Show THE OGDEN up scenes from other wars names like El Casey Santiago and Manila Bay somewhat overshadowed of recent years by such words as :' Cantlgny Belleau Wood and The Ogden btandard-Mamm- er - B C The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use for republication of any news credited to It not other In this paper and also the local news published herein wise-credite- Call 252 for "All Departments ' THE COURAGE OF CALVIN COOLIDGE Out of turmoil of Investigation and political log rolling of the con- gress just closed one! thing stands out as a beacon of assurance to all Americans of ail political creeds and that is the sublime courage of Calvin Coolidge It is not as new as it is refreshing for it dates back to the rock from whence he ' In the' hills of Vermont and was-hew- first attracted nationals attention when as gorernor of Massachusetts he gave the police of Boston to understand in no uncertain terms their oath of office was more thlffi a gesture His action at that time was particularly beneficial to the nation for it did much to check the spirit of Bolshevism that was spreading into various organizations and being winked at by men in high places who placed political expediency and personal political power above and beyond the welfare of a nation emerging from war He carried that same courage to Washington and with it went the sound Judgment born of experience That a certain measure might increase his party's vote in certain quarters or promote his political advantage did not influence his decisions if in his judgment that measure was not for the good of the American people as a whole He carried no big stick and hired no press agents to herald his policies in advance When the time came to act he acted decisireir and let the peopleJudge for themselves through information gleaned from the regular channels of news Calvin Coolidge has set a mark in American statesmanship that has not been equaled Since the days of Abraham Lincoln He has done much to bring us back to the fundamentals of American government He has set a new star in the diadem of the Republican party and made his administration an outstanding success More than this he has set a fine example in political courage for statesmen of all parties and in years to come when history is written the courage of Calvin Coolidge in defense sound government will stand as a beacon light to men aspiring to high place in governmental affairs of- - THE REAL MEANING OF MEMORIAL WEDNESDAY EVENING R v OUR BOARDING HOUSE "Today DAY Time has a way of healing things and making sharp outlines less harsh The slopes of Cemetery Ridge outside the town qf Gettysburg are grass-grow- n and peaceful Vicks-bur- g if surrounded by a smiling green parkway The woods'df Virginia's wilderness are as quiet as they were before the white men came and there are no ruined farmhouses or burned barns between Atlanta and the sea The Civil war has slipped far back into the past But today as on every 30th of May we call it back again not in all its red ugly horror but as a rather picturesque heroic roman tic memory We do this we say in order to pay homage to tha men who fought With it we conjure Yet our reverence to these things seems to be rather a surface 'mat-te- r We watch the parades and listen to the bands and orators today but tomorrow we put it all away and resume the daily routine Memorial day stands out to' most of us it is to be suspected more as a day on which we do not have to work than as a solemn time of remembrance and consecration We need to recapture the solemnity of the original Decoration day Perhaps we could do it by bringing back in all their ghastly horror the war scenes that we talk about so glibly today We speak of Gettysburg for instance and our minds picture" the splendid pageant of Pickett's charge but a man who foughj: at Gettysburg could give us a different picture He could show us men disemboweled torn asunder trampled underfoot run through with bayonets smashed to bleeding fragments a in that "splendid pageant" and if we could see the picture as he sees it we might put more spirit into our observance of the day For the day's real significance lies in the fact that a great many thousands of men have given up their lives for the sake of that red white and blue symbol that heads today's parades They surrendered their youth their hopes their dreams to die before their time and they did it for a great ideal All of the horror all of the agony of those battles are part of the price that was paid for the counBlood and try we - have today tears and sorrow and pain helped buy the peace and prosperity of Decoration day 1928 What should we do then? Chiefly t we could make our patriotism "av little deeper and broader We could do it by remembering the sacrifices that this day commemorates by reminding our selves that our heritage as Americans was dearly bought The freedom and happiness we have today did not come by chance They cost a great price We must maintain them We must be worthy of them BOULDER DAM ISSUE AT REST FOR TIME Congress has gone into recess until December without he senate's taking a vote on the bill for building a dam In Swing-Johnso- n Boulder canyon The ' bill is scheduled to come np for a vote