnimPortant Vinato- - Tht Lincoln Ward had 1.342 aneniberr wrath.Jamea, 1.13. north part at the Limn $lake 015Anchading 232 children. gt I - '. - a C. LIZ . IL LIMIT and cnocErtY SPECIALS EASTER!' C01111 FED BEEF lb. lb. SIRLOIN STEAKS R13 BOIL 23: I C: lb. IR: COTTON CHCPS LCIN 23: pail Jewel SHORTENING ea. 59: BACON (super sliced) lb. 40: LCIN 4-1- ted RI3 VEAL CHCPS lb. b. SALON (fresh) semi-divide- lb. ,,,, LETTUCE ,,, each 9c TAUS or SWEET POTATOES 4 lbs. 23c CELERY MARTS 2 for 15: CRUXES Twenty Years 2 doz. 49c doz. 29c Esti. ARIZONA t!! A Minute With Cobb GRAPEFRUIT UTAH CELERY WEEK! Ship your Moods from Z. C. M. pre-'tent- two-inc- -- 1 I Ilet4;:t I V . 14.,- IL 33: cal C2: s. 12:CE I:EAT '27E",,;: E: 1 517",., 2 or 2St 9St m.'bunt 12 254 S1.49 liff . JELLY, t:y ki:d Cctrzezer , -- Pirlds e S9 let QeintepTets. 43e On 1 "'- -' 2 It& 13: Fr! INo DertterteS . 2 fir 27 tailftr-21- doe t 2 Icr 35: - Querts The Revalue' Teetering Bulk 33t s-i-an CARNATIC3 RICE 2 cans 33: 2lot 214 ;:f7:11:- 1tarts Cats PUDDI.:3 V speatoli '' fib. jar 23: LIACARC:I es. : 10-11- Pez:Li D:Iter SCUP or SPACUETTI w-a- , 10 for 29c 6 for 27c HEINZ . L, mass-with Soaps.... LIALMOTH IIIISCC3SIN DIXIE MUSSES tot. wals Toilet We ore now soiling hone our 1000 lb, Chime. 1 l Powder 3 for 95C Vlsoshing Soap FiAD i: t.,.r WHITE KING "Lt.TJcg Washing By Andrew leiTm e -, PKG. SC. Encyclopedic Church History Utah Celery A-- 1 ,n, It - carton of PECAN I:EATS lb. 45o ,,,, CRANBERRY SAUCE tall can 20: FRUIT CCCNTAIL Zn,q'n't-2 for 210 SLICED PEACHES . , ran 3 for 211: nit niNd I- BROS. TWO 160 large-size- I ; vt9 i )is.1 I E311G IA -- " . 4) . t e -- . . - I I hic":44, t ,...... 41t 4 It? .) ,, ,, ft1 o - ., 11 . Joe si- e- - ' ' - 1 ., ,1,00 I( 07f ..e . ,,..,.. oteir It "7 ! , ' N qi - . ' ; - . .b'..t,..'"N.'osoN.,,.pyo..,.--,Tk- , , ---, per-een- , , be heed anot live au:106h'; Both his di1tion. which-l- perfect, and4ls bank ace .s---- ' I Dean N t - -- . y ' ' - : e : I; 'rtk flittIDS ) in-I- confronting us. I1 IIIIN ,,,........- i , PmPeriY" The data for computing the rank of the arious states on the individual criteria were obtained from the Office of Education, C. S. Department of the Interior. While these eleven criteria do not estabeducational effilish absolute standing-Iciency any one at all familiar with the aims of education cannot but accept them as factors of the greatest significance in estimating the rank of the state in education. The fact that Utah ranks second of the 48 states in this survey is a distinct tom. pliment to our educators and to the public in general. It should serve to inspire c en greater efforts on the part of school of ficials and school patrons tOIA ard the solution of the important educational problems still : ' -,- . 1 Street ever had was, artorted by desigrting men from the people With Arthur Brisbane who dug it out of old Mother Earth by hard work and honest Editor Deseret Newic sweat; that had labor been priyi, In The Deseret News of recent leged the just .portion of the date Arthur Brisbane sayz "Mr.esealth created by .its brawn and have Lemke. who was running for pre, !brain. there never would ident lesterdaY. says he voted- HID ;been created a millionaire. mudsfor the people and,against leas a Wall Street, Wall Street on every issue," and I am eonvinced that were Mr. Mr. Brisbane &Intim", "It did not !Brisbane to take a few Simple lee. vote he him to that might "'cur book isons from the elementary against Wall Street and the peo- - lof aena, and human km. some pie simmitaneously. When enter-lute- . conceive to he might prising men in Wall Street pro-- !small degree the true philosophy of ride the money. they rua")' Ilife's mission, and Altus be better do. to build railroads. !prepared to exercise his natural uitaneouslycreate farms and the :talent for the common good of kis of the larwerar. ProsPertiy !country and his fellow man. Evidently it did not occur to! It probably never occurred te Mr. Brishine that his statement !Mr. Brisbane that labor- and not is as nonsensical as it is fallaelouic i ot occur to him that Wall fmorney abnuildsrallroad.asansdcrteadtes w creedmaoteneviarm money for such purposes i lroads nor s. :iptrodyide for the selfish purpose of gireef niVer possesse.d in honestly meta. earned dollar. SYLVESTER EARL. It neirer occurred to Mr. Bris-bane that all the money Wall Virgin, Utah. - Observer Takes Issue sal-in- The per cent of the pupils enrolled in average daily attendance. D. The per cent ttrat public Itecondary schools enrollinent is of the total public. school enrollments. 6. The per eent.of those enrolled who graduate from public secondary schools. 7. The per cent of the total population of ten years and over that is literate. , 8. The per cent of illiteracy eliminated during the preceding decade.. D. The amount expended for education per capita of total population. 10. The amount expended for educa. tion per pupil in average daily attendance. The amount expended for education per $1.000 of "estimated true value of all who' - - ' , 4. .; I; 7The per cent of the achool popula18 years of age, enrolled in the - ' tiott,.6 to , Vill . If ,. : : ; 2. ' , , , r.,', i .. - ., . ' - - , " - 'r 0.