Show THE OGDEN STAND could be moved from their set courses by no power on earth Perhaps we can express the matter best by saying that these ten The Ogden Standard-Examin- er PUBUSHlNQ COMPANY Eldrcdgt Jr A L Glaimann Publishers An Independent Newtpapor Published every evening and Sunday morning without a muzxte or a club Matter at Entered as Second-cl- a the Pottoffice Ogden Utah Established 1379 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES v Delivered by carrier one month 75e By mail In advance In Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming Three months $193 Six months $360 One year 1700 All other states $100 a month $1200 one year Member of The Associated Press Consolidated Press NEA Service and J U - f A B C The Associated Press I exclusively entitled to the use for republication of any news credited to It not other wise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein Call 252 for All Departments j - AGRICULTURE'S POLICY ON TARIFF STATED Organized agriculture's policy with regard to the protective tariff wag sUted frankly before the tariff commission Wednesday by the group requesting a 60 per cent lncreas in the Import duty of ©nionsi One speaker said men were above all brave men And bravery is a virtue worth prizing highly—especially In this age when men who seek high office walk on eggs for fear of offending some of us And it doesn't particularly mat-te- r that some of these men were beaten men Lee for instance fought for a lost cause and went Debs died with down to defeat ever fought for had he everything Yet that hardly matters crushed The important fact is that both Lea and Debs lived that they built up heroic lives —not for us to agree with necessarily but for us to adn mire They lost their fights but America is a better country because they lived So is it with the rest of them Some like Lincoln left great concrete achievements Others lilje Thoreau and Whitman left nothing but a few books which remain ignored by the majority to this day But each contributed something each dissatisfied with the state of things that surrounded him spent his life in an effort to remedy them Undoubtedly you could amend this lifs A great many names are left off that could be put in with perfect Justice Roosevelt and Bryan will have many supporters and so will Daniel Webster and Jefferson Davis and John Hay America has bad many great men Some day when you're looking for something tc read go to a library and draw a few books on these men Get Maurice's "Lee the Soldier" Sandburg'' "Abraham Lincoln" Carman's "The Heart of Emerson's Journals" and Brooks' "The OrdealMDf Mark Twain" Add to them a few such books as Thoreau's "Walden" and Whitman's "Leaves of Grass" Or better yet buy these books they're worth ""keeping Then read them Study them closely—absorb them You'll that the east era manufacturers are protected from the competition of foreign manufacturers and farmers believe Justice demands that the farmers of the United States should be prod tected from the competition pro-Tide- by foreign onion growers who are leading shipment cf onions to thli country "Today" MISS CtfUPtCd!-- - Compound Interest Lindbergh's Ixg End" G B Shaw on God 11394 Barren Churches A1M-- A ABOUT FRONTIER PAS VJHeRE! rtri' HERO ALMOS--f (SETS held by Baring Brothers for many years interest compounded and cumulated and the tdtal used finally to diminish RrUain'i debt One dollar placed at compound interest when Christ was born would now pay the debts of the whole world public and privste and leave otenty over It is a fascinating idea But Briton directly or indirectly will pay ths compound interest en the 500000 pounds Tou cannot make somethining-out of nothing terest or anything1 elsecompound c l l I i r k v mam names: " j Abraham Lincoln Ralph Waldo Emerson Henry' David Thoreau William Lloyd Garrison Theodore Parker Robert E Lee Walt Whitman Mark Twain Charles W Eliot and Eugene V Debs His list is worth studying even though all of us probably would like to amend it here and there The variety of activities represent ed on it is rather surprising There are two philosophers one president one soldier one poet one satirist one theologian one educator two-- well perhaps we can lump Debs and Garrison together as 'two agita' tors" On what basis do you suppose this list was selected? What quality if any did these ten men have in common? To begin with each of them lacked the great American instinct of conformity Not one of" them ever was swayed in his actions by any fear of what people might think or by any consideration of the effect on his own fortunes