Show s ui THE OGDEN STAND The Ogden Standard-Examin- er head of ' his batteryt Captain Hu laniskl was the" city's spokesman and out of his wisdom and experience" he spoke with enthusiasm of service in the artillery and gave the young men valued counsel to guide them during the period they were soldiers Captain Ward was gifted with Months! before the foresight United States declared war he worked to bring about the organization of a second unit of the national guard in Ogden Captain Hulaniskl will be remembered for his rugged! "qualities and mental vigor PUBLISHING COMPANY Eldredge jr A U Glasmann Publishers An Independent Newspaper Published every evening and Sunday muzzle or a club morning without Entered at Second-clas- s Matter at the Pottoffice Ogden Utah Established 1879 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Delivered by parrter one month 75e In advance in Utah Idaho mall By Nevada and Wyoming Three) months i$t95 Six months $360 One year $700 All other states $100 a month $1200 one year DAYS OF SALT LAKE Member of fThe Associated Press THEATRE NUMBERED Consolidated press NEA Service and J Announcement Is made that the A B C and The Associated Press is exclusively Mountain States Telephone entitled to the use for republication in has Denver of any news Credited to It not other- Telegraph company in wise credited! this paper and also bought for $200000 the famous Salt the local news published herein Lake theatre and Expects eventCall 252 for All Departments ually to destroy the old playhouse to make way for the erection of a modern- - structure upon Its site J U "Woday"' CHICAGO POLICE HUMILIATE! U S An Associated Press dispatch from Chicago on Monday gives an insight into the Chicago situatioTi where the peace officers working for the TJnftjed States government and the pearje officers working for city of Chicago are at odds The government prohibition agent who Wounded a municipal court bailiff three weeks ago at the time the government was making a prohibition raid and who was secluded by government men in the federal building to prevent his being arrested by Chicago policemen finally was surrendered to the police The dispatch wound up by saying: "The object of the federal men In keeping the prohibition agent from the police foe a time they'said was to prevent any mistreatment When the police agreed not to manhandle him he was Jturned over to them" There you have a magnificent situation representatives of the United States government dickering with Chicago policemen to prevent a government employe from being kicked and battered by police officers who no doubt are pretty friendly with the owners of the premises which were raided at the time of the shooting Most of us would like to have read that a vigorous spokesman for Uncle Sam told the Chicago police something' like this: "Here's the man you seeTc to try for a shooting that took place during the course of a raid conducted by the United States government of which he was an officer We do not think you have any business arresting him but we shall turn him over to you while we take legal steps to obtain jurisdiction over him again You are to understand that this govlrnnent 'employe must cTeceive the best possible treatment during the time you have him in If he is mistreated or custody there is any monkey business whatsoever we shall move Into Chicago and make a housecleaning that will set a record for national cleanup week" 1 ' - --Trl MAKi Hour They're Here and Welcome Hoover and Rubber Sir Prummond's Idea When Lasker Obliged -- Bji ARTHUR5 BRISBANE (Copyright Il928 by Star do) 1HIS Bv AHERN Ul4o PMOOEP 'AllUUF A6ox-tHA-- Tl WAS VEMlU61b SEE MAOl : Him lirlArf II am Baron Huenefeld and Koehl German fllersv and James ' Fitz-- j mauricy the l Irishman got here and that's the main thing The Atlantic! la cheated of its prey this time All that skill and courage could accomplish the fliers! did Lack dt fuel forced them' down The Immediate need of airplanes is fuel more compact more powers lesa weight Electricity doesn't can be sent weight anything through thafr without wires Some day the flier will travel in: an