Show — —J Fifty-nint- h r-- — ti KM AT THIS PART OF CAMPAIGN r ' jm T ' It Outshbuts All Else And Political Chiefs Are Worried s i i 1 : What a distressing thought the old philosopher gave us when he said that if all men knew what be others Bay of them there would ' ' friends few ! Perhaps that is only another way of saying that peopje talk lightly of each other j Even friends will gossip and offer adverse criticism but that alone should not destroy friendships Sometimes a discounting remark is tribute prompted' by envy Rusklri told us that October's foliage yellows with his coldus and it is now nature students inform not the frost but the end of the season's fruition that brings the j sere and the yellow It Is the history back of the it to put forth plant which has led to prepare for its leaves and then winter by ceasing to bear What memories the plants have that they know how best to perpetuate themselves Even the cells of our body — even the cancer cells— have memory The cancer cell is said to be an with ordinary cell other cells to build the body but when something goes wrong so as to threaten Its 'destruction it remembers its primitive strupjde at and it begins-t- o fight to survive It has memory MUCH CONFUSION y j : - — —--— - — r— i Group Tries To Take Kinlcs From 1 f ' y 4 ' '5v r JACOB Kontol of AVis wa$ Ranging out her washing one laiy 18 years ago and lost her wejdding ring The other day she sfejund it In a basket of carrots — a carrot had Oct 6 URelig-ion at this week end is out shout-In- g evey' cither Issue in this cam- paign anid an increasing confusion of thought highly alarming to responsible leaders of bot h parties AUSTRIA FEARS BLOODSHED IN SUNDAY CLASH 12000 Troops Patrol City As Rival Groups Prepare To Parade U WIENER Austria Neustajlt 6 — (AP) — Barricaded Oct and under armed patrols so that It re-- i sembles a wartime camp rather than an industrial cenjter this city tonight was prepared for any event arising tomorrow frdmj the meeting of two rival political organizations! Several thousand inhabitants have sought the morej peaceful se elusion of the countryside but their numbers will bs more than regained when the special trains begin depositing the demonstrators tomorrow- morning The parties which have' scheduljsdj giant mass meetings are the Social! Democrats who predominate herdi and In the or capital and the Jleimwehr home defense league of Christian Socialists who contrfol the present national government Although the Austrian gOvern ment declined to grant the request of several International peace so cieties that bothpolfit Seal meetings be forbidden It has! fllaced In the city 12000 troops sLricl gendarmes thoroughly armed with rriodern weapons The authorities in their preparations have jeyen gohe so far as to commandeer the larger municipal hospital Private property was shuttered and banked about tjy! sandbags Work ceased today n tne 443 lac- torles i I - - ROCK SPRINGS HOLDS SUSPECT Murder Warrant tissued In Wyoming Skeleton ":' MysteWV j ' ly lssu44 Iregarding: Catholics aa citizens That statement s 'The Methodist church prefers fact to theory' The "fact U that Cath olios jfnich- as Senata! Walsh of Montajhai Chief Justice White of the supf-emjcoffrt Mayor Mitchell of New York and many others have afforded this country patriotic leadership not surpassed by that of j any jPitotestant The fact is that the jCatholics in quite as large a proportion as the Protestants have demonstrated their sirigle minded patriotism In peace and In e r war" WHERE DRrVE STARTED This writer on that point recollects the cpnversations which took place off the floor aoiong the Protesta nt participants in the great "of conference prohibition organizations here jn Washington last winter "that conference star ted the present Iwhole Protestant ecclesiastical driye in favor of "a dry canThe dr didate! fori president" candidate paost fervently favored among the Democratic Protestant clergymen in that conference was Senator Walsh of indisputably Montana a Catholic! of a particular notable! Catholic piety Protestant opposition to the Catholic in the White House continues intensely but it Continues with big breaks and holes in it and Governor Smith is going to get a Protectant vote which among our tneestors would have been unthinkable The question "Can a Catholic- be president ?" Avould seem to be getting a graduially" changing answer The second question however as to whether or not churcnes and clergymen should address themselves to