From Garrison who1 was often in danger of lynching to Lee who spurned the highest office Lincoln could offer him these men were independent they thought for themselves and ' Life's Niceties HINTS ON ETIQUET 1 — When a young man calls on a girl should som older member of he family make it a point to speak to him a few minutes? utes? 2 — Who 3 — How 1 — Yes V" usually does it? long should she THE ANSWERS stay? 2—The girl's mother or her ther might drop in and hands 3— Only a short time fa- Ikhake CONCERT FOR STUDENTS - NEW YORK— (By The Associated Press) — The second experimen tal school concert designed to teach appreciation of music will be broadcast by Walter Damrosch and the New York symphony orchestra over WJZ and chain at 10 a m February 10 The program Is intended for children of the MUST KNOW OPERA A third proschools grammar KOA at Denver lays claim to gram for high school and college unearthing a new type of radio op- students will be presented Februerator H is called an "operatic ary 17 The first concert was given operator" and his job consists of January 21 and was for educators' knowing music and being able to read operatic scores Thus he can During the past 100 years ths regulate the sound volume much population of the world has inmore accurately than an operator creased from less than 1000000-00- 0 with no knowledge of music" to about 1700000000 - BARROUl D man of my acquaintance tells me that he has a soul above A YOUNQclothes He says that he does not concern bis mind with the small VT 3Ae BINS iIpm ng'LL see REP Ai'"fnllK -- ??' Trf 15 pi crime PAMTe'S matter of dress and in illustration of his theory he always looks sloppy and slovenly and like something just flsped out of the rag bag Thi3 young man also complains that he is not appreciated and that he is discriminated against in his business and he is bitter beI 5 tf '4' J cause men of less ability and who work leeshard 11 In a 41iftM I no AW t lit It tt Wr n Sl MJ advanced over hi$ head 1 3 7 "Perhaps the reason why yeu don't succeed If because of ths way yea dress" I suggested te hjm "Msybe not" I replied "but It Is what we hsve te Judfle him by at first glance All that we can see is the outside of a mani We can't see what Is hidden Inside of him A but we have ne way of shabby coat may cover a k ood coat proclaims It it until he Whereas1 knowing provet to every beholder that the wearer haj already got his It U the badge of achievement and success DOROTHY DIX PI go-gette- Ri CaUSMTOfT Oi2 sv a man may be because he is eccentric but "AFheCOURSE can't explain that to every passerby and no one gives him the him benefit of the doubt They give one look at his costume and brsnS as being too lazy and shiftless or too infeompetent to make enough r money t dress decently ' - fAnd let me tell you son" I mention "whtn yeu Judge man by his clothes you are using a pretty fair yardstick by whi ch to measure him Check up on your acquaintances and see how accurately the way they dress reveals their charad-- nu tmnu mc a mtuurt of publio lmporttnct Th aunt peoplt will b found befor us this year as last: Colonel Thorn ons oC Washington'" ablest attornsys who knows mors about it than any other ten men representing the railroad association a man representing hankers and broker interested in railroad stocks and bonds a member of the Interstate commerce commission supposed to represent the public but who was appointed at the behest of the railroads and is their man a representative of a shippers' association favored by the railroads and actually their tool a representative of the short line railroads which hop to shove their roads off on the big ones "But the consumer is not represented the general public is not and there Is no one represented to speak for the common good or far-rtachi- interest is betrayed" Today's Radio TIME MOUNTAIN WESTERN DIVISION 2257 — KFUR Ogden — 1330 0 a m-- Musical pro- r gram 12:30- - 2:00 p m1— Musical pro-7:30 p m —Musical t:00 — gram" — 3529— KOA Denver— 92tt1 6:30 — Dinner concert 7:00— 7:30— Sunday school lesson 8:00— Twenty Tears of Song 9:00 — KOA orchestra 4685— KFI JLos Angeles— 610 8:00— Roberts' orchestra 9:00— Wrigley review 10:O0 — Concert orchestra 11:00 — Symphonette 3369 — MX Dos Angeles— 880 8:00— Charles W Hamp 8:30 — George program Aggie-Kickoff- mm 1000-- ters nt general welfare "NOVICES AND DUBS" "Meanwhile the railroad committee of the U Si chamber of commerce composed of executives of great railroads has urged pass--i age of ths bill The committee will hear! only the arguments and facts these selfish interests want us to hear We're not experts