electrically anven macnine picking1 up wlrelesspower from the : earth Meanwhile'-StandarOil labora- tories may i find a way to getlmorei energy into a gallon of gasoline -- -- auI HIS 's Avia-Tqr- ! LEFT AVIAtbS SAFEV SUrf! -r- ti-- -- THAWV To A KEEP tti tbtict( He Mt Vod -- -- i f two - I : Answer: It seems to me that It Is your duty to tell the girl v?hat you know about the man she Is to marry Possibly lt4 may do no goodj because a flirl who Is in love Is generally deaf to reason but you will hav given her a chance to save herself Imd at least you will have washed yoiir hands of your re sponsibllity in the matter -- : Commander Byrd f ine type of Ameridan feaUlor on water and in the airi wired to Germany that Ameridan aviators are overjoyed! 'I knew Germany could do ' lt'f That's the right spirit and expresses tne gooa wiu oi an America When a man and woman are married Is a wrong and cruel thing for any one to It wwiint II shatter their faith in each other by revealing any wrong thing that either one is doing or haa done It does no good to tell a man of some misstep his wife has made in her youth and of which he is in ignorance or even that she is flirtatious or that she is in discreet and makes eyes at other men and goes joyriding when hia Nor does it bring a worn aft anything but a broken back is turned heart for some unkind friend to tell that thet husband she loves and trusts is unfaithful to her Therei is nothing that the husband and wife can do about It except to be humiliated by the bitter knowledge and to be made jealous and miserable bvar it The good husband cannot make a flighty wife staid' and respectable Thegood wife cannot stop her wandering husband from philandering with other women OA Uia n In Barori Von Huenefeld you will see a rhan Who knows how to fight as well as: fly He went through V the war and not in the rear Sl times he Jwent to the operating table and came off alive He car ried asf mascot a shamrock that his Irish fHen& IFitzmaurice gavej himj and FitzmUrice received from Von h Huenefeld a tiny long carried silver doll that the German ' the! war through old Men ' A inmEMA3oR?5 ! PISOUISES one-inc- I come m ! escfipe slowly from f bet lief in ifetishes RT&U HAMPV OTP i wi ulnnrr ntrv On JWP1? f 1 pro-Briti- sh lias i7sf i si "pro-Britis- a - Easy-Mark-Shylo- ck ' ''"'' What Others Say I - t j' LEiriE lto per-suaded- e r I M ± A j v ! fcuto-mobilejt- i I j - co-oper- i j ANOTHER COLOR FADING j ) I d old-tim- hard-bidde- ' j - j I no-tru- j re-ent- ry no-tru- I Life's Niceties i i 1 I 3 ! ' i I j O'ne-quart- er r I j i : ' ! -- : j ' f 4 : WtTr Si ' young man is soon to be married to a DEAR youiig man has not girl "vtho Is a great friend of mine lived a clean life and there are things in his passt that are bound to act disastrously upon the woman tie marries He has not told her and Itam wondering if I should not tell her My Only object is to save her as I am myself soon to be married to the dearest girl in the world What should f 1 do? ' BOBBY -- J 7 TOR r DOROTHY DIX — A OF Hts sarr '- ' 1o T(ME- AKiP tMFbRM VOQ OF WS PROGRESS: NAS i !:- i tznftOkKAIl WoTA-noJ- von mi -- t1jwt " ! "ThE lUVJnAllO SAFEiy 4 Newi: thkt rubber is dropping and may fkji to 15 cents a pound means iiteat deal to American owners iofj 2 4000000 automobiles using 9 6 0001000 tires Thej should remember to thank Secretary Hoover for the collapse of the! British rubber trust that dnce got rubber about $1 a pound Lonrf ago Mr Hoover began his attacks ori the ingenious British plan td mkke American buyers of tires ppy the British war debt to He showed the United States what the j plan wais and now it blows tip Thatf is jai fair sample of what they caill "Mr Hoover's Inclination" Stwiltal f "T toiut sli iTsiM'aii m1±t imtim int m "in iiiirnf'i'--it It wpuld be a good thing tf we h could plant some stuff ot thelHoover brand in some NEW pTORK April 17—The only I will jbe —the night I saw her it of ourjothef statesmen —especially ever fashioned solely for was th© audience that was having tliat nunk brand new Amerl magazine A London newspaper says the those inhabitants of New York to meet the struggle