political issues seems to j (Continued on Page Two) - Oct 6 — (AP)— A warrant ifor the arrest of John Moilris jointly " j - i SAN FRANCISCO 0ct 6 — — A gigantic organization of (UP) gem pirates with ramifiqaljions extending from New York to San Francisco today was hel4 responsible for the theft here yesterday ot $200000 in gems frjom Murray Lane a New York diamond sales' man New York police were called into the investigation of jteh robbery by San Francisco detectives in an ef fort to check up dniall euspects known to athoritiesi o? both cities The New York police will be asked for a list of 'suspected per sons who are absent! fiom their us ual haunts and a liconcentrated search will be madefor them on the Pacific coast 1 MAYOR IS SERVING SENTENCE 60-DA- Y SALEM Mass Oct (TJP)— -rt Gillis of Newbury-poMayor "Bossy" declined today to be despondent oer anything so picayune as a Jail sentence The gloom which: settled upon cell 70j at the Salem jail when he becam Its occupant appeared to two-mqn- th have been lifted this morning as his honor began his third day of incarceration under a sentence imposed for selling gasoline without a permit Of course "Bossy" intends to remain active- mayor of his home town despite his temporary absence from Npwburyport He has special permission to use the telephone for the transaction jof official business and also to receive callers! whenever necessary in connection with his work as mayor i" - (UP)- -i David K Ackerman 35 landscape gardener wab held here today charged Oct 6- -J with lurijng Mrs 'Margaret Qmith artist's model to a lonely copse anl attacking her on June 4 Ackernaan police said admitted! that it was he whjo posed as a painter of Indian scenes hj rod Mrs Smith into a forest tied her to a stake and then attacked her j — — —IT" ftTh I lif W FOK T" F" " tlDPh 30000 TEXTILE I CITY ji Compromise- -- j Arrived At After j5 Weeks Idleness Foi Great Mills NEW BEDFORD Mass Oct 6 — (AP) — "the textile workers' strike which hag kept goods and workers Idle in thib clty for 25 weeks ended today Ey vote of unions reported in the "textile council the strikers accepted & compromise agreement under wh f hwages willjbe reduced 5 per een tj and the manufacturers hereafter ivill give the workers' 30 days not ee of any proposed genr eral wage cut The strike was called as a protest against an an nounced 10 per cent wage reducr tion I The New Bedford Manufacturers" association arranged a meeting for tonight jit was expected that they would discuss plans for reopening 'r the mills'j I)XGEST STRIKE i The stifike was the longest in thi city in S2! years Although ther were fewj real disturbances picket was ifohstant and as a result of the stan( taken by the authorities against r)i£ss picketing there wer large numbers of arrests Larg numbers of the picketers were fini-eor reqeived jail sentences in the J district court The mjiJbrity of the strikers were member of craft unions affiliated with thej textile council Early in the strike a new organization calling itself the textile mill committee mad its appearance and conducted t'val picket lines making1 demands which were not sanctionr ed by the textile council 30000 STRIKERS The textile council in its cont duct of the strike including the raising f funds was supported by the United Textile Vorkers of America The task of caring for the 30f00 strikers from 27 mills and their families was a heavy one and in addition to the union relief funds tie city departments were forced tj extend much aid Land lords foit the most part were lenient in theif demands for rent and storekeepers extended liberal credit to th strikers '): :' d EYES OF CHILDREN HIJRT IN EXPLOSION CEDAR CITY Oct' 6— fAr) — from explosion ' five-stor- His arrest was brouerht about after an apparent attempt had been made to the Indian scene re-ena- IN shatter PREMIER be one of the DEEP IN ct with a second victim Two days ago there appeared in ai Kenosha newspaper an advertisement for a model to "pose for an Indian scene" WOMAN INVESTIGATES Remembering Mrs Smith's story of how a fiend had her with a similar ad and trapped then after he had tied - her-to- R tree - danced savagely about her Kenosha police sent a policewoman to apply for the position The ad had been Inserted bv Ackerman who used the name of Anderson When the policewoman went to him she said he told her she cpuld have the job and that he wanted to paint a picture! of an Indian maiden bound to a stake De tectives hiding in an adjoining room arrested him - SUSPECT IDENTIFIED Mrs Smith Identified Ackerman as her attacker She told police that after the gardener had tied her to the tree he danced around her shouting "You this was picture business thought not but it's '' This is real" The attack on Mrs Smith brought about an extensive man hunt! but the crime had been so well covered up that ho trace was found of the f'painter" and the incident was forgotten until recall ed by the ad which led to Acker man's arrest newspapers and periodicals but as expressed by individual citizens and leaders of organizations having large membership and influence HEART OF TREATY The heart of the treaty which is expressed in two sentences ' is a pledge of the signatory powers that they renounce waj as a means of settling International disputes and agree to find peaceful methods of adjusting controversies with each other The treaty has been termed by its critics "a mere scrap of paper"— but it is a scrap of paper that will live through the ages as one of the greatest achievements The practical efof civilization fect of the treaty is to outlaw war and to make obsolete the excuse that "national honor" requires any nation to engage in war to attain its objective The number and character of the letters written by men! and women to their senators and representatives" expressing approval of the treaty and urging early ratification is but an indication of the overwhelming sentiment not only in this country but throughout all nations for a practical first step toward enduring peace SIMPLICITY FEATURE No government which has signed and ratified the treaty would dare vo declare war even the without pretext of first exhausting every possible means - to adjudicate or arbitrate the dispute with anoth er nation 3 1 would not only violate its solemn agreement and contract as express ed in the Kellogg treaty and thu become an outlaw among ndtionsi but it would alienate its own citi zens and make Itself subject to at tack from within ' The very sim plicity of the treaty ip its strongest feature because It can and will be universally understood and in t&rpreted alike by all peoples whose governments' have affixed signa turea r While the treaty was negotiated by a Republican president and—Re publican secretary of state for both of whom it will be a source of enduring fame through genera tions to come — I am certain that whatever opposition my develop in the senate will not be of a partisan character The sentiment of Dem ocrats - as well as of Republicans is for- any measure that will ad vance the cause of international peace and good will furthermore (Continued on 'Page Two) I self-defen- o' se -- SIX DROWNED IN OKLAHOMA Father Sees Wife And Four Children Perish In Lake TULSA Oct 6 N Y — (AP) — Six per sons including a mother and her four small children were drowned and two others were rescued when a boat capsized on a lake 13 miles northeast of Claremore Okla this afternoon The dead are: i Mrs Minnie Shepard her four children "Dannie 10 Imogene 8: Charlotte 6 Georgia 5 and Lum u baunders The tragedy occurred as George II Shepard his wife the four children who were drowned an other child Willie and Lena Saun ders Were riding in a boat About 30 feet from shore the children witnesses said were sitting on the edge of the boat with their feet in the water when It capsized Shepard shouted for help as the boat overturned and dived after his children Twice he managed to clutch two of them but they slipped from his grasp Joe and Lum Saunders brothers and Mrs Robert Saunders heard Shepar"d's cry for help and all plunged into the fvater While Joe and Lum Saunders were attempting to reach the smaller children Mrs Saunders dragged Lena Saunders a relative from the water and re turned to save Willie Shepard As Lum Saunders reached two of the children floundering In the water they clung to him until they pull-ehim down with them Abandoning his efforts to sav his children Shepard dived until he wrs exhausted In an effort to save his wife but was unable to locate her body The bodies of the children were recovered later d WITHIN ONE DAY OF CALIFORNIA NEW YORK Oct 6 —'(UP) — The eastern and western seaboards will be placed within one business day of each other through inaugu ration of a transcontinental air s rvlce aocording to an announcement of the Transcontinental Air company Transport C M Keyes president of the company and Col Charles A Lind bergh chairman of the technical announced the new committee system today Keyes' announcement said