Show I J THE OGDEN The Ogden Standard-Examin- er ' PUBLISHING CO J U Eldredge Jr A L Glaimann Publishers An Independent Newspaper Published every evening and Sunday morning without a muzzle or a club ' Entered as Second class Matter at the Postoffice Ogden Utah 7 E st a blis hed 1 879 -- " SUBSCRIPTION RATES 75c Delivered by carrier one month By mail in advance In Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming 5195 Three months $360 Six imonths One year $700 All ether states $100 a month $1200 one fear The Associated Press United Press Consolidated Press NEA Service and A B C The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of any news credited to It not other-wise- ! credited In this paper and also the local news' published herein Member of Call 252 for All Department 3y MANSIONS RICH AND WHITE CROSSES MEN'S eration Don't yoii think they are lacking in discipline? !What kind of men1 and women will they make? I can remember when you had to hurry hoine from school and cut wood clean the stable where your dadj kept his buggy horse and it seems to me you folks had a cow too and that your mother sold your spare milk to the neighbors and madV you deliver it in lard buckets! Your children have no chores IJow will they develop the habit of working? "The kids are getting along all right" was the reply' "My boy washes the car instead of currying the horse He (goes tt the gym feoy Scouts jl He belongs to believes he leads a more whole-som- e life than 1 did when I was his age Actually t believe children today have more opportunity to develop character t an they did in our boyhood days What has character to do With lack of bathtubs and modern convenience anyway?" "I can see you are an optimist" was the friend's iriply r "You bet I am! and I'll bet I am on my birthday 40 years hence te American Federation of Labor NO PEACE ON delegates in convention in New Or- FARMS JUST YET ' leans on Tuesday heard a speaker 'I the With harvest cornploted declare "that a new millionaire's 'mansion could be checked against President-elec- t Iopvcron a goodwill the animosities excursion and on cross the battle white every of the fields" political campaign being forIf that utterance had come from gotten it would appear that it was a labor delegate it is pretty cer- time for an era of peace and good tain that the federation would have feeling But LeRoy Marsh district bombarded by a shower of criticism agricultural inspector says "No" He says he and others face a task and charges of radicalism and of arousing hatred— hatred for the j and blrd3that prey upon If happens that the statement rodents This s the season to the farmer was made by FaulV McNutt naon rats and other warfare make tional commander of the American Legion and nobody is going pests They are leaving the to Invade the granaries about calling the- legion radical Nevertheless Commander McNutt's warehouses and even homes An statements will cause eyes to open instructive demonstration of meththe! pests that wide in some quarters and some ods for combatting more to farmers cause loss willl "wonder what this world Is actually fires Is available for all who coming to" when such statements than care to visit Mr Marsh's office on are made by distinguished men j Kiesel avenue Commander McNutt was speaking In behalf of the legion program THE MURDER callijagfor legislation to prevent OF ROTH STEIN war profiteering and provide a universal draft The legion seeks The big news bf recent" days labor's indorsement 'Mr 'McNutt aside from the presidential election is ah able man Consequently he has been the nkdrder of Arnold believes in advertising A good ad- Rothstein of New Fork1 "gambling ' bol-shevis- m ' s open-space- ! - j ' "Today" s Police of New Yjork City invite suspects in the Arnold Rothstein murder to visit hekdquajrters PerL haps the reason the party wasn't successful was because the invita tion wasn't sent on scented note paper OUR SAM AS HAS TEFAItl BATHTUB SCOTCH world's song writers Only 31 he died as he had lived very poor loaving the world richer forever by the workings of his genius His deepest admiration was for Beethoven And his dying words ver "Beethoven is not here" Let titj hope that he and his beloved Beethoven and others that encourtoaged knd befriended him were anwhere "their getherdo yesterday behold thei face of gels always my father" and heard his symphony in C major played by the New York Philharmonic conducted ' by Mengelberg The radio could carry it everywhere on Xtiia planet Why pot as far as heaven tovwhich thes ether j 1' surely extends? i V 0 HAPPHHP ByAIlTHUR BRISBANE 1928 