Show The Ogden Standard - Examiner J PUBLISHING CO Jr A L Glasmann Publisher An Independent Newspaper Published every evening and Sunday morning without a muzzle or a club Entered as Seccrd-cls- s Matter at the Postoff ice Ogderr-UtaEstablished 1879 U Etdrecfge h SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier one month 75c By mailt in advance In Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming Three nnontht Six months One year All other states $100 a month one year Member of The Associated United Press Consolidated Press " Press CldT252 rorAlFDeparlnieiita STANtSARD-EXAMINE- R ! fzr r vi vk T tt t n ttt TO BC HEARD YKLL -- I UK£-ttf- & Sikc& I L0Ki(3! BRISBANE (Copyright 1928 by The Stiar Co) Summer dalijcht saving has ended To the ambitious thati makes no difference They begin s the day's work and the nihtls sleep early passing- the failures at both ends of the day JrTSEtJi LIKE A I "1"ME WARPROBE MAW EVEM 6E--T PRESSEP aILL Mod SQliAMPER wt A 7 VUAS H 5BA ISUUlPEd Aieul A E6AP J v m r SK1R-T- M live-mor- X VEMJfdfE7 ' k-- Stand-srd-Examin- far-flun- g " i WHY SOME OF US SLEEP Why do people go to sleep ¥ in churches? The problem probably is as old as Christianity itself In colonial days it was solved by having deacons prowl up and down the aisles with long knobbed sticks with which they tapped sharply the heads of all who dozed Dr Edmund Jacobson of tile University of Chicago has studied the question and thinks he knov3 the answer Complete muscular relaxa-Ho- n he says brings with it relaxation of the thinking powers Tho mail who blumps down in his seat inert and motionless as possible cannot keep his senses alert Consequently he fails to concentrate on the sermon and goes to sleep We" don't know just what the remedy should be Apparently however the moral is that the body as well as the mind must be 'kept alert and responsive while in church Otherwise some of the pastor's gems of wisdom are apt to go unIN CHUjRCH heard BUSES HURT DAY COACH BUSINESS If you don't think that tho auto- moDue anu me ous nave given me railroad executives Fomething to think about consider these figures contained in the 192S Yearbook of Railroad Information just issued During 1927 class one railroads carried 829845522 passengers — fewer than were carried away back in 1911 Furthermore during each of the last four years there has heen a snrinKage in tne totai The country is more prosperous and more populous than it was 16 years In these days when the majority of girls are tha average girl doe not better her condition by getting married She gives up a position in an office or store for a job that has twice as much work to it and no pay envelope attached Very few young husbandsare able to dress theirtwlyes as well as the giri dressed before marriage when they were earning their own money Nor can the average youn wif indulge in the amusements and the diversions to which she treated ' herself when she was single Jf therefore the average woman marrie for money she a poor hand at picking out mutt be a rotten financier-en- gg - - ive-da- far-fro- 1 m 3! e J8 B U S Nt BY mil I ' ' ' like 1 MT Off StAVICl INC E in the old days when woman did have to obey husband wive secretly hated their lord because It take a humbler spirit than most cf us possess to make us love our master Deubtleaa thif New York EDTIME DAY BY DAY Stories Bj JERRY JtCSCRAT IS WORRIED O O MTNTTRE NEW YORK— New York is Ohootingly dubbed the roott inAmerican city Th hospitable I upon stranger stepping frem his A train or steamer is pepularly supposed to be taken over the jumps by everybody frem the taxi gypper to the Broadway racketeer The truth is that no other city has such a tax upon Its hospitality or responds so gallantly There are exclusive of eemmuters about 76000 visitors daily streaming into our midst expecting te be entertained by friends and i acquaintance Their attitude is: "Well here we are" and they expect the cliff dwellers to do their etuff Now in the smallest communities peepla have engagement as a rule for several days ahead and in "cities The triangular fur scarf is go on account ©f distances and mulirig to be in vogue for fall This tiple activities eften weeks ahead is one of beige broadtail run Not much ot a 1 have through a modernistic ring of at the moment engagements that Lrown enamel require my attention for the next ten days Tet tha average Visiter will call up frem the station to announce he is in town and what form of Old Harry will be ra'sed tonight MOUNTAIN TIME It is as a rule the suggestion to attend the reigning theatrical hit WESTFRX DIVISION seats for which at the outside can2237 —KFUR Ogden-- 1 S3 0 not be secured in lees than a week 9:00-10:- 4 5 — Musical and spend the rest of the night In 'program 1:00- - 2:00 — Program a scamper uice den If the na6:30- - 0:00 — Musical program tive hems and haws he finds a de— White City gardens cided