Many of us are novices and most of us are dubs sent here to be somebody's handy men but we must cope with the best brains that can be bought Even if we're honest and want to protect the people we must hunt out the real facts in a maze of technicalities j "Assume that we come out on the floor reiterate the arguments we've heard and put them over on the otler members even more ignorant than ourselves because they have had no opportunity to find out what it's all about Of course the pill Is passed and signed by the president and of course the public 9:00-10:0- s Dance music '' Saint S3 Sinner THERfi is the man for instance who ilwayi look! a if te bi4 been 1 assembled in the dark 'He has o a coat of one suit and trousers of another He will wear a red necktie with a pink shirt and cuffs that A swift glance at the door Into are frayed at the edges ths sun parlor told Faith that Bob was about to close it completely "You will Invariably find that he l Juet as eleppy a werker i assuring Cherry privacy in htr confesison Just behind Bob and towering over x him though Bob was a tall man Faith saw Nils Jonson his handsome face flushed! to the roots of his hair his blue eyes fixed yearningly jupon Cherry Raisins her hand slightly Faith singaled Bob hot to close the door If Nils loved Cherry and wanted to marry her he might as well know the best or the worst about her whichever her confession might reveal j"I — I kept Bill from! making love to me on the way out by chatting about the baby and the office and — and you' Cherry began in a Voice "I'd almost made up my mind to take him but somehow I couldn't bear the thought of his— kissing Tne You know how it is!" f'Yes I know how it is" Faith agreed — softly f'But wattl' Cherry cried in a muffled shamed voice "Bill said Frances knew he was bringing me to the dance and I thought it would be fun not to' let anyone see Bill and me together just at first I wanted to see if Frances or anyone else would recognize me Bill hadn't told her what I was going to wear for he didn't know I made him wait on the porch while I ran in with my cloak wrapped about me and my helmet and goggles hiding my hair and face There are several girls about my site and I thought it 'wctuld be fun to fool everybody until time to unmask I went right up to the dressing room and— and h it was horrible horrible! 'What was horrible Cherry?' 'There were three girls there— Selma Pruitt Frances "Warren and MaUdee Hogan They didn't have their masks on and they tried to get me to taks mine off I an swered something silly in a low throaty voice as different from make it and s mine as I could Maides laughed and said 'It's Justine Wright I should recognise your voice in a thousand old dear I thought it was funny and didn't deny it and right away Selma said 'For a minute I thought it might be our most famous —or infamous highway — Cherry Lane' I thought I'd faint but I managed to chuckle Just like Justine does — you know a little clucking noise deep in her throat and Maidee said 'Don't insult poor Justine Selma It was ghastly! I can't tell you how horrible it was—oh!' Faith's arms tightened about her (Sister and she bowed her head until her cheek rested against the green leather helmet "Don't think of It any more darling They probably didn't mean half they said' "Oh yes they did!" Cherry protested bitterly "Not even Frances stood up for me! And she's pretended to stay my friend through the trial and everything Oh it's not fair! I was acquitted! But I might as well have been found guilty of murder theft adultery and every other crime that's" ever she Well— ljeen committed drew a deep quivering breath and went on "I got out of the dresssomehow and by that ing room time I was fighting mad I was determined to make them kowtow to me make them eat their sun-yello- w j sob-chok- ed j 11:00 — Hollywood stadium 12 :00— Dance music S844— KGO Oakland— 780 7:00— Dinner concert c 9:00 — Wrigley review 4w vm 10:00 — White Rock Crusaders L a r 10:30 — Memory lane ' '"s 11:00 — Dance music r 4915 —KGW Portland— 610 ( 8 00— Concert orchestra 9:00— Wrigley review 10:00 — Memory lane' 11:00 — Motor Coach entertainers 11:30— Hoot Owls 4223 — KPO San Francisco— 710 7:30 — Dinner music Congressman George Huddleston 9:00— NBC program (1 hours) "many of us are novices and 10:30— Concert orchestra aro most of us dubs" 11:80— Dance music words" mmm v-y- i x v Shal enough of those behind him to insure his jelection Then he holds the mirror up to them and assumes the role of) the man they Want him to be Somietimes these groups control the political boss himself in Which case