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PUBLISHING CO J U Eldredge Jr A L Glasmann Publishers An Independent Newspaper Published every evening and Sunday morning without a muzzle or a club Entered as Second-clas- s Matter the Postofflce Ogden Utah Established 4879 SUBSCRIPTION RATES 75c Delivered by carrier one month By mail in advance In Utah Idaho v turned out to be whllfe the damned fools wrong ricrht irer " w" If experts in other lines of en deavor had found themsfelves as far baseball experts they would have been generally discred ited and their usefulness In great But fanrare forglv baseball experts will be ing The on the job predicting! and forecast- a few months and what they sajy will be read with great interest! and attention again and their articles will bring as much remuneration to them as for merly e" Standard-Examin- er Nevada and Wyoming Three months $135 Six months One year $700 All other states $10Q: a month $1200 - : one year Member of The Associated Press United Press Consolidated Press NEA Service and A B C The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to tha use for republication of any news credited to It not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein j$360 Call 252 for All Departments ZEPPELIN VS ELEMENTS AND ZEPPELIN WILL WIN "What a battle Is being waged in the skies over the Atlantic ocean coast of the United tll the eastern States! On the one side is the largest dirigible that has ever at tempted an ocean flight On the other are the elements seemingly determined to press the great Zep pelin back from its destination In view of the troubles the greaj cloud 'cruiser has had making head way against the adverse winds it is apparent the French weather experts were justified 4n expressing great surprise that Dr Eckener had started his journey under the weather conditions prevailing and predicted over his entire course And yet how great will be the triumph of Graf Zeppelin when it finally lands and discharges its passengers and cargo? For it will land successfully The Zeppelin as an ocean carrier will prove its re liability It suffered an accident Sat urday that would have brought dis aster to an airplane But on the lighter-than-ai- r craft the" damage was repaired sufficiently to permit its continuing the journey under reduced speed it is true but never theless continuing to its destina tion No wonder the citizens of every country are following the great flight with Intense interest The arrival of the Zeppelin at Lake- hurst will be the signal for a mighty cheer the world around i II-'"!' i The Ogden ri i — - More WHAT ABOUT OUR President Coolidge will retire be-"P- on heE-lnnin- i " lilt-- if Ti'irtti sue "euvi 'X: as ::'H±aV is cstrangin many peaiency voters But VL vuu nKeu v iiror u ueieua uer' llke the KansaMity Star ara the exception SMc?Z° thinks that Mrs Willebrankfi ttnrL'H — v w pro- luum a cnurcn war" are an instant IT to match and that "the only 9? th¥ episode would he the removal nf iha nuui uniee m ft exclaims of her speech to Republican e "ow unise and even dangerous w Tt? Boston Transcript calls for her removal from the nlntK ulaictall Isstatement that tl prohibition is a moral iVL t a question-oit Vnoiinatat practical adm!niRtratin 7 declares that her J?rnali speeches "contribute in 1 01 ne great doctrine of the ° of church and separation inflamental guarantees of Amrican The Chica mVtl X- fooSh" sible x osV inac-e- ne a still ions a" ami tho f oepiores the fact LiJe Tne iu r7 "'? :?B atrf -- m rulus In-1a- s self-contr- ol "v vwsevpi wouia pave saia EC5AP J - AMP PRtMK COUAJtS km i ilk S I -- -- to' dUell: frfeV ARE "TEMPB RMEr"1( L j AP EVE4 pgMAUP A PRAf£ PRESS(Ai6 JEMi T(MP Vati Ci MQl4-T- "ROOM 1 MV WoRP-- Mot: Po the with" MAAOJd'GEAiaS OF CAMfAiE SIPHoMAPTfeRA OR APrlAairnfeRAi 7 dyX E6APr rJo f coMFUse'te " ' SB V 1b BtlfLP M f A r C'8 BY htk S£BVICC INC RE8"U S PAT td ri&t Offl kJMffl SOCIAL OSS' as it cannot be accu- Charles B priscoll the gaceteer at business rately determined until the job is a Greek restaurant on Fourteenth dends' well under way The amount street and we prowled about Greenargrument which will have' to be paid for flowagre damage is One of the indefinite factors Tentative estimates for the work on the control project for the first year have been placed at $30000-00- 0 and the money will be provided for in the appropriation bill which will be ready when congress v meets Surveys nave been made plans laid out ahd options obtained on the rights of way for the Bonnet Carre spillway so that this relief measure regarded as the most important can be begun promptly as soon as money is available The first task is to build side levees from the river to Xake Pontchar-trai- n The five-mil- e floodway between these levees will have a capacity of 250000 second feet of water and discharge into this floodway from the spillway dam will begin whenever the flood stage at New Orleans reaches a certain point The other main new features are diversion floodways in the Atcha-falay- a and Tensas basins and a river bank floodway from Cairo to New Madrid Mo l°-dr?