Show SUNDAY MORNING JANUARY 15 192S AKE 40 YEAR MAP TO DRAW 15 Stars Are Million Photographed By Scientists y ( i - LARGE PAINTINGS NOT IN DEMAND LONDON — CBv The AasnHatrf are no demand chieflv on no ger uuuni ot xne increasing nonularitv of small houses andi flats Press) —mIarge pictures This was illustrated at a Chriutu sale when Sir Frank Dicksee's Royal academy picture line" which sold six! years"Evangefor 237 pounds was auctioned ago for 73 ( pounds The painting is ix feet four inches by four feet five inches and was painted when Sir Frank president of the Hoyal academy was 28 years old and was the success of 18794 Another academy of Sir Frank's works "Two Crowns" brought 2000 pounds in 1900 when it was purchased for the Tate galleries Art critics declare that if "Evangeline had been a half or a quarter of its size jit would have sold for a great deal more years or so tiianges sana mat wnenievery a particular style is out of fashion botli the srood and' - amtntiv - that tvi a smf feithe bad of w usa j Another factor is the! rices for all kinc's of pictures Large pictures of any kind are now difficult to dispose of because few persons have wall space on which to hang them STANDARD-EXAMINE- IJy NEAl Service Jan Cal Sam 14-- i ex-sold- ier i ) - Samuel had been married before she married Reid This increased Reid's determination not to pay also it eaused him to appeal to Governor C C Young for a pardon Governor Young refused to review hia case however holding1 that it was a matter between Reid and the Glenn strictly county superior court Then Reid asked the court to review the alimony order: The court held however that this could not be done until Reid had first purged himself of contempt and the only way he could' do that was by paying up — which he would not do So the status quo remained undisturbed Next the county grand Jury decided to look into Reid's charge that his should not have custody of the child It investigated her and her home and re i ported that she was an eminently I satisfactory person to take care of ex-wi- fe W Reid ' j a mtie girl lieid remained i un convinced charging that the fore mans of the grand jury was a cloccj friend of the former Mrs Reid REFUSED TO SHAVE j During the first few mcnths of his Imprisonment Reid refused to shavje or have his hair cut and for & time he presented a strange and appearance He soon tired shagsr of that however and now keeps as neatly groomed as though were a rising' young bond salesman His quarters are not regulation jail quarters' He has a room on the isecond floor somewhat away from the regular cell block i He has a comfortable bed a bureau a number of pictures on the walla and ia set of his own books i He eatsjhis meals with the rest of the prisoners mingles with them oc casionally in the "bull pen" and" on i the whole seems not to mind greaitly being a prisoner — — —— — Hickman and Accomplice In Court On Thorns Murder iJ v vn c ill' " ''is WILL BURY BOOK IP vty- CAN'T FIND BODY PARIS — (By The Associated Descartes the great French philosopher are determined to have him buried in the Pantheon If can't bury his bones they insist they will inter one f his! books in they th building intended to be the national mausoleum ' of France's great men Finding the philosopher's bones appears to be difficult His body was brought from Stockholm wnere ne aiea m i860 but there is doubt about where it is During the French Revolution the convention ordered his burial in the Pan- on out the order has never been xecuted Press) — Followers of Rene TOURISTS ASK FOR GOOD COOKING PARIS — (By The Associated I'ressj — "Taking one consideration with another" tho Paris polyglot - '1 J " Q j IN MOVIE THEATRE PARIS — (By The Associated Press) — Smoking in movie theatres has been forbidden as dangerous in Lyons Rouen and other cities may be barred in Paris The danger jof fire and panics are I told by Commandant Georges Gues-nI' Q president of the Firemen's Association of France in an open letter to the prefect of police s He cites four recent fatal fire panics in various countries to make his point Women he adds say little' but almost condemn theaunanimously : i ' tre smoking because 'cold smoke" jmmi:r settles on their gowns and furs and Edward Hickman (right) and Welby Hunt enter pleas in Los Angeles! court to Indictment charging the stale odor sticks ' In Paris at present all movie them with killing C Ivy Thoms druggist j houses and many theatres permit smoking Fire engineers criticise the practice here particularly bemay be either inside or outside tha cause policernan's life is decidedly "a most of the theatres are old ioneM combustiin if from which building away happy Jie differs RADIO and-fe' have exit