in the em&er senate in Meanwhile been have taken for further steps of the site by a board investigation of engineers The situation is fairly satisfactory There was too much doubt and confusion about the Boulder dam bill at this time to warrant passage of the measure as it stands Much can happen in the six months before the fight is to be resumed Whether the senate would have passed the measure had it received the opportunity to - vote is not known The foes of the measure feared the senate would pass it just as the house did so they con ducted a filibuster which kept the issue from a vote Vice President Dawes does not like filibusters and many agree with him Nevertheless there are many earnest citizens in Utah Arizona and other states who believe today that the filibuster despised as it often is is the only thing that prevented passage of a dangerous and costly bit of legislation v There is little chance for when4 24000000 people are driving cars says a political leader Tne man probably never has been driving a car in a Sunday procession when the head of the parade wouldn't go more than 10 miles on hour and that in the middle of the road bol-shevis- m Every girl whether she intends to marry soon or not should keep a hope chest says a London novelist : A 'little box is a handy thing for bridge decks lethal weapons and little things like that COMPETITIOISFAND NERVES By U S PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE The hurry strain and competition of modern life has added greatly to the toll of nervous disorders among city dwellers Neurotic neurasthenic "overworked" and "temperamental" individuals appear to be more numerous Studies of nervous disorders by the Public Health service and other workers have established that individuals are as different in their mental as in their physical resistance Some able to beai? the stress are better fitted for the hurry and competition of city life than others who might breakdown under the same conditions but could maintain their usefulness in exacting environment As civilization becomes more complex and the demands "of life more exacting it is apparent to the public health officials that some way must be found whereby the ordinary person can meet the requirements of successful competition in everyday affairs In this: as in many other problems of health they feel that the basis must be laid in the training of the child to understand that different individuals have different capacities and that it is well to do one's best at all times but not well to be striving always to outstrip the other fellow Few if any children have suffered nervous breakdowns as a result of their classroom work they declare but many have fallen victim to the nervoua strain of competition and desire to lead and excel coupled with the realization that jthey are not attaining their goaL Many young persons thus stimulated beyond their capacities become introspective and melancholy The "overworked" business or professional person and the society women who suffer nervous breakdowns are regarded by the Investigators as owing their condition to similar overtaxing of their abilities For the adult who finds himself worrying staying awake and losing his mental control they advise prompt consultation of a psychiatrist or physician skilled in the treatment of nervous diseases before an actual mental disorder develops a-le- --fVte in messages French and Italian picked up by radio stations in San Francisco and elsewhere on the Pacific coast came undoubtedly from Nobile'a i dirigible Italia radio i&pt-To- R oTA MT2 A ! tiitfXly AcfcEFTepf j But the location of the airship was not given And hope rests on search at random! inside the Arctic I circle Fortunately General Nobllo has provisions foif a month with Sleds and aa full equipment aa could be He and his companions carried ara men of courage And hope need not be abandoned for several ':" weeks 4 r HAVS Ww - At VJRtTlAiO- PAVJ-- u DRINK SEX MARRIAGE AND MAKING A LIVING?" 11 -- WERE oldsters never heard 1 A BALL PLAYER TrlAM 5etS Tor vKo A vest tor 5oT HEARra lot nowadays about the problems of the younger generaWEtion as if it faced strange and perplexing difficulties of which we He HAtale-- i - viw-TlAJ- a 6 claret F It Is true thai the younger generation has" a different environment from that In which its forbears existed Thers are new Inventions new fash-len- s new customs new ways of doing things Beys and girls tuns In en ths radio instead of singing around the piano In the back parlor They step out of an evening Instead of staying at home Thty ' put by ths drop-ligdance the Black Bottom to Jazt musla fnstead of waltzing to the strains ©f the beautiful "Blue Danube" REFQSEP A CI6AR FROAA KIM ES7— "EVE A L0AU r 'v:'' ht Can the human mind conceive anything more dramatic than those messages in twoianguages coming out of the frojzen North ole region asking for help?! Who would hive dared predict such a wondir twenty-fiv- e years ago? fAu step on ths gas in the automobils of ambling along In a side-ba-r buggy UOHOTHY has the problem of deciding whether Mary off her skirts another inch at ths 4 she will-cbottom where mother had to decide whether she would add another width to her petticoats and make them trail