drop in temperature and la0 — ter hears he has grown terrifically KOA 3259 — high hat Orchestras' 6:30 Despite all this life in New Tork 7:30 — Farm questions Eskimos consist largely ih entertaining out 8:25— Variety The burden fall 9:00 — Orchestra: Musical Mixture of -- town friends heaviest on those who live in tiny 9:30 — DancVrnusie apartments and must sleep on the 46S5--KIx)s Angeles— 810 floor or in the kitchen sink to 7:00 — Symphonet detective make the visitor comfortable ften By THORNTON V BURGESS Worry neverfbelps you win It will however " make you thin — Old Mother Jerry Muskrat'a new house was about half 'completed when the great rain fell It began raining early in the morning Jerry didn't mind it It didn't Interfere with his work at all He could work just as well in thei' rain as if joll round It bright Mr $un was shining rained all thstt day The waters in the laughing:!) brook began to rise and of course it rose in the Smiling Pool At first Jerry didn't mind Of course there is always this more water in the Laughing' Brook when it rains Jerry didn't pay any attention to it Jerry worked hard that day and he was tred He went to bed in hia new hjjuse and because he was tired hj soon went to sleep He was awakened by wattr Yes sir he found that he was tleeping in water There was water all ever the flor of his new house Instantly Jeriry was very w ide He idived down through awake the little tunnel that led out from his house anici the minute he was outside he knew that something as wrong There was a strong current in the Smiling Pool There should have been hardly any current at all When Jerry poked his head above wjater he found that it was still raining and raining hard The Laughing Brook was no longer laughing j The now it made was a roar father than a laugh Only half of his roof was above vater now Qnly in tho spring had he ever seen the Smiling Pool as big as it now was "This Is bad" said Jerry "I Btovtos hope the water will not rise any more I guess iptt won't do any harm — Evecady Amaizos to my newhoue but ifit should 10:00 — Concert orchestra I wouldn's like get much higher ' S814 — GO Oakland — 780 ' T it"But 7i:30 — Stroking Troubadour Jerry jwasn't very much 5:00-- Memory Lane worried This wasn't tne time of 9:00 — Light opera Gitanos If it should stop 10:00 — The Pilgrims year for floods soon would go raining the yater 4915— KG W Portland— 610 down Jerry I knew this So he S00 — Memory Lane sat on top! of hia house und 9:00 — Eveready program watched Little by little little by 9:30 — Amaizos music little alowly but steadily the wa- 11:00 — Dance music (two hours) ter "crep farther up the roof By 2342 — KDYf j Salt liaue — 1280 the time dayligh came and Jerry 6:85 — Kalt lAke stock and mining could see arofnd only the top of exchange his roof like a little inland was fi:55 — Announcement Now Jerry- did above the waer 7:00 — Announcements begin to worrf in earnsU 8:00— Harmony lime — '1 I 11 "tCa-tur- e gad-abo- ut adio Today's — x 9:00-10:0- ii ij Fl -- i 9:00 — Popular- artists 10:00 — Program 11:00 — Dance music 12i00 — Time 302S — KSL Salt Lake— 990 - It takes many years for th New Yorker to tire of entertaiftipg his visitors There Is an endless thrill in revealing the wonders of the metropolis New York would not be the same without this feature But the vlaitor hould display the earn consideration he expect of the New Torker who visit him MONTICELLO AND THE NATION (New York Times) While no one ever doubted tho success of the drive for funds to acquire and restore Monticcllo tho home of Thomas Jefferson it is Interesting to note that only S2S500 remains to be raised in order to complete the transaction Most of the contributions have been small showing the widespread interest in the project The preservation of Monticello has had the double interest of its political and its esthetic significance It goes without saying that the home of Jefferson is a national ehrirfe Of all the figures' of Revolutionary days his next to that-o- f Washington has always commanded the greatest popular interest It was lamilton's misfortune to have been more interested in achievement than in popular acclaim He never had the place in the affection of posterity to Which his great constructive work entitles him Rut Jefferson was loved Furthermore he put his own devotion into his house at llonticello and made of it one of tho most interesting and beautiful houses "of early America Thanks to the work of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation it ha3 been restored as nearly as possible to what it was when he occupied it Thiilip Sassoon under- - sefcre tary for air for Great Britain st rts to-t- o Jn- day on a flight frm Londori dia Wise Britain takes fly fng se rtouslyi "GIVK YOUTH CIIANC LONDON1---Fir- st offenders will be piven a chance to com back in this metropolitan area A let- teT addressed recently to magis- tratea