- elu — Henry Ford who went flvineLindbergh will sail with Eck- captain' of the giant dirigible soon to land here It was at Eckener's that Henry Ford built thesuggestion mooring mast on his Dearborn airport - wiitb enter SSS° ZX £?JK "is ""mb nlli toe is a greater tragedy " than S Mother becomes a Darssit miserable and they are miserable Because she has given them her iiTe sne demands their lives In payment of the debt IIOW tlis tragedy is to be helped! I do not know It is easy to point out Killing Intentionally with boot herself in her children to lefe (whisky IS new 18 Morris Cohen junk dealer 22 enough to regulate old yejara to life im ln due season to leave the home prisonment for murderintr Hvmn kk°8?er hlld!n are bound ocial connections and witli f2!endshi?? ifieaman poisoned liquor wmcu io mi ner lite wnen they are eone But jf rienman s son was Coherf s "rl r"" val in love" so Cohen left poisoned llr toToThKT eVe 7klns hour 13 & to the service of wh sky in the rival's automobile Antf yet somehow it must be done and somehow The rival's father drank it land many women do it died But ven so the lonely mother whose children have left he"r Athens reports a violent leaWh- is btter off than the woman who has never had any children quake in thfe big city of C6rinth at eat haa known at It was to be rich n?ue She may ? ofjten shakea by earthquakes bethe neret in her children and is "as °ny fore grandchildren but In coming Into her heritage of the things that the world outside of her family circle has to give her Mr Fatterson real estate man ' !' ' of Sea Girt New Jersey found in DOROTHY DIX (Copyright by Public Ledger) neirear seat of his automobile a neat package containing a human hand cut off at the wrist with the nsenption: 1 "K K K Toti re next Blackhand" because that is new it will interest peoplai that will pay little attention to a faraway Corinth earthquake Jlt0 Or110 ?'OT iSlfteUIJK? New York DAY BY DAY By O O M'lNTYRE NEW YORK —Diary of a modern Peyps: Up and came a delayed postal from Homer Croy in Lima Peru that he had been investigating the Lima bean situation and although the natives never heard of them seemed happy withal Also a letter from Billy De Beck the l!mner who has fallen In love with Parjs and will winter yat St Jean d'Luz So at Irksome taska and later to drive with a friend to Prospect park in Brooklyn and there afoot for a pleasant walk it being my favorite park in all the city Home where came Archie Andrews and Ted Doremus and much rag tag and bobtail In the evening to dinner with wich Village finding a short Vou name pay tiigh divl narrow A New York Id displaythoroughfare called Gay street as ing a diamond jeweler studded as we ever saw Then to designed for a beautifulhaiLd bag peaceful jchorus bed lady whose boy friend docsni't care what lie does with papa's :noney It The roof bungalow craze flourishes Almost every now skyscraper has a house with spreading lawn arbors little streams with foot bridges high up in the clouds The fashionable pent house has become the moat exclusive of all ways of living in the metropolis It has its private elevatcr and Is away from prying eyes of neighbors A few of them it ia whispered have become tasty hideaways for crepa d chine ladies who are linked with the tabloids with those heartless Wall street men i Tattoo removers are not entirely to streets haunted men along water fronts row one on Forty-secon- d The charge for removal square inch confined by sea- There IS street it $5 a - Tattooing is found on people not Supposed to resort to this cuticular vanity At a bathing beach recent- ly a college professor with a supe-ria- r classroom manner exposed an arm with a bleeding heart tattooed thereon It was a relict of a runaway sea trip in early youth Youth Is getting on ln the book publishing business Four new and highly successful publishers are cost him 26000 Before pricing It I had jthught of ordering tine for my wif© and have been bl Jahjng for inree aays straight And