the airplanes now used between Colum bus and Kansas City would be used From there by the new system new airplanes equipped with sleep ing compartments will be used for the trip to the west coast Almost all of the trip from Kansas City to Los Angeles will be at night FOR SALT LAIvEi Oct 6 — Articles of incorporation have been filed here by the Pacific National Life Insur ance company with a capital and Carl R surplus of $3 000 000 Marcusen is president J L Firmage and Heber Nielson vice presi dents and Nephi L Morris secretary-treasurer " The company fg financed entirely by local capital the papers state - - CONTRACT SIGNED FOR 2 ZEPPELINS BLAZE DESTROYS WASHINGTON IDAHO SUGAR BAGS Secretary Wilbur contract with the (AP) — today signed a Goodyear ZeppeIDAHO FALLS Idaho Oct 6 — lin corporation of Akron for tho (AP) — Fire Of unknown origin de- construction of two rigid airships P of sugar bags own- to cost a total of $7825000 stroyed a stock ed by the Utah-Idah- o Sugar com W Litchfield president and F R pany valued at $20000 at the com Wahl assistant treasurer of the pany's Lincoln factory this morn Goodyear Zeppelin "corporation signed lor the company ing Oct 6-- Home Town Pays No At tention To Two enes Defeats YANKS THERE TOO Crowds Storm Ticket Of fices ror Sunday C assic Pasteboards The Standard-Examine- r Invites baseball fans to gather at 12:3 o'eloejc to the third game bf today the world series on the Plnjcfrraph mi tviesei avenue and Twenty lourcn street wj-- e re-enact-ed lIlD ST LOUIS Oct 6— (AP)— The bursting of atrial bombs knd the noise of a ridtous welcome broke the anxious cajlm of St Lois base ball fans as they received their Cardinals who came horn1© today from a pennaht conquest and two losing engagements in the battle1 for thevworld'i championship Far from tfeing a dolorous occasion after two defpntn Yankees theifnilling crowds about gave proor with u" umuu their shoutsBlazon that St Louis fandom was backing is team As the Red Bird Warriors were conducted to gaily decorated Open automobiles n titJif A to the it oifin anq wands and mtch X'pbvLTvwi cheering appre ciating grins spread over their countenances J ' CHEER$ ARE HEARD As the mo1or cavalcade moved out Twentieth! street from either side of the narrow lanes cut! by a squadron of motorcycle police the automobiles bieplum and festooned with colored crepe were open and large pennants bore the names of the occupatots of the cars Windows in the towering office buildings were! crowded with peopI who released Jshowers of paper in the parade and cheering thousands on the sidewalk Tho din jofj overhead alrplanei noisemakers horn: mnra and motbr il!ens hrnne-h- t grins from ajanager M9Kechnie' ciew41uuesiuie ine grim task con- v tomorrow it viLiigi i NOHIIfEE Hoover On Way Home After Fine Reception In Tennessee j frifc By iW B RAGSDAIE Associated Press Staff Writer ELIZABETHTON Tenr Oct 6 — (AP) — Herbert Hoover was on his way back to Washirgon to night aftk appealing to the people of the south" to lay aside party prejudices and vote for a president who represents the! principles that correspond o their convictfons Speaking to an immense crowd many of whom stood almost ankle deep In a muddy field the ReDUb lican presidential candidal made one of the first personal pk-afor the sunpport of the normally solid Democratic south that a nominee of his party has made in modern political history AT FOOT OF HILL The crowd was tumultous in its welcome of :the Republican! standard bearer He spoke on a platform built At the foot of ia! high hill on the edge of the mountain tewn and the crowd massed! into a huge fan shaped mass of humanity below him 'Hundreds or others were seated in temporary stands which sprawled across the hill under the shade of the trees above him As the candidate's car appeared cn the outskirts of the crowd a roar went ub (from the motintaih-eer- s crowded i! about the tands His automobile was parked on the outskirts of the crowd and he was forced to plough through the mud of the field to the rpeakens'l stand -- s 1 Makinsr theffp vjiv nlAnrl the canyons of the business district hotel where thpv rntf r FAXS FILL TOWN Meanwhile tlie scen was sef- for the St Louis end of the world' series The hotels were filled and many out of tdwn fans were driven to seek quartejrs across the Mississippi river in East St Louis Incoming: trains bore more visitors who carried (along with their s money and other valuables the prized tickets Jto Sportsman's park rmui jijcnei scalpers