by the home offi c© ex- presses the wish "that every court before committing a young offender to prjson will satisfy itself that this course is inevit- able and that: no other inethod of treatment can be properly em- ployed 1 f The natives of parfur of the Sudan) store Vater n hoi- low trees against drought! ' Of course when a husband doe attempt to assert his marital supremacy and Issue command to hi wife there I a f ight that generally leaves Minnie In poasetiion of V — — the field Undoubtedly most men do marry women for love Slone and this brings ns face to face with the most insoluble ot all problems and that is why when they marry for love do they so soon faJJ out of love?" For in the great majority of casss the ardent lover Is soon metamorphosed Into the indifferent husband and the man who brokers neck to get a woman in only a short time is breaking his neck trying to get away from her I do not agree wtih you that it would add to the happtnet of men and women If they lived together in an illicit relation' ship because if they eared for each other at all they would be beset continually by the specters of fear and jealousy Eaeh would know that he or she had no hold upon the other except the fancy of the moment and he or she would live In dread of ome one along who helcT more allure — et-nd-do- g else-comin- The thing that makes most for happiness In marriage is the settled and final feeling The permanent home that one builds up knowing It is going to endure the husband and wife who are bound together so that they hive the same name the same interests the same obliga tions and responsibilities and share in the same rewards Liaisons are nearly always short You very rarely-hea- r of a man who has been faithful to a mistress through many year and who still cherishes her when she get old and ugly but many marriages endure for fifty or sixty yer and many old husbands and wive are still' lover DOROTHY DIX ' - pened to draw a blank In the matrimonial lottery? If she has youth beauty and brains would she be on a par with a maiden of similar dualities? Is the divorcee without money no matter how charming ' ' TWENTY-FiVdoomed matrimonially peaklng? E ANSWER: Men have no ettled policy as regard a divorced woman It all depends en the Individual man Some men have relig' ious and conscientious scruples against marrying a grass-widoIt would be repugnant to the taste of other men to know that their wives had husbands alive whom they: were likely to meet at any moment while to many other men It would be a matter of complete indifference whether a woman had had previous v matrlmonlarentang!ment or not " w Also it would depend a good deal on what the grounds for tha divorce were Not many men would care tot marry a woman who had been faithless to her husband or who had' left him just because sua got tired of him gr because she was fickle and wanted to! change or because she couldn't get along with the man to whom she was married For the man would argue that the woman who was untrue to one main would be untrue to another that she who didn't know her mind at one time might not know it at another timevand that the woman who' The New Yorker who calls up a is hard to get along with and who doesn't know now to manage men friend in another Oily usually re- might make a trying life companion V x i ceives a hearty MGlad you are here'f and a vague Intimatien that But that the divorcees who have youth and beauty and "we must get together" But brains and charm are not considered taboo by men IS amply the situation and the visitor proved by the fact that we see them marrying all around us to New York is hurt If he does not DOROTHY DIX every day receive a pot Invitation to don th Public Copyright by Ledger war paint that very evening re'-ver- se i An example of Quick was displayed by a banquetthinking ipeak-e- r the other evening In the midst 7:15 — Republican broadcast 6f his talk an excited guest saw a 7P'30 — Duettists" ' mouse — and could not" refrain from Remote control broadcast $00 "There Hotel Utah presenting male pointing and ehoUting: goes a mouse!" When the assemquartet 9:00— Governor E P Morrow blage looked the mouse was gone "Pleas pardon th condition of miy Kentucky esteemed friend" said the speaker J0:00 — Ensemble with vocalists 10:30 — Dance music quickly and went on with hU 13:50 — Time signal speech Trigger stuff! The latest in was displayed in 4 Supper rendezvous the other evehinsr When a lady wearing glasses with tortoise shell rims flecked with chip diamond popped In Heaveft-knows-wh- irt'ii can't stay here very much longer" said Jerry '"I can't stat nere very much longer" taid Jerry "If the water keep on coming tip It v ill oon be over this houst and I don't know what will happen It looks bad It looks very bad at did look biad Both the Smiling Pool and the Laugbing Brook were over their banks The Green Meadows were being flooded as