facilities that ble materials from his Gllbertian colleague meet modern scientific requireto ihe is a set connected If powThe question he is most frequenter subply line the device used and ments ly asked is where real French the methods :of wiring must be in cooking can be sampled at moderaccordance with the rules covering ate cost His replies are generally permanent and portable fixtures so satisfactory that the inquirer ofdevices and appliances as given in ten comes back and invites him to AssoWASHINGTON— The (By Section 37 of the Natisnal Electrical! dinner ciated Press) —Jn erecting- aerials Safety Code The wiring of for radio sets do storage batteries also must and guy wires conJI ureeK marriage ceremonies a not attach - them to telegraph or form batrules these and such jto ' electric light poles do' not carry teries! must be placed where there gold and a silver ring is used fr$ FOR the wires over streets and tracks is adequate ventilation and avoid 'crossing electrical conductors of all kinds the Bureau of Standards warns in a handbook on DRAMA' BURLESQUES 'Safety Rules for Radio Installa- Jj) - photo-electr- PARIS — (By The Associated Press)— The last' public scribe in Paris is gone and unfortunately to Jail He is Georges Faes whose fambooth ily kept the little lean-t- o against the side of the St Laxare prison for 100 years He was sentenced to two years in prison but he won't serve his time in the fortress-like place against which his office is placed for that is a woman's prison Faes had to add other legal and commercial work to the business of writing letters for the illiterate which his fathers practiced and his calculations for a client the court held transferred 40000 francs of his customer's money to his own pocket In a manner the judge called swindling one-roo- Antenna supports must be sufficiently rigid and of such size as to withstand any load which Tnay come on them and attachment to chimneys should be- avoided the booklet says Metal poles or masts extending more than 10 feet above the supporting building must be and permanently effectively grounded The bureau recommends that locations involving crossings over railroad" supply lines etc be avoided bu here no other location is possible special rules are given for the installation Some of the other instructions - are: non-combusti- 63 It is particularly to know that the most ofinteresting it is bought by mothers for themselves and the children though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for elder Iy people All drug stores have the generous bottles We would be glad to have you prove at our expense how much Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin can mean to you and yours Just write "Syrup Pepsin" Monticello Illinois and we will send you pref paid a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE ' :: -1 :::':v-:- -- "Calvin Calthrop" the ptvoS ol the cdmedy has the world's largest sardine-bo- x factory and come? to France to show how the world oughtrto be run He bring3 n through whirh may be the world as it should be His attiuncouthness his newly-ric- h tude and his consciousness of America's superiority draw laujghs from "the French What pleases them most is that the fantastic American eventually succurnb3 to evidences of European excellence in beauty culture and even in some forms of Industry so the audience goes away happy in the conviction that Americans are wind-bag- s who deflate baturally in the old world atmosphere A few critics comment thatUhe kind of American represented is as fantastic as the comic o£era type of Frenchman of the American stage with silk hat goatee frock coat and wild gesticulation Jion-esty- -- — The Associated ! wife of the prime minister There were sixty odd all having grow gray in this branch of the ceptlon hair so often trod by the mighty In their Sunday clothes they felt more at home than a great many other visitors at No 10 as they were familiar with the premises from basement to attic The cubic content of a pound of air is about twelve cubic feet Car Owners and Dealers to jadvUe that the Wheelwright-Fel- t Auto Supply Coof Ogden Utah former our representatives for Ogden and surrounding territory' is no longer connected in any way with the Stewart-Warnorganization This i 5 er STEWART WARNER -- SALES & SERVICE CO Iotermountala Factory Branch SALT LAKE CITY UTAH A 'L: Til —:- - yy'M u ' 1 X When Your Work Ends ! ' -- llar kkigs'-- ' In the case of receiving stations conductors shall be not less than 064 inch in diameter if of copper nor less than 045 inch if made of bronze or copper-covere- d steeL Lead-i- n conductors should be securely fastened in a workmanlike manner The lead-i- n wire shall enterthe