the congressman may be controlled directly either by the ' boss or groups SEjLFISH GROUPS "The mdst serious factor in this system is that nearly all the groups which are interested in politics are selfish grojups Show mea typical citizen and I'll show you a man whose political Interests are along the lines of his business and financial interest "Civic associations trade bodies chambers of commerce or other groups of merchants jor manufacturers — whatever influence the typical man brings to bear on his government is brought through such an organisation "Often We say a man is good and patriotic when he doesn't belong to a good government club a patriotic society a ponsumers" organization or anything interested in the general publicj but only to a trade or business jassociation represented ere Thrjough the U S chamber of commerce or some similar organization! he is told what he should believe THAT? RAIEROAD BIITi "My committee is now hearing a bill for consolidation of railroads "the coat pOOH" he retorted scornfully does not make the man" t GEfS liP MERVe one-thir- Franc© resents our suggestion about outlawing submarines the weapon most important to this nation next to airplanes The French are logical not "sloppily" sentimental WfrfA-fS- AVlP KTIriALLV " Our state department has signed an arbitration treaty with France The treaty recognizes the Monroe doctrine which is satisfactory But best and only recognition of that permanent doctrine will be found in adequate defense and preparation plenty of airships and submarines WELL-GROOME- E A ill j GREATEST MEN John Haynes Holmes pastor of New York's famous Community-churcundertook the other night to draw up a list of the ten greatest Americans The surest way to start an argument is to make a list of "the ten greatest"—whether it be a list of men books or race horses Mi Holmes limiting himself to men who were born after the adoption of the constitution in 1789 and refusing to consider any who are now living selected the following I BREAK A POZCMlM£S r good-Gover- nor AMERICA'S TEN OUT-OF-STYL- m one-thir- of this book what you take to it' Meaning that one's impression ot the story depends entirely upon the mind of the reader It is I believe a perfectly true statement It cannot be denied that there is the type of book — and let include plays— turned out for the mere purpose of ' catching the dollars of a public eager to pay for obscenity But on the other hand to heat a gorgeous book or a dramatic classic condemned by the ignorant because it handles without gloves a crosa section of life that happens to be unbeautiful (and surely we kngw how rauch of life is unbeautiful) is almost beyond bearing Any demonstration of prudery is disgusting for prudery is merely a mask that hides uhnamable things behind it When the outraged emerge from a theatre that has unfolded an elemental drama before their shocked eyes and declare it to be indecent one wonders often just where the indecenjasties in the theatre or in the patron's own mind It reminds me of the man at the risque review who turned to his wife and remarked loudly "If I had an idea what this show was like I wouldn't have come' And he adjded sotto voce "I went to six --places for tickets and then had to pay-- a blank scalper thirty dollars" !' Those who hold ther indigo noses are as often as not the very ones- - Who: applaud the loudest when thei same plot is labeled Shakespeare or grand opera There they have an excuse for applauding and the world will not lift its eyebrows How then should we judge a play or a book impartially? To clean our minds of their unclean corners and operate on the very large beams in our eyes that obscure clear vision Then we wiL have no need of that camouflage prudery which so often masquerades as virtue Then and then only can we be fair judges THE SLOPPY DRESSER IS A CARELESS WORKER THE UNTIDY CLOTHES MAN IS LA2Y5 THE WEARER OF THE MAN WHO IS BEHIND THE TIMES IN BUSINESS DRESSES FOR COMFORT ALONE j LACKS PEP AND MAN IS AMBITION— BUT THE USUALLY INDUSTRIOUS AND SUCCESSFUL ' he By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON A certain book review contains this sentence: "You will get out - A ' com-stant- ly Two hundred American cities having over fifty 30000 population spent on public schools in 1925 d $607088000 of their income That is called "a great deal of money-- " but it is little considering that the country's future is in the public schools and the amount spent for education ts only $630 per capita in big cities — less than the amount spent for chewing gum cigarets lea cream soda and similar American "necessities" A country that can wisely &pend three billions for automobiles in a year might spend thrice that for education I'P CALL Dorotliy Dix Talks if !' rOdds and Ends ROAAAkiClS -- Re-publlca- - Ti IS LOGGER nrUrt : -i SfRArtP I'M VlC-fORfA-fo- Lindberah oossessss an admir able style which is ths absents of any effort at style the style born in a man ef power Cromwell it no words wasted possesed nothing important -- omitted Describing? an ancient fortress on a Haitian mountain top 8000 feet high flying low Lindbergh saw heaps of antiquated round cannon balls piled row on row and told how the negro king George Chris-toph- e to prove the perfect discipline of his army "marched an entire company' over one of the precipitous walls" to death Ths legend is easily believed for military and religious disciplines accomplish miracles besides making people belfeve in them Jewish historians tell of a pretended Messiah long after the coming of Chistianlty who finally cams to believe in himself and ordered a host of his followers to walk with him on the water separating Europe from Asia They believing followed and wers drowned with him In 1910 George B Shaw ToLstol "God does not yet ViAtfA-- f Bin SUMPIJL' delj-icac- ' - A r j - --rU£Rr£' -I- By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright 1928 by BUr Ca) An anonymous British haa given 500000 pounds patriot to be rt ia-TM rMl6rttf f :it6 HcrfMOVIE okSB oV VteM J An American publisher recently announced that he was- going to introduce to American readers a long list --of German authors whose work was worth knowing The books will be worth watching German literature today is better worth knowing than it has been at any time since the great days of Goethe Schiller Leasing and Heine The smash of the monarchy the freedom from the grip of the junkers and the militarists seems to have given German thought a new budding time Men breathe in a freer and cleaner air In a republic they dare to Bay and to write what they never dared under a monarchy They are telling the truth about their former rulers They are showing the rottenness of the old bureau cracy They are revealing how deep seated was the hatred of the common German soldier not only for the long continued war but also for the officers who fared so well while to the men fell all the hardships and all the poor food and clothing Germany today is producing a literature that cannot be neglected by any educated man By AHERN -- I CHANCE TO READ GERMAN BOOKS FRIDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 10 1228 ER OUR BOARDING HOUSE wrote exist but there is a creative force struggling to evolve an exknowlecutive organ of god-lik- e edge and power" Every human being represents that effort to produce good according to Shaw He says the WHAT'S iTHE MATTER WITH modern conception of God surCONGRESS— MEMBERS TRX TO PEEASE THEIR BACKERS rounded by inferior beings "like a Russian is AND nobleman" barbarous THESE ARE SEEFISH find it a moist worth-whil- e experiGROUP SAYS HUDDLESTON -- — rShaw who says th god of ence -- and you'll understand why love could not be at the same time DUTCHER RjODNEY By Mr Holmes put tbese men on his a god of epilepsy and cancer "may Semrice NEA Writer have a vague hope that himself listFeb 10— WASHINGTON the latest and represents fairly What's jths matter with consatisfactory type of divine IDAHO GOVERNOR gress?" Tjie question isn't brand new and it has met numerous anREBUKES PESSIMISTS y swers Bilt perhaps through a in Governor Baldridge of Idaho Temporary imperfection onie "a doesn't ask often unrace or a building told the retail hardware and im- developing der construction does not mean in- congressman that It put it up to George Huddleston plement' dealers jln convention in competency In its creator Shaw Congressnian of Alabaxna because George has be would see to himself surprised PocatellOi that "we hear talk that now as he looked 7 months be- sense because he's independent Idaho is in distress The gov- fore he was born That dreadful and because he was one of the few Qne could think ot embryo was a necessary prelude to congressmjen ernor then went on to tell why the Shaw And so it may who wouldn't answer "The perfect he knew these reports are not be with our embryonic civilization "The Democrats" ot ' : its injustice poverty and disease "Nothing!' true he answered "wants "Congress" The complaint of the Idaho poThe Men's Church league in New to be reflected Congressmen matter jdo Just wjhat they think will get tato growers about the slump in York asks "What is-twith our churches?" Disturbed by them They're