ths same Jeweler has a necklace which has been) soldpearl for $685000 The largest pearl is valued at $135000 The purchaser Is a middle west fellow on the right eide of a mojtor stock rise "The story goes his wlf tried to persuade him to- keep out of vnwi oLfcrt na io piacat ner he promised if he won she cotiid select any necklace she mlcht rhnn The $685000 necklace Was her choice The income represented by such an investment isf $'3000 a week which seeing to aohie of us an awfiil price for upkeep of something so easily duplicated in paste ohly experts can distinguish "I am retiring from active work" announces i a New York merchant "to go to the SOUth Of FrsnCA and write Louder one-gallua- ed - f Also a (lot funnier you big stiff! t 19 28 by the McNaught (Copi-rig- b Syndicate Inc) t DERBIES SCARCE BTjA PRINCETON in j vct 10— under 35 (AP)t— T'Here's a shortage of black It has been observed that great derbies at rnnceton university of fans at Saturday's trame publishing houses reach a stage of to the Tiger heads-eaCry rot Until late years tew read- took a II ers In publishing houses who and bet! their own felt hats— and passed upon the merits of books neckties— tthat the Tlflrer would nat wer© under 80 Then the business win by m pre than two touchdowns was infused with the enthusiasm of The garfi a was a tie youth and more books are sold -now than ever Six books a year GOLjP' BY CANDLE LIGHT used to be an average for publishers On© firm this year published NEW YORK Oct 15— (AP)— 412 Birdies like moths are attracted by a flame Using candles to mark reEnthusiascm the eighteenth hole after it became incidentally ceives this trade last from a high- dark! three members of a fourly successful New Yorker: "Give some at the Dunwoodie golf club me 80 er cent enthusiasm and 20 course made fours and tne other per cent ability and I'll make any shot a par five -- r -- T J tXy ' AN EASYCoiABR "APLACE TO "" i ? TWO LETTER' TluARS TROt APTElt GREAT pi from Cairo III T sN Mexico TROJECTS' ARE BE By RODNEY DUTCnER yE Sen ice Writer ry ix tiiomas EAi Service Writpr ANOCLEP— Ruth Elder risked her life to fly across 4 lie Atlantic and nriw she isn't doing at all'hadlj- out ihe re in Hollywood JEOS - her husband! as though to shoi' Lyle the world he's no stuffed shirt arikl can nskj his life too when theHmood if Mpanwhile Womac-- oh him has gone sailing with Byrd's expedition' to the south poif nnm it's an over wm th- - h a reunion between i the riskfne- wife and risking husband perhaps here in this ifilm canital? That' one OX thebthlnsrs Hollvwhhi in talking about' between shots these days j&utn is namnv buTv nn rti likect here As usual gossip has linked heir name romantically with this one and that one —even Robert Castle new leading man extraordinary from Vienna has been mentioned as possible successor in Ruth'sLyle's affections — but :it always turns out to be a couple of othtr fellows Ruth has ust finished a with Richard Dix in "M or an ofpart the Marines" She has a lot of charm with her that fcirl And determii nation! — Nearly two years after the last great flood began to Jyreak its havoc in the Mississippi valley work on th na!r tion's 1 g- flood control project will aetuaM besin The ipny engineers expect that by Janwoiv or February they can begin erectinsr the side levees oi the Jionpet Carre spillway above New Orleans This will be the first major Operation in the Two things remain before it project can b I Kiting: he hand has been jincorporated in Jugoslavia's code of sallantry : i done ir-- j f irst 'President Coolidge must approe! the report of the flood adi visory bbard which congress to reconcile the plan of the army engineers with the ideas of the Mississippi river commission Contrary to a widespread congress did not appro! priate $825000000 for the flood Control (project It merely authorized the-j- appropriation of such a sum and the appropriation can b made byjeongress alone The army engineers- expect that the president will haVa approved tho - advisory board's report before congrets meets IA December and that con gress w5ll lose little time in api propriatipg money with which they may begin the job Subsequently congress 'will take tip the Question of work on the tributaries The food control act passed at the last session covers only the main stem of the Mississip- dii-recte- i j to the Gulf of d A cheerful lamp and a stool f6r jrotit feet—a stand jfor papers and bo'oks — a corner of "your own" so to speak wherein to rest after the day- - work is done and relax-- tired body— to form! new plans and gather inspiration forj the morrow! In your home are there two such "corners" for both wife and husband? One is not enoughr— each! should enjoy such a simple "luxury" as this for home enjoyment should be mutual! If there are others in the family circle the rule holds good— r a The army engineers obtained a total appropriation of 124000000 for Immediate work on the Mist-sissipp- t WASHINGTON " of Mrs Willebranrlt i ""vvueuuVyiUB - u-- !