so often haippen early in just the fpring And tili it rained Kow that the water? was flowing over the Green Meadows it diun't rise ouite so fast" But it was still rising just the same Jerry clung to the top of the hou$e There was now only a1 few inches around him that the water had iot covered Jerry began to wondef what he should do Little by little little by little tha waiter crept ups His tc&t were- wet now He was eitting in waterl His splendid new house was entirely covered by water There was no us© in sitting thr any longer Jerry pushed off and began to swim He headed toward the nearest land he could see "Oh dear!" thought Jerry "I hope my new house won't be swept Tee sir I hope my new away housa' won't be swept away This v dreadful!" (Coryright 132? T W Burgess) The nest storv: "Mrs Muakimt Joins Jerry i i' trrrriipg'iirninii'Ai:?! "1 rood ( - ' I ' '': ' si"' at And according to a Broadway 'dentist there have been three burlesque ladies in the past year who have diamonds set in their teeth Bt WAIE WERNER - Cab— It appear Th most entrancing' of the American negro is about to sjing childhood memory wa figure a hurly snd dance his way into a- place of steamboat mate with every tooth importance in the movies capped with gold He wa known Heretofore producers have fought locally as "Yukon Charlie" and the ehy of descriptions of modern ne legend was he had mined the geld gro life in this country' preferring for his teeth In Alaska He was to go to the polar regions and film a rare favorite with th ladies of the life of the Eskimo or make an the levee— a Cameo KIrby ef his elephant picture in Siam whtn they day Wre often wonder what hid wanted something unusual But statu would be with the advent of the talking screen teeth not rated aotoday hot Among gld has caused them to reconsider for where is a tribe of human beings so beautifully adapted to sound- New York news6aBermft picture treatment as the American longer than thos in Fleet street negro with his banjo his 'blues' says the London Bystander and his spirituals and his dialect? have no time for cricket The King Vldor who for three years idea! Cricket la oUr secret vlhas been trying to inoculate pro- That and sailing paper beat ducers with his enthusiasm for an (Cepyriffht lfj by th won picture has finally were Syndicate Ine) his point because those who to unable iee anything Interesting in the flickering of silent negroes SMALLEST FLAN on a screen could understand at VIENA — What Ulbtljeved to be once the popular appeal of the ne-- the smallest airplane In th world was recently flown for nine and gro in his musical moments hours by Kaszala HunA race was run in Australia re garian airman The plane weighs cently between an oftrich and a but 300 pound and has an engine HOLLYWOOD - - -- n-nr- lr - Mc-Nau- ght all-neg- ro i one-ha- lf horse ' DEAR MISS DIX— What is man's attitude matrimonially! to the woman? Does he condemn her merely because she hap- out-of-to- "An-udde- younjar man may' deoide to l uiiaiuei v uiijji essmari voneii s BUS But in these times of female emancipation no woman takes seriously her promise to obey her husband — even when she makes it which isn't often Nor is she weighted down by a sense ot her husband's authority over her She feels so little a elave that it really doesn't influence her mental attitude toward her husband at all 7:00-—-Progra- g abl V Just look around you at the men that women marry Mrj Man an4 you will have to withdraw your statement that they "marry for gain There nothing but love blind adoring love that doesn't count the consequences that makes them do It Si ALLTHE WST KSSF FASHION PLAQUE — 4" urgess - - V self-supportin- g i O pinions of the Press f : married at all because each would know that he or she was free to go when he or This would make them very she pleased careful not to hurt each other's feeling!' But when they are bound together tlfey can treat each other as they please because it' is not so jasy to break apart What do you think? A DISGUSTED MAN ANSWER: Of courae there Is an occasional woman who rrtarrle for money or po DOROTHY DIX sition or a meal ticket but the proof that the majority of women marry fer f love I feund in the fact that they choose as husbands poor men who have nothing to give them ' 1 cow-milkin- 'J Ill Ml ' n s idge-Kello- - tii--: CLOTHES 1 ' w Bar moYh!im6 'Box MISS DIX—I don't believe that any girl or woman ever lovea fj£AR a man for himself alone A woman marries a man to get somebody to support her and as oon as she is married and feels that she ha tr obey her husband she resents the fact and ceases to love him But when a man marries he marries a woman for love alone and nothing else matters I believe that men and women wottld peaceably together if they were not (Ad She WHEM £ SOli-f- Tixs Jetter THE FACT THAT SO MANY GIRLS WED POOR MEN j DISPROVES THE THEORY ''THAT THEY MARRY FOR MONEY7 THE