a foot asmlonger on the ground t j ime ji or a rfuun ub Diem di aciaing wneiuer do wm d an aviator pro a1 V Z3 ZU uZl vote Or-- '0 REG BIRTH and love and marriage and death go on generation after repeating themselves endlessly without change Joy and sorrow laughter and tears struggle and anxiety success and failure the hot passions of youth that tear the heart to tatters and the healing peace of! age when pne's emotions are atrophied —millions of generations of men and women have run the gamut of the same experience There hasn't been even a new temptation invented since the serpent onerea are tne forbidden fruit Jn the Garden Pf Eden leure on record was received In a j ' certain salon The lady who reWhat then are these problems that the younger generation ceived it awakened the next morn oonf fonts? The baslo one is making a living sines ws srs ing to find a swollen infected finthe painful necessity of being fsd and clothed But under ail Im ger Her husband rushed her is nothing hew about that problem Father and grandto one of the most ex therf mediately all earns to grips with It In their father and He pensive- - physicians in town successive days And curiously enough ths younger generation made a written statement the In has to go about solving this problem of how to make money In fectlon was caused by clipping the cuticle too short The husband Just exactly the sarns way that the older generation did Nobody took thtA to the proprietor of the hat ilscqytred a niw answer to the old conundrum " f O establishment and demanded or of a suit is stilupbllL It still requires intelligence Rather than face what he bellevd THE way to Easy street and probity and the ability to stick to your thrift liduitryand be he damaging "publicly might an tUrn to Job a clerk into executive and change a small shopkeeper And the couple are now paid a ' into The merchant prince qualities that make for success are not touring Europe from what they have always been and it is no more a (Copyright 1828 by th MeNaught different! now problem f or the young man of today to win out than it was for his Syndicate Inc) j iauier jla ao bo UtTriEiK5 cr BIVOUAC 'sfOe II G Wells has a plan for management and government of this earth with one board of director running the whole thing Religions' says Wells have run their course Christianity whicn began with "the completest communism" has become the complet- DEAD great-grandfath- er $15-OO- j 3 'i Buddhism began in complete renunciation Bud&ha let the hungry tigress eat hia body Now vilest Buddha's superstition replaces teachings — and so it goes i - ' i tell-Whe- ' i Arthur Keith heavyweight British scientist denied the possibility of "Mind soul death and spirit are manifestations of a living brain and ocase to exist when the brain dies" scientists 'discuss that Many which they can't posslbly under stand life-afte- r " F G Bonflls owner and boss of the Denver Post says: "I am living now and so far as I know I wasn't living a few years - J - i v v "If that can happen anything can happen So why shouldn't I be living a fews years or a few hundred million years from now?" That's common sense If it can happen once it pan happen twice or a million times --— j Every day year in and year out 2000000 Americans are ill The average worker loses - eight days a year through What the community ineeas la intelligent pre Illness- ventlon f- ' e - ' And what moral question does the younger generation fees that! everyj generation has not faced? Drunkenness? There has always been spirituous liquors and has always ratted withi the Individual man whether hs drankjitIn moderation like a gentleman ©r guszlad it like a pig There have always been temperate men and sots who rolled In the gutter There la nothing new tin alcohol except the poisons that are put In It 13 YEARS AFTER LUSITANIA CONSIDERING the danger of drinking denatured alcohol and the jrther by bootleggers that burn up the lining ot SINKING HEIRS OF VICTIMS one's stomach and peddled half a dozen fatal diseases one would think produce BEGIN TO COJLLECT DAM that the younger generation would be far less tempted to drink than any other generation in the whole history of the world AGES LEXTE v d I "Give light and the people will find their own way' Give good public schools and you give light -- teat! - !!'- and-distribut- muffled drum'B sad rolJvhas The neighing steed the flashing blade v e The trumpet's stirring blast The soldier's last tattoo Ko more on life's parade shall meet The charge the dreadful cannon-ade That brave- and fallen few The din and shout are past On Fame's eternal camping-grounNo "war's wild note not glory'a Their silent tents are spread peal And Glory guards with solemn Shall thrill with fierce delight ' round Those breasts that nevermore shall The Wvonae of the dead ' feel The rapture of the fight No answer! of the foe's' advance Rest on' embalmed and sainted Npw swells upon the wind No troubled thought at midnight dead! Dear as the blood you gave haunts No Impious footsteps here shall Of loved ones left behind No vision of the morrow's strife tread "The herbage of your grave The warrior's dream alarms ' No braying horn nor screaming Nor shall your glory be forgot fife" ' While fame ber record keeps