—— w ' r or f i " Tan sarrfe w dilly-dallyin- t performer"Rob4s rmAMEP ne-enter- ! H REPUBLICAN PRESfe (New or k World) ""l"u"'ul- - case is more iitearten mp- EACrl: TtEA IS A SjAR AMi Has oui4 : The trouble with life I that it often demand the Impossible ofu and never more so than in a easesuch a this is The poor woman who has a UUrtOlHY DIX house full of children whom ihe must nufse and tend snd feed and bathe and dress with herown hands has no time In whch to do anything else There isfot a minute of jthe day in which she Is not washing dirty litthfaces or cut ting nread and butter or hustling children off toSchool or patch ing or mending or sewing or answering the eternal cry of ivi hr Opinions of tyf ress cccatN rnrlev APArTfMEUT$ OF lKBIf2 j 1 i CP ytttBV'ftE Hart SB y oK Is j - own? "How can she cultivate a hobby when her family ha absorbed her for so long that she has ceased to have any hobby except her family? "Is not the childless woman better off be cause she has no one to leave her?" Evehtually perhaps something Willi bej done about bootlegging re sorts m which young ladieis thaet forget to dutck are apt to be killed oy peaungas ana aicononsm com bined she has to FBycho-analysevery: thought and energy on getting gentlemen ought DECAt'SE J her jday's work doneconcentrate) toi investigate customers of such in and because she hai to give every bit of intellistations M gence she has to making one dollar do theT work of five and because &he Miss Texas Gulnan psycho ana has neither the time nor the money for outside indulgences and diversions lysed them long ago and greets such ajwoman's children come to filljier whole universe Thev hemm eaten one most appropriately as an obsfssion with her She has nd thought nor interest outside of them THello sucker' and when they grow up and go about the business of life on their own she is desolate left with accounjt empty hands but with a life !Mr nottmly Augusta E Stetson One of that is tempty of interests and Mfsj Mary Baker Eddy's first etu- deints and disciples died recently1 And as my correspondent says such women do become She had predicted that she would nu sances to their chlraren for they make up the live forever and doubtless lived legions of mothers-in-lawho-recthe peace and happiness of so many longer because she really believed homes and are thT causes of so much estrangement between It: hubands and wiyes and the first aid to so many divorces Mrs bretSBTl was L wnman rT strong character and original Ideas IT IS ndisputable that the presence of any third party in a household She established the First Christ is a (benace bits well-bein- g No matter how good and kind a mother-in-laian (Science j Church in New York matter how may no bejfao tactful how heroically she bites Cityj appropriatelv selecting an back tlie advice and suggestions that arematter on ever the tin of tnnimB apartment ajbove a drug store and and refrain from interfering she cannot helo but come hn' between the as motto: her "Science and uauu taking ajuuwue ana break up their intimacy Mind Above Drugs" Death however is more power m There are little foolish endearments that they cannot ful man drfugs Or "science" and each other with mother Ibokina on There ir uhi must be Obeyed when he beckons thfjt they do not care to discuss In mother's presence and tha (Air travel across the ocean' is mfnent of confidence passes So they grow apart Instead of nUbnus-Vr attuallV together as they might have done If they had been alone to- -' uncertain wiay as when earlV gether American railroads advertised that start "weather per EVERM woman who nonestly faces the situation recognizes the fact that iraips woui not add tn hoi- - mnrnfoA ihn4n 1 miningw iT Vvr going no sue sees sne vriw uiciu uneu ia tne sniirra nf onic mat something hew in modern and bickering Always she knows jthat no matter how much her children geiry wil"ns they are to do their duty by her they would Dr Robert Meals younsr yi ft W °i surceon of Holly wooH thought that j shock oui sic! ujjerationj is causea They would be happier If mother was not atwavi nresent at by