building "through a rigid insulating tube or bushing or through a drilled window pane For receiving stations grounds must not be made to gas pipes but should be made to cold water pipes if these are connected to a street main An outlet pipe from a water tank fed by a street main or a well may be used provided such outlet pipe is adequately bound to the inlet pipe connected to the street main or well Suitable clamps must be used where the wire is attached and the entire surface of the pipe covered by the clamp must be scraped clean Each lead-i- n conductor must be It Honesty isn't the befct provided with a lightning arrester isn't any kind of policypolicy fa a It whether or not an antenna ground- state Of mind or else u isn't ing switch is used The arrester JRoanoke World News j lead-i- n AT AGS ioLos PARIS — (By The Associated Press — Durlesquing of America's supposed attempt to reform the world! gets blame and praise 'for a neiv play "Telercopase" by Paul de Mont a Belgian American braggadocio is considered much exaggerated by critics who have sen the United States but in general there is a sort of chuckle over showing up the '"do- 5 y Press) — Flappers took a back seat at a tea at No 10 Downing street the other day The charwomen who tidy up the Whitehall govern- ment buildings were having their inning at an "at home" given them specially by Mrs Stanley Baldwin' - m - AMERICAN "IDEALS" gested It would afford fire pro tectlon for storage warehouses or other buildings seldom frequented for the first wisp of smoke from a tiny blaze would be sufficient to ring a warning bell or start a sprinkler system Safes and vaults might be protected by the device too since & bursrlar's shadow fail ing on the sentinel light ray could1" turn in an alarm! cell ic LAST PARIS SCRIBE IS SENT TO PRISON MIL ES ? tan be registered on the meter Numerous other usea for the same apparatus have been sug The rising smoke clouds the horizontal ray in the stack diminishing the radiance This actuates the cell which establishes a current in a wire connected with a recording meter in the engine room "of the factory A needle in the meter keeps a written chart of the action so that a consatnt record of the smoke is available and the engineers can tell when its has reached the legal limit density So sensitive is the cell that a puff of cigarette smoke blown across the path of the light ray DRA "INI UP 5 I By JOHN L COOLEY (Associated Press Science Editor) EAST PITTSBURG Fa — (By The Associated Press) — A vacuum tube and a beam of light have been put on police duty to help enforce regulations for the control of the smoke nuisance Many cities in industrial districts have ordinances governing the density of smoke that may be emitted by a chimney but the men down in the engine rooms of 'the plants find it difficult to know whether the stacks are violating the law X new device perfected by the engineers of the Westing-hous- e Electric & Manufacturing company makes possible an accurate check by letting the smoke record its own density A photo-electri- c cell Is the basic unit of the simple apparatus This fragile bit of glass is so sensitive to light that the slightest shadow will cause it to generate a current which then amplified will operate a circuit assigned to any practical task Utilization of this principle in determining smoke 3 density requires only the passage ©f a light ray through a chimney The beam is introduced into the stack through a short piece of tubing set horizontally into the brick wall and makes Its exit through 9 similar opening ditectly opposite At the end of its course it falls upon a - tions" !')' - " i et -- ' Photo Cell Posted as Sentry Tells Factory Smoke Density a-n- s 1 FRENCH STATISTICS POVERTY STRICKEN Yon know your loved ones will be safeguarded and happy as long as you are here to provide for them But when your work ends — what then? That is when our duty of protecting your loved ones will begin — if you show the proper foresight now in naming this institution your executor "and trustee' ' uuci Lr'-- Lro U UV Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin it does NOT affect the heart i tie trad mark ot Bay Come in and talk the matter over with our Trust officer NATIONAL BAMC OF COMMERCE To break a cold harmlessly end in a hurry try a Bayer Aspirin" tablet And for headache The action of Aspirin is very efficient too in cases of neuralgia neuritis even rheumatism and lumbago! And there's no after effect: doctors give Aspirin to children— often infants Whenever there's pain think of Aspirin The genuine Bayer Aspirin has Bayer on the box and on every tablet All druggists with proven directions 'JLsf-tti- ie GIVES RECEPTION FOR CHARWOMEN LONDON-—(B- m - J i on DrXaldwelPs Prescription - " farm COMPETES WITH CAS "Due to it3 improved lightness efficiency and cheapness and to its higher rotative speed" he said "competition with gasoline farm lighting plants s now possible" Fifteen or 20 he added are in use to light beacons on airways between Cheyenne and Salt Lake City They differ from the old fashioned American or "Wind Rose" and Dutch types in their Diaaes which are- one to four in number of x streamline cross-se- c tion like those" of an airplane pro peller The speed" of revolution he placed at six to 10 times that of the "Wind Rose" type wheel of equal diameter in equal wind ve locity ' newspaperman TO BAR SMOKING Millions of Families E)epeiiE When Dr Caldwell started to practice mediqlne back in 1875 the needs for a laxative were not as great as they are today People lived normal ate quiet lives piam wnoiesome food and got of fresh air and sunshine plentyeven But that earlv thr wr astic physics and pursres for the reiiet or constipation which Dr Caldwell did not believe were good for human beings to put into their system So he wrote a prescription for a laxative to be used by his patients The prescription for that he used early jinconstipation his practice and which he Iput in drug stores in 1892 under nhe name of Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a liquid vegetable remedy Intended for women children' and elderly need just such people and a mild safe they bowel stimugentle lant as Syrup rPepsin ( Under successful management this prescription has proven its worth and is now the largest selling liquid laxative in the world The fact that millions of bottles are used a year proves that has won the confidence of peopleit who needed it to get relief from head- acnes Diuousness flatulence indl- loss ot appetite and sleep Ejwon a oream aypepsia colds and t fevers Millions of families & nnw never without Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and if you will once start using it you will also always have a bottlehandy for emerf gencies a PARIS — (By The Associated Press) — France Is discontinuing the compilation of many industrial statistics because it costs too much There is such a shortage of men and money that even the 1921 census has not been completed say those pleading for more funds There are two adding machines in the office it is said and one of them of the vintage of 1900 has laid down and died Parliament appropriated $10000 for new equipment but that is regarded as little better than nothing for the 24 old fashioned statistical machines all need to be replaced Aside from these difficulties the statisticians complain that business men won't give them Information fearing the government will use it to run up their Income tax And as indicating the department's reputation for poverty it is asserted that examinations for new clerks ordered held in?1924 were postponed twice because there were no candidates and that in three years only one man appeared and he resigned shortly afterwards K4 A Dela-querr- non-aircra- erate the generator of lightmg plant i ii - WASHINGTON" — (By The Associated Press ) — Aeronautics having borrowed the windmill from the farm to adapt it to the need j of a new art is ready "to pay the debt by returning the implement scientifically refined to the farm for the operation of lighting plants LONG IN USE The has been used for generations chiefly to operate pumps but for 150 years prior to the World war little progress had been made toward a scientific understanding of its principles Aviation development during the war however brought the aerodynamic method of analysis to the problem and within the last few years windmills hava been made useful for driving radio-electr- ic generators centrifugal gasoline pumps and £imilar accessories of the airplane The new analysis of the windmill wag begun in the army aeronautics laboratories at Dayton under the supervision of E N Fales seeking a type best suited to drive working in collaboration with It R Stuart who handled the generator deaircraft velopment in the war-tim- e researches' "outlined before the American Society of Mechanical Engineers by Mr Fales he said it has been possible to devise a propeller-type high speed windmill ft use which will op for or ex-Vi- fe ts waiters blacksmiths policemen lawyers and scientists Music was their avocation but arMrtont nam ed usuaMy to steer them towards fame When Andre Gaudin a Paris lawyer recently took off his cap ana gown and appeared on the stage of the Opera Comique i was recalled that scores of French operatic notables began their careers in trades and professions that seemed unrelated to music Gaudin'a appearance was preceded by two others who