MATRIMONIAL PROSPECTS OF THE DIVORCEE PROMEJAPfzP MW ' ' ? -- ELIZA WAS QLP MEi "Rope— clv HeR EFUOEE'S MAP V1 ARTirat To attract attention make yourself heard! That seems to j be the motto of Walker's department store' In Ios Angeles publishing today in More complete reports Indicate the Los Angeles Examiner one adof fifteen pages — one that Florida has suffered as much vertisement twelve-pag- e section plus! three" in the recent hurricane as in the pages in another section ' ' f disaster of 1926 The list of dead Is to It safe say that notyody in keeps growing and there is a con- and around Los Angeles wijl over otore stantly swellipg total of injured look the fact that the Walker birth celebratig its twenty-thir- d and homeless' and has things for salei The rest of the country fhould day This will interest merchant? and and undoubtedly will be quick to sum puhhshers everywhere rescue Whatever come to the ' There are many ingenioi i ways is asked of us we must be sure to of I ut i he attracting: attention give it — and give it promptly quickest shortest surGt w y is to in relief work may cost many yell when you have some ing to yell about "': lives Florida can be depended upon to Britain "pleased" with th e Cool- note in the recover from the effects of this hur to Eritieh outwit the plan ricane as speedily as she did two States in a naval agreem em t le- years ago Isut just at this mo- minds you of the salesman kicked ten flights of stairs a dif-to- p ment the load i greater than down ferent man kicking at the of of rest can the The Florida carry each flight On the sidew a k he remarked: ''What a wonder ul FS- country must come to the rescue tern you got" "BELL'S A RINGING Mrs James Stillman energetic CAT'S A SINGING" and intelligent wife of a well Two men' were passing: a school known financier starts a "Panorama building Striding briskly around called Mrs Stillman writes ahout the the edifice was an upstanding latest fashions which she under youngster who vigorously clanged a stands and wears' A woman less bell as ho strode Children who a wise would have' chosen to write about political economy of Juris second before had been! running prudence wildly- at their play became order- Poing Mrs Stillman a favor ly and disciplined small souls which she will not apprec l te un- "Do ycMi see that boy with the til later we' tell her that on the 'bell?" one man asked the other present basis her weekly wi ill lose money and in due time lik Lucy "Ho is actually a young man set will "cease to be" in spite of her apart Do you realize that in a two able editors If Mrs Stillman will ma ke her school of several hundred pupils all and "exclusively about weekly only one is selected to ring the women s fashion it will e suc- Th s is an bell? In my day a boy would do cessful and profitable of age specialization almost anything to get the job of bell ringer I hat the job one year A British boy dug up 600 Roman and I was mighty proud of it I silver coins buried four fee below The British law of surface well remember my first trip around the "treasure trove" says "it doth be the building with the smaller kids long to the king" The king1 will reward th e little following me and shouting: 'The boybell's a ringing the cat's a singing' You know I have often thought Under old German law as told that we former school bell ringers by Goethe In the second part of Faust a farmer can keep an ought to organize a society a na- are turned up by his own tional organization jwith officers share v That wasn't all generosity badges meeting places and everyThe famer ploughed deep hoping thing I have heard that the for- to dig up something got better mer organ blowers are doing this crops and his ruler sharing the It wouldn't be a bad idea at all crop got more than trcasun e trove could have given him What do you think?" Building trades unions in New The companion his begged York demand the five-da- y week friend's pardon which is sound In five days work"Blessed if I paid much attention ing cheerfully well rested after days of leisure used sensibly to what you were saying" he said two workers would do as much as they "I was so busy wondering how the pould do in six days of ordinary school folks get the children- so well work if they would trained My wife and I often must As Ford says the f y call our youngster Jialf a dozen week Henry is needed to increase prosper- times to get him home from the ity by giving men a chance to spend they earn neighbor's across the street I just what Let a man earn good wa es for saw that kid leg it to the school five days spending his money sen- door as fast as he could go merely sibly on Saturday and Sun qay and pros- because he heard a school bell ring you will' halve a better more cird ulating perous country wages How do they do it?" usefully less money going tb race- tracks speakeasies and oth fr fool- Duck hunters instead of pro- ishness