she claims for herself can warships when Britain Wants with — success is The New Yorker It prince falls off his horse so often It done is a weekly publlcationn that made The tragic tale of a Siamese cat because of crowding hysterical One morn- the open and rather snooty avowal comes from a big hotel vice mmond Fraser Dru Sir prewomen-onot was issue with the race bourses We'll ident c its it first that Aftit missed Was ing patron Of thej British Institute jra old for from Dubuciue" "the aser was a lady search hfllfevfl it it ths newSoaier will ex Ranks it Complete tell Iondon's Financial Nearly all its editors are from the a sumed fallen window ha4 from es-- a it to a idea fine be would Times the how happens it prince plain hbwever to the street twenty-thre- e floors 'world storehouse df brush tablish weak-knee- d a was never falls off a danc$ floor infant that It On the fifth day there below A11 would the world's gold gold" be put In it to back up the nations nearly tbttered to oblivion during was a Weak jand plaintive meow on the first few months despite carry- a ledgel near the window The feline Down in Pennsylvania a bride on a gold basis a glittering had apparently lost about eight of ing at its mast-hea- d groom on hi3 way tp be married men who re- its nine Uvea in a cramped posiof young Of galaxy bright Britain! for a Not Idea bad Hft- went right broke his arm bow aifavored ceived from the head tion in th© vi'ind and the rain The Mr coursej ahead and got married Some peo Uncle Bam would be expected tjo waiter at the Algonquin It did not ledge Was only half as wide as its body j '(put in ( his 'gigantic pile of Igold click ple simply Ignore every favor more Then a gentleman with a hefty (Sopyright $928 by the McNaught than what double any pther Chance throws in their way bankroll got behind it New life j nation hasi'J! Syndicate Inc) Mr prurnmond kindly points odt was breathed into its pages the in fant's eyelids began to flutter and that wul(? te a splendid thing fqr was in aj short time yelping lustily Americfa We have so much jgold says hef that our country is suffe- t- The Editorial destinies are assigned Don to Harold W Ross from —of all ins: frdm credit inflation r It about is serious places —Aspen Colorado Every week in the year should laugh he week" ahimals Today seven American cities have be a "Be kind to ' D who Laskef Once Albert helpthe periodicals patterned after The New kindness To teach jto ' was Yorker Parts is issuing two and less animals is to teach kindness abominlates gambling troubled play "freeze out!' for the another is on the fire in London to all who suffer the amounf of 'si check he had won at From a cramped cubby-hol- e or are heavy laden of Journal moved into expansive of BOOMBOOJl'S ' HAPPY I am glad to learnj that the cel golf frm Herbert Fleishhacker BOOM Losing the check fices occupying almost an entire ebration of "Be Kind to Animals San 10Ffiancispo BOOM'S GLAD HE HAS NO said with jminutes Lasker floor of ja big office building week" is becoming more and in DELEGATES TO MAKE It Is siid Ralph Barton the cari more an affair of national inter- deep conviction to his opponent: HOI SAD believe "I you play poker caturist in 'its formation days ac est and j concern The cause Is Umttreally J T An" h tlin deserves one which thoroughly cepted tock In the magazine in BfI RODNEY DUTCHER his dividends all the consideration that pos lieu of cash and NEA Service Writer Our Bolshevist friends have rnade from tht sourcetoday it can his be maintain given help sibly OGDEN LOSES TWO 17— These — Calvin coolidge a similar remarkable discover elaborate establishment in tne Jttue areWASHINGTON April senator J happy days for FORMER SOLDIERS We do not hesitate to say that The "Ifravda" official organ eaya Nicolo 1A Paris Boomboom jMcWhorter candidate ate Stated United in the to so vital the developworkerp xne nothing renecia Coincidence is noted in the death magazine eaiioriany ment of the character of child "so codl to communist propaganda the smugness New for this presidency that is (Senator is confident that he of two former soldiers on the same hood and the future