by the Star Co) (Copyright One ' hundred years ago Franz Schubert died greatest of all the ALASMV ooK SAW BHUlAB IAl i life vbrMciods c 'if MONTHS 'A rrro i) tht written it Stopping at a tavern on a walk a friend recited some of Shakespeare's sonnets' Schubert on the tavern menu ''Hta u s pat orfn'A wrote his song "Hark Hark the © J2 BY nth SERVICE Iark" And that1 evening wrote the music of "Who Is Sylvia?" In his last year he wrote "Death and the Maiden" and until he died he continued pouring out works of genius songs operas quartets quintets' symphonies He made many friends jail worth while in ability and character When a new acquaintance was his question always way DAVIIiA PLAYS IWItT IN IIOOY- "Kann er 'was?" "Can he do EK VISIT TO SOI Tit "AMKRICA AMBASSADOR IS PROGRESSIVE XIVJELY Congratulations are due the men and women that arranged to honor his memory From his grave he By RODNEY BUTCHER sends to the world beauty and NEA Service Writer par INC-- g BE M lATHElilTbrMaLA tiO-CETT- 21— Senor Dr Diiph Carlos Davila ambassador extaojrtdinary and minister from the Republic of Chile j was instrumental if not chiefly responsible in the matter of Hoover's arranging President-elec- t visit tq Jatin America Ambassador Diivlla is one of the most progresses and energetic members of the diplomatic colony here Until he was sent on his mission to Washington he was a newspa-permlie hasn't been here long enough to determine whether he would rather be that or a diplomat But he WTas so long the editor of a morning newspaper in Santiago that he still does a gTeat deal of: his work at night from force of habit His journalistic reputation in Chile vas so great that it was assumed that his diplomatic achievements could never quite create anit But other reputation to equal there begins to be ' some doubt about t lat Few newcomers to tiic corps jinj recent years have made such 4 favorable impression ft with Davila reveals thut he knjows far more about 'the United iStates— its business polithe avertics and history—-thal- n Americano' age — j We jfound out just how Senor Don Davila was last spring vhen he flew to the Foreign Trade j Convention at Houston and back The ambassador threw a luncheon in honor of the good will flyers which was attended by War Secretary Davis alhd Navy Secretary Wilbur They were telling them of their attempts to make the country It appeared that Don Carthat los himself was so he habijtually hopped into an airplane as unthinkingly as one might mount 4 bicycle a 'buggy or motor car he was offered an army olane td take him to Houston WASHINGTON Nov plejii-potentia- ry ar Con-yersat- ic j i Latln-Ariieric- in le ed i ' Ue 155-year-o- ld i f ' tner-chandibt- hg R ESS 1 k ! d sj-y- s - far-reachi- self-respecti- sellf-supportl- er j tf-- zr be convinced crime as a callis a miserable affair - by-fo- prcss uniform who seems to revvi an authority he does not have They sweep scrub and run er- rands for prisoners and are known as fats ana Mikes The reamy sidte of life has not hardened them: They are kindly and extremely garrulous blu in I early Sunday morning Once in Santiago Davila was 4 mer reporter covering ires fun eraln murders and all sudh matters for JC1 Iercurio La Nation mad? him its foreign editor arid he was so good that he became managing editor whereupon he ihtroducetl American ideas- of journalism and built Jua Nacion up to its presn f j commanding position As editor and publisher of L4 Nacion he founded an afternooi tabloid Los Tiempos jle raiso4 newspaper salaries and Effected 4 under journalists retirement fiind which with government! adminis! tratton each employe ofj a rrewkS paper contributed '5 pen cent o his salary to be matchedf by 5 pef cent from the owner plifs 20 pef cent of the paper's annufl profit-- ? The occupationail disease nerserr ana or wnicn sne was misiEess tnan live in an other woman's palace Around nearly eve ry police head- - quarters is an odd ype — generally a wizened old man in a castoff York! land visible sign of her authority that she exhibits a iealousv ahont it that she shows about nothing else on earth She is literally like tba monopdlistic Turk who can bear no rival near the throne and any other woman who attempts to interfere with her wajils of Housekeeping does : I "f so at her peril 7 j ever knew ©f began when insisted that her daughterf should wash the dishes in two waters instead of one land among my ac- woman quaintances is an otherwise tolerjintiand boad-niindewho has cherished a grudge for twenty years against her son's wife because when the girl came as a bride to live! with her she Insher