Or honor points the hallowed spot At dawn shall call to arms " ' 1 I Where valor proudly sleeps - ! ' Their shivered ewords are red with Yon minstrel's voiceless stone rust : j In deathless song shall Their plumed heads are bowed n Their haughty banner trailed Jn many a vanquished age hatli flownr dustj Is now their natural shroud ' The story how ye fell And plenteous funeral-tear- s have Nor wreck nor change or winter r washed blight Nor Time's remorseless doom ' The redi stains Irom each brow And their proud forms la battle Shall jaim one ray of holy light ' That gilds your glorious tomb gashed And free fromjingnlsh now —THEODORE 0!IIARA rpHE Mr Wells' plan is interesting like those of I'Jato in his "Republic" More in his "Utopia"- - and Karl Marx in hi book that became Socialthe foundation of modern ism Each one! would work as well as the other that la to say not at all Yet each is useful for it makes men think and that is important 1 -- By RODNEY threaten i i Mr Haley Fiske's big Metropoli- tan Life Insurance company started this work among its thousands of employes in addition- to advertising extremely ! valuable health v warnings Many big concerns including the federal reserve bank have followed the good example - The most valuable men Jn every organization are often thoe most in need of warning as shown by heart disease statistics Theron Rilander wanted a good place to park his car for the automobile race on the Indianapolis speedway today So on Saturday he parked his Incar at the entrance to bo first " side the gate There he waited and slept If each man took as deep Interest in his own race for success as he does in somebody else's race there would be fewer at the speed ways race tracks and baseball 500-mi- le jf parks The - NEA Service Writer WASHINGTON May than- 13 years ago the German e - embassy here advertised in the newspapers a warning to Americans against: sailing : through the war zone on British ships That was the beginning of the story of the Lueltania which was torpedoed six days later near Ireland with loss of 124 Americans whose deaths proved the greatest single factor in pushing us Into the war with Germany The Incident Is now being closed It was within a week or two of ic ' 'v :':: -:': :H !! : THERE have alwaysin been Don Juans and women who followed the the world There bafe always been men who profession were philanderers tnd women who were vamps There have always been men wh tempted women and women who tempted men always men who whispered lying promises into unsophisticated maidens' ears and weak girls who trusteH and loved not wisely but too well There havs always been petting parties and young people "who play with fire and burn their fingers : i '1 I What is new about sex? How fdtotfe ko think that the stx appeal is more potent now l:an it used to be Hew silly to bslievs that the girl of today finds l harder to resist tsmpta-tlonjtha- n her mother did or that aha la fmore allured by the fascinations of plausible villain than her mother was or that a boy la mora taken with a pretty face than! his father waa May 7 the thirteenth anniversary of the Lusltanla catastrophe that the heirs and survivors of the American victims began to receive the $2500000 'damages awarded them by the mixed claims commission against Germany Most of the money has been paid and the rest will be doled out as Yast as the remaining successful claimants file their applications with the treasury under provision of the war claims act That act provided for immediate payment of all death and personal injury claims and "all claims under $100-00- 0 The othifc claims are being paid by Installments jThe money will really come from Germany but aa it is being collected over a X A period under the Dawea rirW V decided to taktcare congress plan NEW YORK May 30 — New conscienceless rascals who take ad- of the American claimants while York is often called the City of vantage of their victims' ignorance some of them remained alive preadfui Debt because of the in- of the law Taxi drivers who borclination of most cli(f dwellers to row money on thlr machines are The mixed claims commission live far beyond their means A particular targets under the umpireshlp of Judge bankruptcy petition showing $100- Edwin B Parker of Texas started ' 000 debts and assets of a hat and One of the new night haunts Is out with 12500 claims for an nearly " in- - the Roaring Forties change of underwear infrequent Chill Vll A contributory cadse is easy Few chili endure here bur aggregate of nearly $1500000000 of credit Once one is established at this one isparlors in its third year It It scaled them down to awards one f a hotel of standing he is automati- opens at dusk and With about $200000000 close at dawn cally! eligible for a chargex account and is conducted oddly enough by American and one German memin almost every store The man a Vermont lady and her daughter ber plus Parker it handled both Who couldn't command ' 5 worth of who is rather soothing on the eye American claims and those of Gercredit in his home town gets un- At midnight the fills with many for place d property of limited credit here folk and a eoupcon of those her nationals stage one As an experiment I stepped indefinable people