carriea on meir trade in the Hotel lobbies and the eleventh hour enstomprti ! wr charged all the traffic wll bear It was reported one scalper sold six i - L ?lso rihey Cost S3985 j GATES OPEN EARLY It was announced all crates would be openjed at 8:30 a m tomorrow five hours before U the ASKS FAIR PI AY game To the first comers there Launching into his speech he win oe soia tuuw oieacner seats at expanded hia views on farm relief II each: 3500 navilion seats at J3: prohibition and other platform dec- and after th navllion- - seata ar larations but mfide no reference to gone 3500 standing room tickets the religious issue that is stirring the southern states Hoover did Castinar sleeb to the winds ar however make an appeal for fair dent baseball fans coneTPtrntirt to play and good sportsmanship as- night at Sporjtsman's park ticket serting that i "we provts ourselves windows there to hold their posiworthy worthy of self government tions until tomprrow morning when and worthy of confidence as offi- they will have their choice of the cials in proportion as we keep seats on Bale these contests free from abuse YANKEES THERE TOO free from misrepresentation and The New York Yankees slinned free from words and acta that car- QUietlv into StL Ixiuis late todav ry regret" r it SMITH! TO TALK IN LOUISVILLE — :'!: while the echoes of the celebration over the return home of the Cardinals were still resounding in the city's streetsil With two vilctorles in the world series safely tucked away in their bat bags the' American league champions were quite content to come to town junheralded and unsung It wasithe Cardinals celebration and the Yanks said they did not want tlo edge into the pic t - Next Speech Will Be Given ture Two Next Saturday For Kenthe ( tucky Audience 1 SALT LAKE HAS NEW LIFE INSURANCE CO FANS Le- CROWD STANDS 1929 Re-ena- ct KENOSHA Wis DY WILD ar r) This will to sir louis national convention "yviiich open here Monday quickened today with the arrival of National Commander Edwatd E Five army kitchens Spafford were established in the business district Hotels packed every possible bed Into their rooms and headquarters were established for every deportment The greatest influx of legionnaires is expected tomorrow An army of crack peace officers borrowed from every city tht has entertained a legion convention reported to the Sati Antonio police department-f- or Local authorities seized duty 24 cases of alleged pre-wwhisky today and arrested four men who were attempting to deliver their cargo probably one jof the most By Positig As An Applicant for Position With Artist first and certainly to tasks undertaken important Policewoman Brings Aboui Arrest of Landscape by the senate at thebenext session judgment is based upon careGardener Who Was Ready to Indian fulmystudy of the sentinient of the Scene With Intended Victim country not only as reflected in i J arations for the American By ARTHUR CAPPER United States Senator From Kansas and Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (Special Dispatch" to The Standard-ExamjjneTOPE K A Kan Oct 6— My judgment is that the foreign relations committee undoubtedly will vote to ratify the Kellogg treaty for the renunciation of war and furthermore that that treaty will be ratified by the senate before March 4 FINE WELCOME ANTONIO Texas Oct 6 — The tempo of prep- ft ion - Artist's Model Points Out Suspect She Says Tied Her Tp Stake in Lonely Woods Fhysiciins here are fighting to save the sight of Katie Muir 8 and hejr brother 'Ernest 10 of Sulphur! Dtile who were partially blinded yesterday when a giant cap with wl&ich they were playihg exploded j In addition to the injuries sufffredSto their eyes the children befth suffered deep cuts about th4 face and body BORGER Texas Oct 6— (UP) — Scores of plate glass windows were broken and hundreds - of FORlilER S L MAN smaller windows shattered here last SUICIDES IN RENO midnight when 600 quarts of nitroglycerin of the Atlas Glycerin company near here exploded RENp Nev Oct 6— (AP)—The A check today failed to j' reveal of Allen Porcher 57 was body any casualties company officials found at 'the foot of a y said building or the Nevada Packing company ilant early this morning Crushed and every bone TUNNEY COUPLE MAY the skll Police who investigated broken SEE POPE! a theoiy that he had been pushed from ah upper story of the buildROME Oct 6— (AP) —Gene ing by ja companion found nothing Tunney and his bride the former to sustain it and stated in their Mary