room shifted the arrangement of the furniture ' a of One of thei bitterest famipy feuds mother-in-la- w d chauffeurs especially drivers of private cars is ind gestion Th-jare forced to gulp down food on the fly to be ready when they are wanted r ' j jj - j COURSE ft inay seem fooljsh that women! should lay such stress on Uttle things but the average domestic wlomanfs life Is made up This is no great snakes as an item but interested me At a ga of littlei things and her happinesi depends on suqlh small trifles as being thering the other evening the au able to gratify her own whims and do jUst as she pleases in her own dience stood to sing "The Star home :Tb use doilies if she prfefers them to tablectoths to have the Spangled Banner" A foreign look wallpafcer she likes and the draperies that appeal to her to doll up her ing gentleman next to me sang all the words And in broken dialect kitchen! or leave it! bare as a laboratory according to her taste — f I The dressing room of a theatrical man jean ever understand! Just what star is being made over entirely of Possibly no mere horne meanslto a home-Iovi- n mirrored panels including the ceil q womani for min arje at best im- — to knew often I've ached domesticated animals and j to most mtn a home Is ing perfectly don't tell me I'll guess—why stage a place where they can hang up their hats and ease mainlyfeet-andartists seem constantly to require their get the kind of things they like tjs eat without their mirrored reflections on stage to order them and theA slump down oyer pipe and paper having and off You can keepalmost all Or ielse it Is place where thejy can grouch and gloom and work of them content for hours at a off all the temper and nerves they are afraidj!to exhibit to some stupid party by seating them within body of their own size and weight f range of a-- looking glass Indeed I believe an actress shipwrecked R HOME is merely a filling Station and as jfeoon as they have got on a desert isle with only a hand mirror would not be frightfully 0 their tanks replenished they step on ihe gaf and joyride away and bored don tc(me back uhtil every other place H closed up Any place where the food is good and the bed comfortable can be home to them but no Writes a Philadelphia lady "You place las homo to a woman Isn't her wn andf Isn't filled with her own used to be rather interesting but things j That is why men'sthat clubs ate suclesseSj and women's are sociapi wfeeks have two you for the past a failures wants When to read land relax she doesn't go to a Iwpman been unusually dull What's the club I do it she jgoes home f ft toj matter?" 0' I!' : I house-cleanin- ' red-heade- d w B EDTIME - Stories York 'New Mlt DAY BY DAY M'INTYRE By O O YORIv--Th- e ol Fulton "deadline" for crodsks is still mniniaincd at least in tjeory it was C'Jablished by the pcturesqud Inspoctor lijTnes many fears agoj and any known criminal found bel nA in " tta ciitvvAf tvj jttcu iuv iLwr liii quarters The idea Avas to kecrt nimblj gentlefingered and men' away fropi the npq ties and1 minarets of the financial zone There are crooks who hve and proved thlr worth who' are given special permission f i J to cross the line Indeed two are reportfed estab-- 1 lished in business and are proof the j riminal does see thd error ot his ways Uptown there is a fellow once handy with the "soup soap and blanket" who has an office force composed entirely of those who have done their "ftretche&" and are now He i a regular visitor to a Bowery mission and contributf heavily to its support There is a police theory that a man mayf make a mifs-tctwice and still iecbrrie at useful member of society) But the! third time offender is regarded as j i hopeless Countless police data ?confirmsr this reasoning Consequently whin a third termer trespasses the district he is in for a lot explaining and perhaps another voyage up the Hudson Fulton street is well patrolled by lookouts' from Central Offick Thr-loiter about shop windovv3 dtepliylnsr an air of indifference whilj scanninK the fea of faces for the seasoned crook I Many f I "camera them are the ! ' Safe-blowi- - ng "gone-stratght- " law-abidin- g! - n s - so-call- ed eyes'1 of the department who re- tain k! photographic memory of a criminal for many yearsl Tha fcrook is usoially vainglorious As th murderer returnf to the scene of his crime he lik-e- to revisit the scene of his triuiiiph One of the: most carefully policed sections) south of Fulton M Maiden Lanei the great diamond and jewelh ry district — ' ' J Toiico headquarters seem haunted M wretched human shadows In tho halls are always harfied men