anaesthetics not by the boera evjry meal If mother wasn't always ocoupying the back seat To te"st his theory he Removed every time they went riding If mother didn't have h Hr his own appendix lying on the opalong every time they went to the theatre or the movies or a concert or a ball game erating table propped uti iaskine It tne assistance or a brother smrsmi ottly in locafcing the appendix ajnd 1ND jia isn't any reflection upon mother or her children or her removing aanesions lt i? ust that tho eal of married is the solitude of two A fine display of and as tne wTencn say that all husbands and wiveslifewho love each other like W ciourage" thelr h0me and ° off on Uttle sprees aldne Mother felt Local anaesthesia was emtlovrid but could hot prevent ' internal vjiovi1 mai way uerseii wnen sne was youne pain Yet knowing this It Is the common custom of women wkn This operation again raises the are to break nor thir widows — hnm "What is couraee?" question kiiiiuicii i H reminds us that not lorisr aco a"Hy ?° t0 ve wlth tnem Sometimes this Is a financial marry neees before anaesthetics were used all slty but oftener the woman Is still young enough to support her seif and be Independent or she h mnnw Hnih n ofrations were accompanfJed bv ierrioie painu t sne nas so absorbed herself In her child ren upon vwirjiwriaoiy that The clergy said it was a ishame neinas no existence apart from them to: ipse anaesthetics because jit de- ieatea tne will of God who desired THE world is only interesting to! her because of the part her children his creature to suffer That opin 1 plajhln iL The whole automobile industry ATit tttot TaIii ion nas oeen abandoned life ANOTHER KljND OF DOQ STORY BVeA ftis f4 TLUAS AklSrfQCkA-f- c w t-- M CUlAi ! children when they get homes of their "fc - i SPECIAL WXrl toyherhome? her i es principle-fo- - ') I Jrl-BAPO- up-bringi- "I guess I forgot to duck" Those were the last words of Miss liessiea'odle dancer in one of rcevr York'sinight clubs She died a! little later having according to Miss Lillian Lorraine suffered i rnuxih path previously Nlew York's district attorney says tbie jyoung lady had been beaten by Mr Tommy Gulnan brother of Texas Gulnan as the result of her neglect "to duck" Anyhow shs is dead j " from office n4xt Marchi When he retires if he does not seek some new position lie will have to live on whatever sums he may havej been able to save during his occupancy of the White House Like most of our presidents he is not a man of Inde- pendent mean And this cal s to mind the follow- ing thought: s not this cotintry richrenough td make a practice of paying its former presidents regu lar annual salaries? When a man serves us as fchlef executive he ought never tiafe to worry about finances again To pay every ex- president some such sum as $25000 a year would hot swell our federal expenditures greatly and it would be no more thkn simple Justice rresiaent Grant died In compara- tive poverty President Roosevelt had to devote himself to literature to make a lining President Taft was forced to enter the Yale Law school faculty Surely when a man has been ouif president he has earned the right' to freedom from money troubled for the rest of his ARE Trfe MOTHER asks these questions: "What Is a woman with a young family going to do when they grow up and leave her without her job? "Her whole time is of necessity occupied in their What opportunity has ghe of preparing for the fu 1 ture when she will be left alone? "How can she take up another career when i By AHERN YOUTH HAS BEEN ABSORBED IN HER CHILDREN IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE FRIENDS AND OUT- SIDE INTERESTS IN HER AGE A n e OUR BOARDING HOUSE THE TROUBLE WITH LIFE IS THAT IT SO OFTEN DEMANDS THE IMPOSSIBLE OF US SO THAT A WOMAN WHOSE ENTIRE er y ( — - Dorothy Tix 'Talks So many killings' in New York tha Chicago takes second place and! killings become routine news "3iljk Shirt" John Hennessey last to be "taken for a ride" wis shot only three times The mini killed before him in Brooklyn had nine bullets in his body Detectives say that "Silk Shirt' jvucw loo raucn 1 well bootleg-hljacker-rackete- MONDAY EVENIlTGrJ OCTOBER 15 E - ( By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright 1928 by the Star Co) ' Nothing in swift condemnation given to her speeches as i ANOTHER RIDE SUE FORGOT TO DUCK ABOVE DRUGS & SCIENCE FLIES WITH LINDY "man-bltesJa-dog- l " f ARD-EXAMINE- i 1 "Todayr ' The story of the faithful dog that roused members of the family when the house caug ht on fire thus sav- ing