intended to be lawyers Leon Achard and Wa rot The great baritone Faure was an organ pumper at Notre Dame Carbelly's true name was Dr de Casteras a practicing physician and Aujruste Regonde was a professor of chemistry Segond disappeared for ten years changing his name to Salviti ' studied music in Italy and then toured Europe and South America Amonfr other singers in French opera were Lasalle a shawl designer Roger and Obln notarial clerks: Franz a bank clerk: who was headed for the priesthood and the great Van Dyck first a notary and then a Lake-Cheyen- ne Reid is an Intelligent-appearin- g who served quiet young under fire with the 91st division in France and who is not at all the kind ofman you expect to find in a jail His troubles began when Mrs Reid sued for and won a divorce The court awarded her custody of their child a girl gave her $20 a month alimony and directed Reid to pay an additional $20 a month for the support Of the child Reid refused pointblank to pay one red cent He declared that while he was willing and anxious to pay for the support of his daugher his was not a fit person to take care of her So long as Mrs Reid the girl he taid he would kept pay nothing but if Mrs Reid would give up the girl he would pay gladly Refusing to pay he was found in contempt of court a'nd ordered to jail until he paid REFUSED TO YIELD County authorities were perMost alimony prisoners plexed soften after & short confinement and agree to pay! anything rather than be held prisoners But not Reid He calmly" announced that nothing- on earth could make him pay The county authorities felt that Reid must be mentally unsound They had alienists examine him The alienists reported that Reid was perthough very stubborn j fectly sane Meanwhile the former Mrs Jteid as her husband the man taking to whom she ° PARIS — (By The Associated Press) — Opera singers in France seem to be of fate A large proportion of the stars started out to be something else Operate Lamps On Salt Route ar u OPERA SINGERS IN VARIED TRADES after-though- ! I The Snake Driver LIGIITAIRWAY uel W Reed Is a mild-appeman but he is very young ing stubborn Which is why he has been in jail here ever since July 27 1925 In addition Reid probably will continue to stay in Jail for some time to come Yet he could ai any time get out very easily If he would agree to pay alimony tc his wife who divorced him more than two years ago he would be given his freedom at once VOWS HE WONT PAY He won't He Nws he will stay in jail for the rest of his life rather than pay his wife one cent" ' The other side shows no signs of weakening Consequently it begins to look as if Reid's stubbornness will get a very long endurance test' 5— — R R INDILLTO In Jail Two and a Half Years Because He Refuses to Pay Alimony to fir-- Wife w OXFORD England--(BThe Associated Press)— Forty years to draw & map —that is the meaning of the completion of a' gigantic task undertaken two generations ago by the Oxford: and Greenwich observatories Fifteen million stars have been photographed to make a map ct the heavens only f000 of which are visible to the naked eye Some 30000 star-char- ts weighing two tons and piling up 30 feet high re to do assemDtea ana prjntea wirnin a rew monins accormnr ta Dr Herbert H sTurner Oxford as tronomer who nasi assisted in the gigantic task Because some of the stars dis- ' motion tjhe played jn photographs which were taken of them astronomers here andi in Iondon have formed the coiicluion that many of the faint or lessef stars are comparatively near i the earth5 and not at enormous distances as was hitherto believed j Nineteen observatories in various parts of the world have cooperated in the stupendous "task Perth They are at SMeltourne Cap of Good Hope Hyderabad Helsingfors Catanli Cordoba San Fernando Rome Algiers Potsdam Bordeaux Sydney! Tauba Toulouse Santiago Greenwich Paris and Oxford i " Stars only up to! the fourteenth magnitude have be£n photograph ed year addiUonal work wouldxnirty be required to Include the apping of fainter stars The cameras lusedt for the charting v are specially longfocused fixed to telescopes which travel by clockwork device at the same rate of speed as the stars they Are embracing5 The length of the ex posure depends! on the brilliance of tne star to be photographed The heavenly charts are expected to be of great value to the astronomer of the future because they will enable him to tell how much a star has moved in relation to its neighbors and in what direction Determination ' of the exact positions of stars is considered today as ibeing one of the most important phases of astron"I omy THE OGDEN Haaufactnr of Monoaeeticacidegter ct fitl!j-iitfti- ' ' OGDEN UTAH' — nS i- -- |