and women wondering qver the It i" difficult why of retributionto loiter around the corridors and " I - TMI By THORNTON NEW 1 POSSUM SHOWS OFT ras W BURGESS That good for you with me might fail: Each needs his own peculiar tail — Unjc' Billy Possujm In that way you will make her happy alhd vouMI keep her busy and Interested and you will take thei best way that has been yet devised for developing her cHaractei FoV a home will l U ! uu iiivio uioii f mi WOmin WalK- j ix o rcep iii uic i cn vurnmanumcms ing in tne straight ana narrow way Somehfflw there is a mora nftuence in pots and pans artd gas ranges arid vacuum cleaners ff tnat lifts worrier up to the higher life 1ITHY? Don't ask me But I have seenia comMete set of aluminum ware regenerate a flapper and turn a Ch4(rlestbh dancer into a sedate housewife In the twinkling of an eye L Rusty the Fox Squirrel was feelFurthermore be glad and thankful that your wife want He was outside ing better now her own home and has the fjomemaklng Instinct Instead of bethat hollow treo in which he had ing one of the undomestic women who shy at the sight of a been trapped by the Possum whoso kitchen and Insist on living In hotel arid board(ng houses so home it was He was outside and that nothing may Interfere with their brldgls games and shop- Now fear bo no longer worried ' I A i Yes ping orgies j had given way to curiosity curto had indeed fear given way He was curious about that (Copyright by Public iLedgef) j iosity tail that Mr Possum possessed He was so proud of his own tail and by he got out to feet and htifig head down sa that and he found it so useful that h climbed Bybranches were email he had hoh of that branch only the where Possum's Mr couidn't imagine uuuei JPn neiuv rvuJlJ' with liis hihdfeet and his tall queer tail with no Hair On ll USAHfJr Ufut began to wonder 11 Mr 1'ossqm Rusty saw right1 away how very being useful at all Back in the wasn't in danger pf falling Thn handy that ail was He even let he had Green Forest from which Then he made a long journey he had met lfe made a discovery That queer go wth ©njr hindfoot Unc' Billy Possum but never had tail was wrapped around that reached andrstretiched and stretchbeen really acquainted with him branch tightly Mr Possum let go ed and reached' Until he got hold of that persimmon Then ho pulled He had never noticed Unc' Billy himself bacli upon that branch lie He hadn't noticed him much looked over Sat Rust3 Unc' at ail about to wonder enough "What do! yo' think how Brr Billy's tail which was exactly like the tail of the Mr Possum whom Squirrel ab0t niah tail?" he I So Rusty had he had just met j been asking questions "It's a splendid tall!' replirxl Now Mr Possum had recovred a till like Husty "I-- l wish 1 had r from his anger over having had it" :s I hi ( his home occupied by Rusty and MrJ Possupi gave a pleaded sort had listened with some amusement of chuckle 'Yo" wouldn't like It" to Rusty as he bragged about his lis all lie said "It rlglit for me but own beautiful tall "Your tail may yo' wouldn't have any use for it suit yo' Mr Squirrel" said he "but The kind of :a tail yo' need you'v Ah wouldn't have such a tail as got :The kind of a tail Ah need to tree that Ah don't jump from Ah have Hut don't make fun of tree 'so Ah don't need anything anybody'a taP Flrid out about them to balance me Ah don't sit up to before yo niake fun of them" eat so 'Ah don't need a tail to shut Thin I think you will agree waa off the wind Ah wouldn't have Mother If Old very good a I vice1 such a tail as yours Nature would 'give it to me Ah (opyrisH 1928 by T W wants a tail that is useful and Ah jj iBurgess) :: ii i I " j 'Yuur tail may suit you Mr reckon that is the kind of a tail Thei next l story: Ah has" Squirrel' said lie but Ah would "Rusty Gets Rustv looked at that bare taper- n't have a tall like that Busy" ing tail and for the life of him he couldn't see of what possible VI th both his forefeet and reached feLM use it could be He said so Mr out to pick a persimmon He didPapers n't fall because"! he was held iin Possum's small eyes twinkled NETV YOHlvVInamOaPt haa "Ah will show you" said he "Yo place by that talk He picked the see that tree right over there persimmon and ate it He smacked the newBpapers :to blame for a of bigamy lodged - against That's a persimmon tree Ah'a his lips over it Then he discovered charge A notice of his marriage him here me nice watch a To' persimmon of fond particularly persimmons beto a little Evelyn Slbrer found its Avay Inhanging from a branchget some of those persimmons" to a Springfield Mass paper It AHe couldn't reach