well-bein- g becaus they are prosperous) arid Yorklsh1 It has a jeer typically for the prov hasThe nomination sewed up He the the into state is of sucjh get hih the wages" of and both citizens almost brought a arid cheerio for Ogden inces day no has of which he Bolshevist editor The as which spent schoolroom that rightjlearned everything bearing the Manhattan has very little money J Ray Ward who was a nor even any tlrhe we says the f'aradox" of America's trademark ly and broadly understood on this And it thrives or wind of which he has plenty tain in the 145th (First Utah) field call humane education' The en- hostility to pommunlsm Is the one sort of sophistication he hium't a single delegate of word the of the character I'prosperity" nobling Whiles designed strictly for the Today artillery in the world war met an child and Correct ' To discourage jvice metropolis therein i3 the fundamental thing it according to Senator outcirculates it largely — Dr Francis II Rowley make it expensive To protect men side this area untimely deith at the age of 42 seeks McWhOrter ilea his great New York in the TT am was a hard struggle strength bif? fortunes at the top take "It hut it's in an automobile accident early deeply interested in the and a dozen such has had decade past over now" paia JMCwnorter in a I care o the! people at the bottori class education cause humane of soon which expired Sunday morning journals think it exclusive interview "I strongly to our of inanition But The New York- recent On the sarne day died Edmund T American appeals German genius invents an for a while that I might people and am hopethought to come er has it would anDear starts on the "rocket" get the delegation from my own Hulaniskl in his eightieth year ful that proper legislation may be 60 stay and has developed a half doz state but In a as as enacted speed prlncipjle reaching pi possible rapidly mjf fears were groundless I Captain Hulkniski too was a solen writers and arqsts of promise every state in the "Union to pro- miles an hdur from a standstill In while rolling up circulation dier He was an officer in the mote the teaching of humanity six seconds "My nomination is as sure as a I confidently bein our schools The istartl' is made by explddlng civil war speech by Tbm Heflin It Is an in comes A from zipping lieve telegram all our state commis- a charge of gunpowder The idea fallible politScal rule- that the canBoth were? enthusiastic artillery sionersthat true Los of education andT superin- is relied ori to carry men some day Angeles to inquire if it is jbui! didate iwith the most delegates at men Just a day or so before the tendents of public instruction will to thel outer Jimlts of our atmos-- i a Fifth tvenue store is offering the of start the convention ia never with this phere in a 'wing skyrocket'! The parasolsj in colors for men We nominated j By the law of comOgden battertesdeparted from Salt heartily — movement John J Tigert return j journey would be made by wouldn't! know about that But t pensation and converses It follows Lake from (whence they went to wouldn't! surprise us Nothing does One thing we must never for- parachlute J that the man who comes w4 learned the Nedllck who necessarily since of even Men the dreamed that get infinitely namely: escapi the in with the least delegates of all jhave Camp Kearny Ogden artillery most juice Is not a person has the best chance of all to cop important work for us Is the ing the earth's power of gravitation! sells orange name units were lined up for a farewell humane education 'of the millions in a rdcketl ship and going to the but a trade the little red apple testimonial in the city hall park who are soon to com© on the moon That Is called the Julea "And no man has any fewer dele since a male beauty Verne ilfantastlc aream or toaay Indeeq here Captain Ward was at the stage of action than I have There are some gates The feubniarine was once thf —George T Angell opened on Fifth avenue we men who haven't any more but Jules yerne fantastic dream of suspect thos rrien who talk in deep none of them are actual candi VOlCtS Ol atUlIlS UUU UUJI ttil dates J