trying their market received consider- the fact that not one convert was to be and do just what they think able publicity because of the made last year in 11394 churches their pople want them to be They d of all the 'Presbyterian are holding the mirror up to their warmth of the charges made and Northern Baptist and Methodist districts I "Some constituents don't care tie persons! named and this may Episcopal churches in the country how pitiful a man is so long as he have given rise to belief in some Some who The based on careful doe3 whaf s wanted minds that the entire Idaho sit- study of figures the three churches' offi- want a good man are deceived cial year books show that 3290 DOMINANT INTERESTS uation is not so churches made not districts are not Presbyterian "Congressional Baldridge did well to one convert 500 others made one controlled on a per capita basis We believe convert each The congressman- - merely repredeny these rumors CamDbell nrewirtlna- - at sents the dominant interests in his White J the governor is correct in his be- the Church league luncheon said district those which control the lief that 1928 and the years to energy used on foreign missions elections along with nearly everybe used at home The Rev come will be good years for the should elsej J Earle Edwards Baptist blamed thing ' "Sometimes he is controlled by Gem atate on the trouble "red sectarian mere tape a political boss and his as' theology jealousy piration is to do what the boss With plenty 6f fertile land organization everything but Jesus Christ and wants him to do In that case he plenty of water and an intelligent his spirit" holds the mirror up to the boss other districts influ"In agriculture Idaho is on a sound There is also the competition of ential maiiy grcjups and organizationsfoundation for prosperity in ag- radio automobiles etc Men are control him He need only marattracted by what interests them riculture alone Billy Sunday should resume operations There can be no ciuarrel with that way of looking at the situation If" protection is available for the manufacturer it should be available for the farmer If agriculture thinks It Is being discriminated against we can expect renewed demands for a general reduction of all protective duties for the farmers resent placing a protective duty upon the things they must buy without giving them the benefits of a protective duty upon the things they have to sell ARD-EXAM1N- SOO 3486 —KJR Seattle— ' 7:80— Dinner concert 8:30-Dinner concert 8:30— Varied HVt program j' hours) 11:00— Dance music (2 hours) 370J2— KHQ Spokane— 810 8:00— Old Hickory period 9:00— Magio Isle 10:00— Isaak Walton league 10:00— Memory lane 302 8—KSD Salt Lake— 990 4:00— Radio tea 5:00— Children's hour 6:00— Informal period ' 7:00— Ogden livestock 7:30— Salt Lake mining market 8:00-Kent Gobi baritone 8:30— Beth Whitney Afton Pitt and Frelc McGanney ' 9:00-Music box 9 :05— Remote control broadcast from Hotel Bigelow at Off 'j" v den 11:00— Studio program 12:00—Time 2342 —KDYli Salt Lake 3:30— Classical and music 4:00 — Dance selections 4:30 —Variety period 5:16 — Time 6:00 —Children's period 6:30— Dinner music 7:00 — Nightly doings 7:05-Variety period 8:00— Studio program — 9:00 Boy Scout talk by the Rev Hoyt E Henriques 10:00 — Tims i semi-classic- al NEXT—Nils as an actor (Copyright 1928 NEA Service) Bridge Me Another BfWW he is a dresser He does everything about halfway He never does anything Just right He never pays any attention to deHe Is the tail I' sort ef a man Is a "If he is clerk somebody always having to check up after him If he Is a stenographer half of his words are misIf he is a professional spelled and his letters are blurred If he has his own man he Is an also-raor doctor lawyer and In ths' business his store Is untidy and full of dead stock ' n end he goes broke-:- 7 ' I THEN there is the man who always has spots on his clothes and 1 whose trousers bag at the knees and whose coat needs pressing and ' whose shoes need polishing 'If he shouted from the housetop that he was Just bone lazy hiftless he couldn't' proclaim any louder what he is thsn his appearance does and 1T0T every man can afford to buy fine clothes but every' man can keepjhimself neat if he has any energy about him' Soap and water and cleaning fluids are cheap so are pressing-- irons And if a man can't summon up enough energy to keep himself looking presentable he isn't going to waste any superfluous you may rest assured that and does Just as little work as labor on his job He is a clock-watcher "And there is the man who never notices what other people are wearing