their livesl is an old one Here's the reverse of it— not? so pleasing to dog lovers probably but interesting because it goes counter to one of our traditions' A Chicago nian passing along a street late at night saw smoke pouring from ai house He rushed in to arouse the toccupants A police dog leaped on him in the hallway and nearly fe led Him The man had to overpower the dog before he could proceed upstairs and carry out two women and a baby all par-b- y TERRIBLE FAILURE tially stupefied smoke OF BASEBALL EXPERTS The faithful flog in this case was Those baseball experts whose pre undoubtedly the villain in "the piece dictions are read with profound at- The story accordingly under the tention by thousands of basebafll old " formula is fans in the nation were so terribly news mistaken in the recent world serlesJ As women's dresses grew short that the New York Times considers er accidents jdecreased the situation serious enough to warsays a rant comment thereon in the Times' prominent doctjor Maybe some day holy of holies — its editorial page soon we won't have any more mis The Times says: haps at all The world's series ended in Three midwebtern university pro a blaze of home runs and fessors came dut for ALSmith th The players worked other day Which seems to dis hard but the sports writers count reports that he made a good worked still harder Never' showing on hi4 trtp west have the superlatives been so strained to fit the facts The aa jtramp applying for a night's sober and unadorned truth is rest in a Newl York rescue home sensational enough The Yankfled when he ivas ordered to take ees broke all records and all a bath In other words showed a hearts in St' Louis There have clean pair of hfeels been larger crowds and bigger Might it be skid in a casual way receipts in previous contests of tnat drug store! clerks conduct sun the kind but never before were dae schools? the prophecies and the original betting odds so made a mock Mussolini declares he is about to t by the outcome Latterly naugurate a '"vigorous" policy there has been much sardonic' Tired of all this comment on the preliminary Judges voices often carry con reports that the Yankees would viction go into the world's series a team of "cripples" But it was true that they were entirely WIFE ANSWERS minus the services of two of IN DIVORCE SUIT their beet players Pennock and Combs and that some of the Cleo Lewis filed an answer and stand-by- s were not in the best cross complaintj Saturday afternoon in the Second district court to the physical condition But they action for divorce started by her went through triumphantly on husband Joseph W Lewis their nerve or on the lack of in ner answer she denies thev nerve in their opponents The were married it Malad Idaho on July 16 1926 but asserts result was a glorious triumph date was July 22 Sjhe has two the children for the New York nine along by a former rriarriaire with a complete upset of the In her cross comnlalnt cho Lewis with failure to procharges expert baseball forecasters As vide and cruelty She seeks the Lord Melbourne said about divorce $50 a month temoorarv Catholic emancipation after the nd permanent alimony and rootnr tiOn of her former name C1er An bill for it was passed "all the derson rnuri THE OGDEK STAND J 1 " i and are' it on measures regardedexpendingas Immediately necessary and not on the main project They have been spending iuvuuuuo a year on flood work ooo 000 was added ana for emergency and repair work They w ere unaDie ro money on features of theirspend main project which were ln dispute Hence the work in progress since congress adjourned was designed to take care of urgent necessities The necessary operations were divided into three main classes: leee construction bank revetment and dredging This was merely a continuation of what the engineers have been doing for many years along the "levees Only" theory When'the 1927 flood hit the valley not all the levees had been completed up to the standard set by congress in 1914 Before beginning construction of new levees the flood control act provided that tho old levees be brought up to the standard Their new big project adopted by congress subject to any alterations by the advisory board and now virtually indorsed en toto by that board In Its recent report additionally provides for a spillway above New Orleans and three floodways along the river " I none should be overlooked! fc— v— ' 1914 i ' MISSISSIPPI COX- FIOOD It will take about 10 years to complete the project and meanwhile the total cost is a matter of- - |