Mr Possum climbed down from low it read by Jlacljr3 May Kupercanj the tree in which he and Rusty lthough he tried Then ho did what was were sitting and leisurely went over to Rusty was an astonishing thing who told police that Oust married j to the persimmon tree Lp this he He let go entirely with his fore her lit Springfield in 1921 i ! i - in-quir- eq : " 1 j the 1 ii' ' ! - i I 0 - - Davila was always strong fo cultural relations with ith United States and was irrfportantbf iritoirumental in making! Chile good friend of ours jeanwhn he and numerous other Chilean! werti becoming disgusted yyith thei government and Davila fbaight for a new deal g wa A ' general effected in 1926 and wthen 'they asUcU Don Carlos what ppsition hi wanted in the new government hf asked for th© ambassadorship t Vasijiiigton hoping thatt he coul some more Chilefin-Ame- ri promote ' ican friendship and do Jomethln to clean up the Tacna-AHc- a mctf in which his country and feru have been embroiled for these' man This desire of a woman for a home is a osmi4 urge It has Haven't you heard? It's my pit f isn't come It yea is down to us from our earliest! forentsotherS Who when right working gland uitary Ho has been doing wel at botll asrairf of d ry caves in which to II I've aifid rear their hairy supply IIo got the Peruvian anl jobtf babies ran out built hutches of branches of trees and grasses (Copyright 1928 by tne mc Chilean delegates together at Ha Naught Syndicate Inc) "u o crcticu me nrsi nomcs tou fan DCf tnat each of those vana' and was' responsible for r ladies had her own individual shack to bosi and that storing diplomatic relationship befa and didn't double up with her motherln-la: tweon the two countries after Tacna IT The years lapse of see :Mr Man that your wife isn't to be blamed for wanting Arii-urgess S YOU question remains unsettled home It is in her plood Itfis herlinheritanbe from those heti own has but the outlook beepme coiu cavewomen who invented homesl and if you are a wise nl an and know more hopeful! sidernbiy what's good" for you you will gq right out and feet her one before the ' sun set? cIohq' ' x That is why ho woman wants jtoiHve with her own mother after she Ja married and thkt's why she if miserable and dis- no conxeniea it tne is rorcea o live wtn nr motner-in-iamatter hov good and kind and considerate the mother-in-lamay be nor how luxurious the house she iharesj For women are individualiEts and there is no young wiff who has the home- marking instincts in her who wouldn't rathe! have her own two- flat or a pasteboard: bungalow In hich she could ex- - HAiK-roM- ic LETTER fd it's to6 late that they had listened However while some lose and oihers'win the money remains only changing hands and some of it at least Is used admirably Last year two billions of dollars were spent on the public schools Every dollar of that is worth a thousand to the country's future and the expenditure will steadily increase as it should 'I ireasons that girls get married is tq get a borne and ONE of the main doesn't mean that they mrry to get somebody to pay tueir bills for them They can do that theiiselves put what they crave Is a place In which they may reign suprepe and have Itheir own motiogramed towels land silver chest And mostly they have to marry to get this Yod will notice that the bachelor girls who have! set up their own homes are pot: keen on matrimony It is the girls whoihave to live in the fam ily home who are most actively jengagedJIn huiband-huntln- nvSUINGTON Advocates of birth control may muse upon the fact that Schubert was the thirteenth in a family of 14 children Fortunately for the wtrld his'strong mother EJizabeth Fritz did not think it necessary to stop at an even dozen Btf( them fc nts Wiell I'll tell yu Mr Man It is a woman's Home m the realization of DOROTHY D1X the dream she has cherished ever since she iplayed keeping house in the nurs Is It her Is a woman's emancipation procla because home ery mation No woman evfr really feels free ufitil she lives in her own house with rier own fuijmture she picked out herself and that repreisnts her Individual taste and her own gas ranga on which she can cook the ihings srie likels the way she likes 4 7 Works of genitia poured from liim In a stream Hearing one ot Mr q n songs he said "That is not so bad" He forgot that he had sug-pest- ij he-poi- mat 1(5: o I i s don't think hs wife is utterly unreaA sonable because she wants a! home of heriown Ever since tbey were married they have lived wijh his people liand out with unassailable logic tnat this arrangement it not only much cheaper! but gives