known' as "celeFour millions were awarded for into a Fifth avenue Jewelry shop brities" The menu contains an to purchase a cigaret case I Mad ominous line for nocturnal royster-er- s S84 American death and personal previously priced and extravagantJt reads: "Cover charge when injury claims the greater partof I ordered It necessary" ly decided to own this involving the Lusltanla fasent to my hotel and said "Charge talities Ul" !I had no charge account yet a buxom lady The These Lusltanla awards were the clerk suggested 1 take-i- t 'along seemedproprietress of holding her own capable wiUvime L with the Broadway wits the night I made strictly on the basis of what j Questioned he confessed he had! was there One of those foolish the death of a meant In no idea who I was "We take such question askers came in beamed financial Joe a topassenger tha heir Chances now and then" he said brightly and inquired: of Mr and Mrs the death For fHad I been wrong the firm would "How's the food?" heirs receivHubbard Elbert the aoi have Idst a cent It would have "Terrible" was the - acid to Elbert Hub$57500— ed $25000 been up to me to settle" Working "Everything we have has beenreply here Hubto $7500 Katherlne bard II On commission he took this chance since Xmas" on the prospect I Would become bard and $25000 to Miriam Hubhis steady customer Writers are notoriously slovenly bard Elbert and Katherlne were Most of their ef- children by Hubbard's first marin penmanship On another occasion' I ran up a forts are scarcely readable The by hi- - second Elsizeable check in a restaurant and most meticulous handwriting of any riage' Miriam were heirs to Miriam bert and suddenly discovered I hadn't my of thostars £s said to be that of estate Two Hubbard's $400000 purse I was told without a quibble Kathleen Norrls to sign my name and address on sons of the first marriage Ralph the back of the check These expeA Park avenue dinner party and Sanford were awarded nothriences are not unusual Almost turned delightfully into one of those ing: by the commission because every New Yorker finds the eame old fashioned gatherings'the other their father had not contributed easy credit The dignified guests to their support for a long time evening I have known men who have lost found themselves playing charades before his death and some important jobs suddenly and were clap-i- n and clap-oThe estate of Alfred G Vander-bil- t able to liv for two years in their guessing games of the Nineties entered a $250000 claim and accustomed manner on credit alone About Id o'clock a maid passed lt Debt accumulators of this sort through the room and the hostess was not allowed anything seem U suffer very little It Js the inquired: "Nanette where are the had spent nearly $300000 Small' wage earner who endures children?' a year on himself and family but tortures of debt "He usually falls "They are in the dining room had! left $15000000 to his widin with the loan sharks " Madam playing- roulette" "was the he ow and two children and it was Despite New York's incessant war reply shawn that he had not been adding on loan sharks they continue their to his estate Henco the decision manhanded high brigandage They are Perhaps the most expensive ' j -- mmmom J5-ye- i- n- ar i - - war-seize- ! ! " i 4 ut Van-derbi- - SEX presents no new problem to the younger generation It la no more than every other generation has been and whether it stands or falls depends as It always has depended on its own sense of honor and virtue i And what new problem doea marriage present to tha younger generation? Marriage hae always brought disillusion ths conflict of different temperaments the economto bone to be fought over There have alwaya been selfish Inconsiderate hus- -- mm - passenger liners give the American railroads at the ports a traveling party each year which exceeds the complete population of the state of Maine trans-Atlant- Sex? The younger generation seems to think that It has dlseovsrsd sex and that Its allure Is something brand nsw with' which Its ancestors have never had $o contend This Is a mistake ' It la as old as humanity Itself snd there Isn't a aex experiment from frea love and companionate marriage to mothat hasn't been tried out over and over and over agaln nogamy : DUTCHES ' The A 6 Smith company employing: several thousand men In Milwaukee! retails & staff of medical experts whoae business it is to Loxamine wih thj greatest care and without charge and without compulsion every employe from the president down Each is told exactly what his physical condition is and how to circumvent1 any illness that may It e est capitalism "Take all thou hast and give to the poor" has pbeen changed to "get all thou canst and devil take the hindmost" — '''- — 'y--v- j The most Important work now is to encourage thought knowledge And the greatest agency is the public school I 9 The Ethiopian: does not change his skin or! the leopard 'his epots least of all in politics Change from one party to another require independent thoug&t and that is Ipalnfuily difficult l ago But that is all on the outside and amounts to nothing Llfs Itself haci't changed Life never changes It Is ths same to-d-y nd yesterday and will be tomorrow': It Is ths sams as it was thousands