yesterdiay ear for an expected falsetto "Who can deny that the great An attetnlpt to murder the king curse of a presidential candidate is 18 but of lives of took the a with Italy By BRUCE CATTON terrifying 'Aj gentleman J ihim phobia for open spaces has been delegates? fortunately did not injure world "My good friend and esteemed The attack proved to the Central dark after walking jto park Servant Jim Watson will the taxi public SAN FRANCISCO BAY dropped back into the past the other day For how delep an attachment the Italidn every evening instructing 33 of them if he's unlucky have desbrief moment its twentieth century trappings were shed and a people have for their king driver to follow closely at his heels That mans m$f majority over Jim cendant of the brave men who so he can hop in bcene from in earlier and more colorful era was moment at any IS 33 and leaU with Cavour other three-mastegreat Two barks sole surviving windjammers in the Alaskan The otheir night in the middle of the established and made perma- park he looked about and the taxi "Yessir thia Campaign of mine Is salmon fleeti swung down the bay and out through the Golden Gate for ers of was not in nent the freedom and unity He yelled whis- based On th£ new e the Alaskan fishing ports They were manned by eight Lshellbacks i strategy— that il n tled and screamed to no avail And was Warren! stumpy-legge- d old mariners and they were Italy skippered by Harding's strategy he arriyed at an exit limp and only it was pretty hard to nominate racing masters and crews had put up a goodly sum as a bet and the him lost driver had "phe dewy him he because a few delehad Me long trip north was to be a speed contest Another Bridge in the dark and also lost his job gates !lf Jdhn Davis hadn't These two sailing vessels are survivals from the old tiays All the had a for the experience cured the gen- few delegates in 1924 it wouldn't other carriers in the Alaskan fleet are steamers" San Francisco bay tleman f his phobia and he now have taken 674 ballots to nominate By w w wejctworth eiuom sees tan masts ana spmery rigging any more In a few years walks In the park alone him either i when these two barks are laid up they "will be replaced by isteamers The "The onty man I hare to fear r — Is nearly extinct square-riggePardon-the-yaw- n note: A star In (Abbrfvlattohs: A—ace K king Dawes who i In the old days when scores of sailing vessels visited San Francisco Q—queen j J—Jack X—eny card a recent musical comedy says her now is Vice President same is ' but he'll the game playing j than lower 10) annually in jthe grain trade there were many races similar to the one greatest trial was to fight off utcome in and spoil himself 1 — At mentioned above The lean iron clippers of Liverpool (and the long play when you ter boredom the average audience probably by getting delegates on early bal wooaen snips irom juaine wouia race an the way from the Golden Gate hold A K X X X X of suit In dum- inspires In her None of the ballots count ex lots no with in card other to London huge sums were put up and captains would run amazing my the last cept hand is your what the salest — way be In wanted If to I fact nasty risks to gain a few hours advantage of makingifive tricks? "Maybe seme Chicago politician We are nore efficient now Steamers make 10000-mil- e will 2 — At say something nasty about me voyages on play youi hjld In the next touple of months Then regular schedules Cape Horn has lost most of its terrors: the doldrums A X X X X in dummy with tio ref are only a name to the sailor of 1928 the Shanghai passage is no more entries' and X X X in declarer' I can ride to the convention in an une modern sailor has an easier life than his predecessor hand Wha is the safest way to army tank (and get my picture In j We couldn't go back to the old system even if we would Modern life make at least three tricks? every Newspaper in America as the BINTS 'ON ETIQCET 3— What is the quick trick vaU candidate who defied the bombs is predicated on speed and efficiency The sailing ship slow and uncerue of Q X X? That'll !take care of the publicity tain Is out of place We cannot