Josephine Lauder are re- opiniorj that Porcher had commitported to be returning to Iiome in ted suicide' He was a native of a few days Both have been pro- Englanjd but came to Reno from posed for audiences with Pope Pius Salt Lake He had lived here many and Premier Mussolini years " SAN Capper Says World Makes Progress Toward Lasting Peace BEFORE SENATE SOON Letters To Members of Congress Show People Favor Treaty- h CARDS! GIVEN Borrows Cops For Conclave PREDICTED BY KANSAS SOLON away twle) They ar Miss Virginia Pfisterer 2643 Monroe ayeriue and Miss Helen Pr t 24)46 Porter avenue both Southern Pacific railroad com- pany em pi oyes who found a purse Friday near the Union station which co tained $1Q0 and returned it to the owner Mrs Moultrae an Idaho woman lost the purse Thursday be- tween th TJnion and Bamberger Btatioiis while on her way to Salt Lake Th $100 it contained was all sh owned and had been raised by the s a 3 of all her property to' be used in placing her daughter in r a Salt La e hospital M L Gans 359 Twenty-fourtstreet a friend of the Moultrae family tO) k the woman to Salt Lake and gave her money to tide her over The t o young women who found the purse immediately turned It over to Gns having read the account in Friday's Standard-Exam- iner telli g of the plight of the Idaho widow " windows: San Antonio RATIFICATION U this st ry is not about an honest man It concerns however two honest yo h g women so perhaps old Dioge should throw his lantern j - Wyo- PIRATES BLAMED FOR GEM JOBBERY E H Harriman recognized the g value of expenditures when he built the Ogden-Luei- n cutoff which reduced the running time of passenger trains from Ogden to the coast by eliminating over 40 miles of track including heavy grades and sharp curves cutoff cost The Ogden-Luei- n many millions of dollars but has more than paid for itself The Southern Pacific has tunneled the Sierras in order to save time and eventually the Southern Pacific and Union Pacific shall be called upon to utilize all their g economies in order to euccessfully meet competitors The confusion proceeds from an illogical! mingling of two distinct and different "religious questions' each 'ofi wljiich is now rending this counttyffromitop to bottom The first Is: Shoutd a Catholic as a CathqlicVbe debarred by public opinipn r4m the presidency? The sfdoiid is: Should t hurches as churches and clergymen as celrgymten address themselves to political issues such as prohibition? This vrijter noted a a current fact that there seems to be some development toward handling the first question but that the becond question seems absolutely uncontrollable either among Protestant clergymen or among Cathojlc clergymen MORE TOLERANClj On the first question despite present appearances tnis writer ventures the positive assertion that there is more Protestant public opinion that is tolerant of the idea of a Catthlic In the Whites House today amoiiig us than ever before Two generations ago for Instance it would have beeni absoJntely impossible f jT the ' MethOdis board and tr temrnce to prOiblbition Jvave lsyed the public inoals t Today time Is an essential to success and everywhere in America there is a struggle to save the minutes and the hours It turns ooutlaw and preys on Its neighbors Gathered in small quantities and carried home the highly colored leaves in the hills are robbed of much of their richness Tou Do not disturb them might mar the picture In the Cascades the Great Northern railroad is compteteing a tunnel nearly eight miles long wlfteh will' eliminate 35 miles of mad The cost Of the project will be $1C000-00- 0 : WASHINGTON grown through the circlet Here Is the carrot withs the ringk j I Dy WILLIAM IIAKJ) Siwdal Correspondent vi The Standard-Kxaminc- MRS ROCK SPRINGS Religious Thinking The officials of the line estimate time of passenger that the running trains will be reduced one and one-ha- lf hours and freight trains will save four fours on KELLOGG PACT Destitute Idaho Wbman Recovers Lost Funds f charged with his sfajther Henry B Morris of Carthage Mo with murder was issued here today Young Morris is believed to be in Carthage His father Is held here Sweetwater county authorities last night conducted a secret inquest' into the deathi df Mrs Anna Grabe of Denvtr and her 5 year old Gnovat whose daughter parched bones were! ijound burled in the cellar of a hoi se here last Mrs Grabd Several years August ago was the elder Morris" housekeeper The coroner's found that the woman and juty