of yssrs ago and as It will jbe thousands of yesrs hen'ce "There hsvt been many elvlllzatlons' sayt Tallyrand "butlonly one humanity1 cmott-ei- u McNary-Hau-ge- The human race is an individual on a bigger scale and it is in its It is useless to contemplate Infancy a baby two years old and plan to make a I man of it In six months You must observe how and at what rate your race or individual can grow then dp what you can to direct and promote good growth a bond salesman r Republican flEY m W Among Democrats the presiden- born and bred Democratic? I ut tial nomination is settled It's all over for Governor Smith except the campaign The question la: "Who shall run for vice president?" Some stalwart triend of the honeet rarmer is wanted one that "could capitalize the Republican farmers' hostiln ity to the president's veto" Cut how The hostility exists are you going to make a farmer j What pray are these mysterious new questions that life puts up to modern youths that It finds so hard to answer? 1 map I vaoaup ! "WHAT ARE THESE NEW PROBLEMS FACING RISING GENERA- I ION WITH WHICH WE OLDSTERS NEVER HAD TO CON- 6 I VW Miun l "x" — w n v l n l ui m ' nAVfc IU THE UUE5TIONS Or WASW sacH A BOM rte MAY 30 1928 Dorothy Dbc Talk s StfAWESPEAfcE PAITTrV SUM OT Tor EAcM AzXcu£r kf TKeV LIKE A SlbfW IS 3ooP 7rfo UlRrrK Sfte'AAiP IIMl-fABL- e 0W4 BIP PAPER WAtfTfeP VlORPf AHvfe- A A By AUTIIUH BRISBANE (Copyright 1928 by The Star Co) : PAP To From the Cold North What Vice iPresident? Another World Reform Plan F G Bonflls on the Soul Garbled By Ah era Impose VoU Mont-faucoa- PUBLISHING COMPANY J U EIdrdge jr A I— Glasmann Publishers An Independent Ncwipaptr Published every evening and Sunday morning without a muzzle or a club Matter at Entered as Second-clas- s the Postoffice Ogden Utah Established 1879 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Delivered by carrier one month 75c By mall In advance In Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming Three months' 360 Six months 1700 One 'year All other states $100 a month $1200one year Member of The Associated Press Consolidated Press NEA Service and A STANDARD-EXAMINE- bands and wivee high tempered husbands and wives extravaThere la ho new breed of husbands and wives gant wlvea and stingy husbands ! THE first husband blamed the first wife for everything that went and every husband since has followed his example aniLdoubt less Eve said the same things in reply to Adam that every wife has sine said in the heat of argument to her husband jEvery subject of domestic controversy has been threshed out by evry married couple and divorcesare still grand for the same old causes And husbands and wives who get along together still use the same brand of soft soap 'There la nothing new undsr the Sun' said the wise man 1 So ask you: "What are these new prob ems of the younger wnav angie or lire confronta them that we have ginrinoni never aeen7" JJON'T all answtr at once Copyright by Public Ledger DOROTHY DIX that his death was no financial that Bllicke's earning capacity ai loss to the heirs a realtor had pyramided an 'prig-ina- l $16000 investment intoAged sisters of Charles Froh-ma- n In Jess than 25 years He the unmarried theatrical proa year ducer slid to have died with the had spent :up assertion that death was life's most on his faintly and the commission beautiful adventure filed a claim decided Germany ought to pay for which was also denied on similar the loss of his earning power principle The commission felt no Samuel :M Knox president of relief was needed as Frohman's the New York Shipbuilding Co movie stockholdings had increased was ' awarded $15000 for injuries in value in the Lusltanla sinking and $1130 ' The two sons of Charles Klein for Joss at the time He properly: another producer who went down barely escaped with his life after are receiving $50000 They were going down under a smokestack-an- d born lit America and Klein had rescued the water being filed papers for American citizen- by a lifeboat ! He!from died in 1824 ship before his death Mrs Klein so the mojiey goes to his estate a was British got- nothing as she ' Many other claims were made subject1 and still Is to the commission which were felt to be poorly grounded A disThe widow and daughter of Al- tiller brought an unsuccessful bert U Hopkins president of the claim for $500000 claiming that Newport News Shipbuilding & had Germany brought on the war Drydock Co drew $80000 on" the and that the war had brought on claim that Hopkins had always his business! prohibition ruining on $25000-a-yea- r his salary spent his family "because of business JAPAN SELLS FLOWERS and social connections" He had TOKYO-inf (AP)— Japan last year left no estate except a small surance policy and the commis- shipped to ithe United States more sion held that he had Invested his than $1000000 of flowers which no florist bought or handled They salary lor future benefit Mrs Andrew Bilicke widw of a were! "pyre thrum flowers" used for Los AngeJes realtor got $50000 the manufacture of lnsectlde and and each of her children $30000 the 6123$ plculs or 4072 tons ex— the largest award for a single ported represented almost the enLusitania death It was shown tire Japanese crop - 00 I - " |