afford to use it 1— -- Is ' THE AXSWERS on the street bad "Just watch me go after those eating Of course we have been the gainers The world of stearii has things 1 — ILead jfrorn hand and do not manner? southern delegates! Nobody dares that the wofld of sail lacked Ease comfort' luxury and security are cover with A or K on first round 2 — Does a person with 'em money this year for pay any really the Jot of many more people now than in the days of squire sail But it 2 — tead twice from hand and manners ever chew gum pub- votes and they're pretty discour good j has not ail been us who happen to be a trifle sentimental do not cover with A until third licly? gain Those of aged But after I bring a carload cannot help jfeeling that we have lot a bit of color nothing important roundjf f 2 — Ifow should one dispose of of watermelons outside the hall and ' j 3— j perhaps butSomething that kept life from being drab and matter-of-fac- t Invite them jen masse every one of paper or rubbish on the street? So we like to read about the two California barks that are racing to (Copyright 1928 Ready Reference i THE ANSWERS those fine dusky boys will march 1 — Yes Alaska Weihopo that they have fair winds make good voyages show publishing Co) back In earning a McWhorter ' — n 2 — Never sr a profit at the end of the season on and banner" the route for stay many years The (London county council's 8 — A well-bre- d - v v- - U person has" civic yet ' tate at! Beontree will when fully pride enough to put Due ' to kh© weakness of his :out of date of slow ineffcient and course yet we hate to developed contain about 26009 tacles and never strew itit in recepThey're abouttha see mem disappear lungs the lion has little endur ' houses "streets ance or!-ar- at u til --rtfe PEPaFECrTtO ivfe UHO TlKiAJLiCET? V -- 1 SHOULD A pIRL'S FRIEND TELL HER OFHER FIANCE'S DARK PAST JHE SORDID BUSINESS OF POSTPONING HAPPl- NESS UNTIL DEATH OF WEALTH RELATIONS OLD STORY OF AN AGED MAN AND HIS GRAFTING RELATIVES MOPMiMd A SAILEP VrCQ PbALlrtr vcr --tuts cryrr WES-fEUPA- Dorothy Dix 's Litter Box vooPLE ma-T- ar 1 ALLIM3 "Tell Mim I aka please r5US-- f MEUE2 REMIAVD 1 TUESDAY EVENING APRIL 17 1928 R OUR BOARDING HOUSE " The Salt Lake theatre is the oldest playhouse In the United States today — that is the oldest structure of its kind still In use for the purpose forVhich it wan built In a state so younj that some of its founders stiil are alive the building nevertheless is surrounded with the interest that attaches to In a 'sense it historic objects stands out as significant of a great people for it informs the world that a devout religious group is a patron of the arts Members of the dramatic profession have been ti e first to cry out at rumors the theatre would be torn down And no wonder Actors have heen moreW less out of the graces of the churches and It must be refreshing fqr them to play in a theatre that wis built under the directions of an able church ' j leader In view of the interest that attaches to the old edifice regret Is expressed that it is hot to be preserved It is hot always profitable to destroy monuments to an earlier day What if Independence hall in Philadelphia had oeen torn down when pressure foij commercial building space becarrie strong? ARD-EXAMINE- I I 1 kt j i MOUNTAIN WESTEKN DrrISION 2257— KFUIt Ogden — 1330 : 0 00— Musical Program 12:30- - liOO — Musical 'Program 6:00- -' 8:00 — Musical Program — White City Orchestra 0 3529 — KOA Denver — 820 5:30 — Fundamentals of the Law 6:00 — Stromberg Carlson Pro- gram 6:30 —Singers Orchestra 7:3 0 — Farm Question Box 4685 — KET Los Angeles—640 7 : 0 0— Dinner Music Features 9:00 — Eveready Hour 9:30 — Don Amaizo Kolsten 11:00 — Dance Music 3369 — KNX Los Angles-i89- 0 8:00 — Chinese Theatre 8:30 — Courtesy Programs 9:00 — Dance Orchestras 3344—KGO Oakland —780 7:30— In Memory Lane 8:00 — Dinner Concert 9:00 — Orchestra Don Amaizo 10:00 — Pilgrims 4915—KGW Portland —610 7:00—Voters' Service 7:30 — Features (1 hours) 9:00 —Everready Don Hour Amaizo 10: 00 — Maxwell Hour Dancei 4223 —KPO San Francisco— 710 7:30 —Dinner Music t 00-1- J'- i i If we saw a friend blundering