-- Lawrence Lauds Record Unprecedented Of Automobile Industry RubberStamp' Start AGRATIrtING iI , -- '' 7, I ,, . only-charg- Utah's Rank In Education t - Congress --- i t' i Old-time- 0 Mii - 1 , 7 - What Readers ,Thln . , , , ., - ID ., kb.gut January of 1916, the fight began at once and; lasted for six' months.-will recall that-- the American Bar Association in slated he was not person to be a member Of the nation's highest tribunal. William Howard Taft. later Chief Justice, was rabidly againsthim: but David I. Walsh, afterwards' senator from Massachusetts, In ' ' BY DAVID LAWRENCE defending Brandeis, showed with, apparent By CHARLES P. STEWART Deseret conenaiveness that the News) (Copyright. 1936, by The against (Central Press Staff Writer him boiled down actually to the fact that make WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.When the American-peopl17.Of The his exposed the iniquities of men in I saving of 9637,000,000 a yearenough to pay the entiro electric WASRMOTON, Nov. !course Rooseveltians are delighted light bill of all the residential consumers of the United States with the unprecedented majorities high places in our financial system." for a whole yearone might think it was news. 'Indeed, if It the Democrats will have in both There are many good citizens who take a houses of the next Congressin. were ,discovered before or during a political campaign or if the ;creased majorities pride in the record of this octogenarian who over the already. or TVA once said: "If we would guide by the light were of !enormous ones in the outgoing leg-the direct result the yardstick policy savings islative body. some other governmental action, the politicians would not hestof reason we must let our minds be bold." Neverthetess, the' suggestion Is tate to crow about it. that an administration's con- made for the improve.: .heard yet :pose! But it so happens that the $637..;ment of America's economic condi 'gressional ' majority can be to Off To A Good 4, Comaiiiaiso if Ike tiniting Sivas to nondivii; it io tininitint ;legions I Coot h is o hassavoir.koutari ,pisitoon k b. so ail diem who owe priestess'', tooth lits mega 0 tiborty Met tho cooties Ando of I greet rack la Toni rafroskiaa , own lit4i await boa h to take a areas vast. mutat sihoso liwandies men Prone gory -- inn in aiiiAlloof from site 6nrotoog ' Am saa."--T- hst 2 inv. 'repave loaaipb 'rho . .1 - NOVEMBER 17, 1936. SALT LAKE CITY, - at ,, March & 1679. Congress. . , nt Boston, and began to build up a formidable list of bigtisinesi enemies who .foughthis rising career step by atep, as he. won im. 'predanpriant cases against the tory intereste-O- f that time. It is difficult now to realize the bitterness of the battle to prevent his assumption of the robes of a Supreme Court justice.. When Woodrow Wilson nominated him in 4 no - 7--- -e' Will Go Ftshi tt' g Presdent 0 Address corraapondence for publication to the Editor. Entered at the postoffico at Set Lake City As second clan matter according to Act el - II California Street 351 ,mteriee In this newspaper sand also the jocaiThwS published herein. Ali rights for republication ot special dispatches here are also reserved. Send remittances and business antimonies, i Deseret News, Salt Lake City. Utah. lions to , ' t The , , serve-the-caUs- He-we- Glenn mudding 114 West tom Street City 1 i t ' Street North Ilicrilgan Avenue .General Motors building 4 1. I A Jane. Inc. 10 Last 40di City, 300 - sanChttall , totali'more than a riputmillion, edlyhim to rein, in ease ' and grandeur the rest of his dayE iilkthe man seems to have an unquenchable desire e of liberal' progress and" , to he continues to exert a tremendous influence i i affairs. on the nation's pointing always to the principles of free speech and the right to individual opinion. , lie has voted in favor of seven of the 13 New Deal laws passed tin by the court Once the cosigner with the late justice Oliver Wendell Holmes of those famous Vissenting opinions of Justice Holmes and Brandeis," he hai now nattirallyhecome the keystone of the group of three liberals who so often dissent from the conservative rulings of the majoilty. He was torn in Kentucky and brought . to school In Ken-- up in Boston. tucky and in Germany and finally to Harvard when Longfellow and Lowell and ,. -- IILPitkENTA, A1VIL11151NQ TIVES Noes. Rothenburg 1 1 - , , ,S;4113r1.. invest. NATIONAL. 1 i ..., ' tito One Year IOU One Year. Of paid In advance) - - trims tales tas in WAIL) --- Maim .Thssbov'rnes ' appty ' 'kW Agenda. Wyoming. Wagon. Washington. Coto. rano.. Montana. New biezict.. California and Arizona; other states by mad per month. SLOW , - ' 4444..4..4. - . ' Published Altarauusas &wept Suntsay Salt Lake Oty, Utak. PbooL, Was, abil Atorobor of TM Audit ituroau of eircitiotioob sussourrioN SATES Ase One Month .. - - , oe..; 111:1aammtet 1.1Xluv h , r I ,, idol" Lis 25a I ' .......--.- , |