chifd came to their death at the) hands' of "a party or parties unknown" No new angle to- the jcAso was injected at the inquest Ed Parr who lived near th house where Mrs (Jrabc was emthe woman ployed testified th-f- t was last seen about lusk Sunday She evening August 3 1924 said at that time Wrr added that phe intended 1 leave the next day and join a man named Cummings whom she intended to marry She said! tihat if Cummings failed to appjeajr she would return to her Denver home as soon as she had neceived her monthly salary time-savin- n IOGEN S can well afford to throw away his lantern even though IS RELIGIO ' There was no opium tmolcinK in America until the coolies from Canton arrived in San Francisco during the construction of the Central Pacific railroad The Chinese out on the work lived in hovels and! the odor of opium issued froni their dens That debasement helped to make the Chinese workers undesirables From San Francisco's Chinatown which grew to large proportions the opium habit spread until thousands of white victims were claimed Ogdcn in the years gone by has had its opium smokers but today even among the Chinese the evil r has passed Cocaine seems to have displaced opium in the circle of those who yield to habit forming drugs But even in the use of cocaine Ogden Is reported to be comparatively free from the affliction With clear sklea and days as warm as those of spring Ogden invites the inhabitant? of the - east to come west Reading weather reports from Florida Porto Rico Illinoisin and beelsewhere there is comfort in Utah ing i r On the west side of Jackson aveand nue between Twenty-sevent- h streets is an entire Twenty-eight- h block of homes with the backyards in flowers It is one of the beauty spots of the city Hidden away in the rear of the houses the gorgeouatbeds of cojor may be overlooked Farmers of Weber county should recognize that good seed is the key to success not take High quality seed swill the place of hard woi-k- and Intelligent study oCtbe farm 'problems but it will do much to bring desired results Under modern competition no farmer can be highly successful without planting the ' best obtainable seed l ISSUE GREAT It's Hatdl To BelievehBut Here 's Photo 4r Frank Francis J Tit i —— CITY WAH SUNDAY MORNING OCTOBER 7 1928 Year — NoI81 HMM"mUIMUH'"J'" time-savin- —? ' " " ALBANY N Y Oct C— - (AP) — Placing the "solid south' outside of his future speech making j r '! years ago the Yankees beat Cardinals in ' the railroad run west after the first two games at the Yankee stadium and in the excitement the homo town folkf touched off half the fireworks an 1 bombs by mistake when tho Yan- kees' train dr£w in - Babe Ruth out and compariy still get a laugh ' I plans Governor Smith wl!l invade the border state of Kentucky for i the ficst address of hi1 second of that campaign tour' next Saturday "J 44 S 4 4 ? t 4 night at Louisviiie he will make ? his seventh speech on national Is- 44 4 J 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 if 4 4 4 4 4 sues since his notification August ' This announcement was! made today bythe t)emocratio presidential nominee at the daily press man- conference at the executive slon after he had put ' in iseveral 1 ours of the morning on last minute arrangements for his departure from Albany either Monday or s j Tuesday After spending a day or two in New York City in conference with party leaders the governor will leave by special train Thursday morning fori Chattanooga and Nashville Tenn for further conferences with i Democratic chieftains of that section but no speeches Beyond hiar engagement In Kennothing tucky the governor assaid final this hsd been decided even including the day of his de partnre for New York by regular train It la quite generally believed however that the wtek of October 15 will find him in Chicago and somewhere in Missouri for ths second' and third speeches j j 'i m "ft 44 ft 4 v4 4 The Ad reproduced below brought almost iinmediate results to the advertiser 'I A RT5AL FARM Located in Iloy 'forty "acres of choice croundL flood barn srOod four room home Planted In crops unharvebled Step right in and reap thej harvest Place In the highest sitate of cultivation X real harmln Prtv will trade for home in towit or small acre f age FRED T IFLINDIS CO 302 25th Street Phone 350 ' ' This gale running into thousands of dolhir-- s is just another' proof of thej pulling power of Standard-Esaminc- r Want Ads i 4AAA:'444'44444'4v4'44-4- i 4444444'4'4'4'4'4444i4'4'4'44 ' |