out on a bridge that we knew was rotten anil would break under his weight wei would shout warnings 'to him until' w4 were hoarse If we saw a friend about to plunge over a precipice to a horrible death we would risk our own lives to save him and we Would consider ourselves cowards and' morally guilty of murder if we let! him go to meet a terrible fate without our having raised a hand to try to prevent it j j J j To make an unhappy marriage Is a far worse calamity than to die for the agony that the marriaga bring endures for years while the sufferings of death are bdt for an Instant Yet we will let our friends wreck their lives by makinp marriages thatiwe jknow can bring them nothing but misery without lift!' ing our Voices in protest 9:00-10:3- 1 9:00 — NBC Programs 10:00— Kolster Hour 11:00— Dance (2 hours) Mi - J Today's Radio TIME I Many a'igirl marries a man who is a drunkard or a gambler or a bigamist or Who is diseased without knowing1 it Many a man marries a girl with a dark past or who has the curse Of some hereditary disease in her v4ins without knowing it when each had friends who could hav warned thenk before they took the fatal step j Of course the Infatuated lovers may: not listen Generally them the thing they they don't and hate the one who told Who has tried to save didn't want to know but at any rate he them ' haJs N DOROTHY DIX shrived his own conscience 'I' j DIX— I am a young girl anJ We been barrled almost but my husband and I do not live together although we love each other dearly The reason is that j I have a relative who is I marTied a man quite wealthy and from whom V have expectation DEAR klSS of a different faith than hers and if she knew that I tparrled without mother Is afraid' that Bhe her consent she would disinherit me-Mwould disinherit her also and she keeps me find my husband apart By next fall we shall have enough to start our own homo and live until this relative dies very comfortably Would you advise me to wait II 'j O B or be happy on our own initiative? Answer: I should certainly advise you and your husband to have enoiigh spunk and backbone to announce your marriage right away and set up your own home— no matter how htimble It Is for a dead woman's shoes for many reasons One It is because they are a long time coming People that you wait for to die seem tobe endowed with as many lives as a cat and live On and on anc on and on j S( 3486— KJH Seattle— S80 7:30 — Dinner Concert 8:30 —Tenor Two Pant Twins 2 hours) 10:00 — Orchestras S702 — K1IQ Spokane — 810 7:00 — Orchestra 7:30 — Features (2 hours) 10:00 — Maxwell Hour Dance 3028 — KSL Salt Lake— 990 6:00 —Ogden Livestock Market 6:30 — New York Stock Market and Chicago Grain Market 7:00-Salt Lake Mining Market 7:05 — Trio 7:30— Quartet 8:00— Male Quartet 9:00 — Instrumental Ensemble 9:30 — Songs and Music Of the ' Past 10:00— Studio Program 11:00 — Dance Music Broadcast 11:30 — Time t 2343— IvDYL Salt Lake 6:00 — Program 6:30— Dinner Hour Program 700 —' American and National league baseball reports 7:05 —Nightly Doings 7:1 0 — Variety Period 7:55 — Financial Resumfe Bv Instrumental 9:00 — Studio Program 10:50 — Orchestra 10:30 —Studio Program 10:50 — Orehesetra 11:30 — Remote Control 12:00— Time Report the time this woman dies you andivour husband may be people yourselves and you will have wasted all of middle-age- d the sweetness and freshness of your youth you will have missed all the glamour of young love and In the unnatural relationship which exists' between you you will almost: certainly quarrel ana drift ap4rt -- ' j ill-waiti- — -- f Another reason why it la for k dead woman's shoes Is because you are so apt not to get them in the phd I have known dozens of people who danced attention for twenty or thirty years on a crochety whimsical old woman who put up with herf abuses who: were veritable slaves to her anq never dared called their souls their own and then in the end when! they: expected te be repaid when the will was read It was found that shef Jiad left her fortune to build a home for senile tomcats or disabled: cinary birds ii m iS:n You certainly will be making a foojisfi 'gamble