i pounding that old wheeze: Why did Russian justice is interesting they built the ocean so close to the loung Russians in Rost ff opgoyernm nt de- shore? are asking why is our club posed to Russia's etded to try "counter-revolu- t ion" house so the lake? Their plan was to blow up bridges kill and terrorize1 When girl in Toliticians might as well take their confidence Zinaida Iilc a vacation for a week commencing threatened to tell they drow ed her Thursday Who will have time to "Crime of passion " said lussian follow politics with the world series ju&uc-sentencing two youn g men to ten years in jail Learniri S later in the spotlight? n not that it was! counter-revolu- ti wi ptob-- n Russian "passion" justice Roger Rabson lists 70 ways to ably execute the young mi and make a million dollars And doesn't several of their associates even mention' tho invention of a nina preparing a regu la r tar- disappearing receptable for used iff like western nations g ee not razor blades please the western nations They wish to dump whatever thd y nave Chinese biarket One of the big college football lor saleat onto the least to regulate a ny tar- freely teams 1s to travel 10000 miles this iff collect Chine?e duties a nd payyear A football player has to get to themselves the money that China owes them an education some way ' China has a long way to go on for Suggested campaign song her new tariff journey before 1928: "Whisper and I Shall Hear" producing: the steel mills o ' Pittsburg or silk mills of France But Over the picture of Ima Leslie without tariff protection feuch a country as China exists merely for champion some face- - tho benefit of other nations just r as ours would do tious captioneer has written Champion" Which all will Governor's island south o f Man- agree is udderly absurd hattan in the shadow of Jsew York's great skyscrapers oflfte rs an a viation aumirame - reaay-maa- e CHAMIUfcXK IX RXVFIl ncid Rorlin — German wine smugglers Thi government proposes o spoil Inst some of their Ftock"3n-trad- e it wijh barracks that might be lo- recently when bathers at' Coblcnz anywhere else- found so Vera! crises of French cated That foolish w aste- f champagne in the Rhine Police a great represents opportunity hrlioVo that the wine was smug gltMl from Franco and hidden in tho river ponding an opportunity New York "asks the government to to take it into the city us pian ana une uovernor s inaiip island for an" airport call BEEM SO Y Dorothy -- Mb4 VIRST OF E CWThf S j BRITAIN" PLEASED —EASILY MRS STILLMAN'S WEEKLY By By AHERK Do-la- y of the world's greatest news patherinp: furnish the teleorganizations news to The OSdon graphed Two sets of automatic printer telegraph maclfmes instead of one set now hum buzz and click as they unreel yards and yards of dispatches from all parts of the world" Along sidft The Associated Press equipment for'bringing to us 'tho news gathered' by the "vast and Associated Tress ' Ftnff of news gatherers there now functions the automatic equipment of the United Tress associations Two great armies of reporters and editors now are providing1 the telegraph news for this newspaper for six days of the week and "on Sunday there is the third the Consolidated Tress All this means a better newspaper It meanH that Tlf Standard-Examiner is growing and that means that Ogden and its vicinity V are growing Nearly three years -- ago The Standard-Examiner took note of the forward strides the city was taking It left its old quarters and moved into a new home where there was room for the expansion it knew would be necessary The paper installed the most modern equipment It doubled its press capacity It increased its staff for the gathering of local news and increased its service to advertisers With the addition of the new wire service The Standard-Examine- r takes pride in announcing its ability to furnish to its Ireaders such excellent world coverage of news events as is nowpossihle with The Associated Tress the United Tress and the Consolidated Tress i OUR BOARDING HOUSE Today" i $195 $360 5700 FLORIDA NEEDS $1200 PLENTY OF HELP NEA Servicemark A B C The Associat&d Press Is exclusively entitled to the ' use for republication "qf any news credited to It not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein GROWS WITH OGDEN Commencing Monday ago but the railway passenger business Is falling off Obviously there Is only one an- - " er— the automobile Is interesting however to note that the bulk of this decline comes la the day coach business' Railway revenues from Pullman car passengers continue to rise But whereas day coach receipts for 1921 were $703402216 in 1927 they had fallen to $534222334 i Small wonder that de lujje "trains are being put on with frequent excursion rates and plentiful advertising ! of Jy is horsepower Hungarian Paprika! Vivid color - and a soft roselike savor In a handsome container for fine tabic use |