j He buys good enough clothes and heis neat" enough but be is a couple of years behind the style His trousers are rilver just the right width He never has the latest things in collars and neckties His hat ljirim is a little too narrow or too wide for anything that requires snap He doesn't notice-littlobservation to catch on Ha will never be way of doing things or see the He will always be a little old fashioned and a little behind the times 'Never pick out that man py judgment or accuracy of He isn't quick things the first to'adopt a different advantages of a new method e ND there is the man who looks as if his 'worst enemy-habought his If he has sandy bairland a red face he is given to wearnothing can keep him out of ing light tans If he is Ahin and-gragray clothes that make him look like a bleecbed bone If he is short and tubby he wears gay plaids Of course these men may be colorblind or their wives may buy their clothes or they may be so vain that they think they look beautiful in anything but as a rule they are men who are slacking In judgment men who have no sense of proportion men who! are overly optimistic' A clothes "jAnd always they are men who have no knowledge of themselves They have never taken their own measures and considered what they were fitted for but they have drifted into doing whatever was the easiest thing to do at the minute Amorig these imapproprlately dressed men you will find grocers Who should have been doctors doctors who should have been grocers preachers who should hae been carpenters and carpenters who should have been preachers " ttTHEN there are the men who put comfort before appearance In 1 dress They will wear broken old shoesj because they are easy on the feet They will wear a coat until it is shiny at the seams because it is loose and roomy They will wear la collar that exposes their adam's apple because it doesn't bind them in the neck "You don't need to have any one tell you that these mm have jno ambition andthat they are perfectly content to sit at the bottom of the ladder without ever making an attempt to climbi it Give that kind of a man a Job that will furnish him with food and lodging and and maybe a flivver to nae in ana ne wm stay in it for lorry years tp will never have enough pep In' him to rise above it ': it AND inj contradistinction to these there are other men who always who are always dressed Just right for the oc"look casion and whose clothes breathe the aura of prosperity hand-me-dow- ' : v-:- " spick-and-spa- n "Nine times out of ten you will be right if you size these men up as being cleyer industrious efficient and as havfnp quick sound judgment unOSTLV thy raiment as thy purse can buy for the apparel oft 1 claims thtf man' said Shakespeare It is good advice pro--v "Of course a genius can afford to dress as he pleases and be asjsioppy and as slovenly as he likes but before you neglect your personal appearance be sure that there is no mistake DOROTHY DIX about your l?eing a genius" Copyright by Public Ledger 1 WENTWORTO A — ace K — king: — X — any card Jack J f Abbreviations: Q—queen lower than 10) 1— What does Initial bid of fivs in a minor suit denote? 2—What does an lnitital bid of four in a major suit denote? 3—What does initial bid of three In a major suit denote? THE ANSWERS 1 — Ten probable tricks 2 —Eight sure tricks 3—Seven sure tricks CONSTIPATION CAUSES MANY A SLOW IIP ! But you can protect yourself No man Can do justice to his job woman can remain vivacious and happy — with constipation — no (Copyright 1928 by the Ready Reference Publishing Co) -- health and daily underminingheads painful Aching muscles nervousness blemished cheeks— these are just little thmg3 that constipation brings on In pocket money as boys by trapping the end it causes more than forty muskrats might go back to their diseases dreadful now a lines and make quite trap comfortable income on the side constiThe boy who used to sell his musk-rBegin 'now combating1 ALL-BRAis 15 cents might pation Kellogg's skins for 10 and be surprised to see skins no betguaranteed to relieve it More —ls ter than those he sold bringing as to prevent it Just eat two much as a dollar or two at th daily --- chronic cases fur auction In New York MUSKRAT SKINS HIGH NEW TORK— (By The Associated Press)—Men of today who made strength every meal ALL-BRA-N Doctors recommend because it 13 IOO7V effective Healthful and delicious with milk bran— lOO or cream or with fruit or honey Rec- added Sprinkle into soups ipes on package Sold by all grocers Served everywhere Made by Kellocs in Battle Creek at N table-spoonfu- 4T ALL-BRA- N |