If you stake your life's happiness on the chances of Iwhat a notlonate old woman is oing to leave you when she dl!j J '' j '! j And the third reason why It is jfor a dead woman's shoes is because nothing else Is so utterly demoralizing 16 one's charhcter Every minute of the time murder will be in yHf" heart because yon are wishing that she would die and leave you jfreeiogo to your husband It will make a liar and a hypocrite of you (bepause you will have to f ' flatter and cajole her and hide from her yduri tjecret f Years Ago From Our Files T fil!l I'- J - So I earnestly advise you to have the QUrage and Independence to defy your relatives and live your olwn life' You and your husband are young Go to work and honestly earn your money Don't wait for an old woman to give it t you You will be a thousand times better off standing on yoijown feet than you will depending on her and you will be jhappler For take it from me my child If you put your husband ff until your relative dies you will lose him No man who is worth having would stand for that sort of treatment DOROTHf DI3C' OGDEN— 20 j! So the friends of married couples should hold their peace home and when they know something that would disrupt In But a other and each confident wife's husband's destroy beforfe couple are married it It a very different matter and then It becomes a crime for those who Kjnow some Just cause why this couple should not be joined together in the bonds of holy ilwedlock as the marriage service - says to remain silent ( 8 : 00 — I ' " ! Elder Edward H Chambers son u of County Treasurer Chambers re — to'iij! Ayear ago I was nicely turned from Europe where he DEAR MISS DIX I am an old man over in a good hotel and had rented my home out for $200 a spent two years on a church mis slon Accompanying him to Utah month: Perhaps I felt under obligations toj schn p relatives "by marlrage were 97 converts to the church for some'nice Sunday dinners Anyway theyjiame to me in a panic F W Stecher of Cleveland Ohio when they were ordered out of their apartmfhi and told me that If I the originator of "Pompellan would let them go into my house they would make me a rilce home with Face Cream" Is In Ogden visiting home cooking and care In a moment of weakness I fell z But now that I am with them I get npttflhg na food no 'care no his brother Paul W Stecher Chairman F J Hendershot of decent place to live and l have the annoyance of the worst child I ever E Q B the Republican county central saw The house is bedlam What shall I do? y committee has called a meeting to ' k consider a date for holding pri ib -Answer ' to select delegates to the maries Tell your troubles to the police and get them to evict your Republican state convention' grafting relatives so that you can rent your house out again and Chief of Police Browning and go back to your hotel Your experience jls that of ninety-ninthe entire police department to old people out of a hundred who undertake to live with their gether with Sheriff Wilson and his ' kinfolks They are all promises and no (performance force are spending several hours I DOROTHY DIX i each day keeping the hordes of '' Public Lcidger by Copyright unemployed m$n moving through Ogden John Plngree John S Lewis A R Hey wood 8 W Badcon and SO YEARS IN BUSINESS Thomas H Carr have been selected as a committee to choose a name for the Ogden Press club show which Is to be presented at the j - f ! : -- ' - ' e 1 t Off Grand Opera house May 1 "The District Leader" Is playing at the Grand Members of Nichols band in their new uniforms are to parade the streets of the business district tonight Mme Anna Gould and Prince Helie De Sagan were married In a small frontier town In Germany Unless trees have been given better than ordinary handling in the operations - of transplanting their roots will need some trimming broken and bruised roots should be pruned with a clean cut mm And Company Member Salt Lake Stock and Mining Exchange UTAH MINES AND INDUSTRIALS t 4154 ' Phones— Wasatchi ' ! - 4153-Wakatc- Stock Exchange Building Salt Lake City Utah PANORAMIC VIEW OF TINTIO inNINQ DISTRICT " ' " I r ON REQUEST j !i - 'turn |