his wife less work to do than she $vould have if thev set up a separate esUblish&ierrt uecr liruuonai ANcveiiuinetiB t iite to iwhom he is tnarried persists in demanding! her own home and! weeps and aavs that he jdoesn't love hjer when he refuses to give ner one nence tie is exasperated beyond measure because? she 'fnt happy and satisfied wnen sne nas good roof over her head and plentyajperreftiy df wholesomeifood to eat And" aren't women the craafy things anyway? And why do they make Etch a fetish of their homes? (V? PfiBVlOliS bv H ! MAN wants to know of me If PATCHES a&sLAa&tt-r- s WOMAN'S DESIRE FOR HER OWN HOME IS AN AGE-OLINSTINCT INHERITED FROM THE FIRST THEREFORE ANY ATTEMPT TO DEPRIVE HER OF IT IS SURE TO RESjULT IN UNHAPPINESS — CAVE-WOMAN- au MS j well-organize- A Tim CAME VROM- - A -- j 5 --Trie OUT rloROSCQPe Xa WtTH HIS i 21 1928 T)oroth y iDkj Talks OUJM TtORMULA FOR MOTH COAi1feo£- -r 12 f Upon Schubert's Jife teachers and preachers might base useful sermons His father! a parish school master gave him music lessons but at seven youngFranz had passed his father Of his 600 songs he wrotf pimc of he most beautiful in his 'tpens"protchen at the Spinning Wheel" at 17 "Krl Kconi?" at IS addi-tionalltit- " r TOPAV 7 CATASTROPHE -AAV IMS IS 117 air-mind- Q P W I O N S of the CO A 11 jUrfA'fK ? G&BAcf CAHSAR i prison er in Cleveland got mad Professor Shayer of Columbia at a judge and killed his cell mate reminds you that national prosperA in revenge person can't be safe expands as public school funds ity even in jail these jdays In 1910 this country increase spent only 500 millions on public schools last year 2000 millions "It An Illinois man! won! the corn hath not yet been shown what we It hasn't shall be" And the public schools husking championship been determined who's the best at arc tlie: greatest progressive force range" At the coronation of Ras Tafarl drinking jit "But don't you think the good "Kings of Kings" with the of "Jion of Judah and ft wafa rather surprising that old days were better? Were we More than 50090 deer hunters Elect sof God" 'the kingdom of Chile didn't lose a perfectly good not happier then and didn't we live stormed the Michjgan woods this Ethiopia better known as Abys- ambasMdor'as things turned out more contented lives?" the quescelebrated most completely Ha flS4 first to Fort Bragg ami men never cease to war sinia year Will The whole including then jtoward Montgomery Ala population tion er broke In ' s upon one another j to festive Forced! Mown at Eufaula Ala lie the marched the army "No I do hoC'j replied the man in and squadrons platoons bpard proceejtjd by motor to Maxwell "A with the birthday jbkit meanwhile he was lost for seven days feasted and Field "Thirty years You can tell a own ingrowing - king of kings was crowned to Uh© jvorld and there "wore serTheimdad more a ago my occupied when a wig is called a trans? by his aunt behind a curtain ious ff4rs whether he would be portant place in the life of the com- up scene too sacred for common eyes seen agjiin alive llpwever Don formation And a little buzzing squadron of Carlos flew on In a new plane from munity than I ciojtodayi And confighting airplanes could wipe out Maxw elf Field bound for Houston sider dad lie "hlad no auto He En route he ran into a tornado all that lion of Judah business in whic Among the many ways in had no radio He had no electric wliich ipjb bsequ en tly nearly destroyminutes a few ed fa tbijvn or two in its path and refrigerafor ( lie f had ho furnace a man can makef his pile don't But :let us be humble Mnce our had a miraculous escape from that Come to think of it he had very lit- overlook the junkyard Sam is only a Ras Tafarl on Rut thai tornado hurried him un tle modern plumbing I have all the ashixger scale He and his popula- to Houston and he made the 650 Zaro Agha Turk is tion hvave been feasting at the stock miles ini five hours things my dad lacked when he was he made 'a speech an American wife Who exchange banquet for months And the age that I am now Times seeking feen 'fine feasting which the Foreign Trade Council are better for all of us than they said age dims the fighting spirit? it Ahas fewN squadrons of fighting deemed ij worthy of several printwere a generation ago" And ings' y'4le demonstrated that the could end all that planes wre have not remarjkiible growth of our trade ticker His friend asked some more watchtngjth Sometimes you ask the boss for with jlUltln - America was not due enoughto realize it ' a raise and all y$u get Is a rise brains questions: "Our best farnilies" in New York to fwanf'4 fortuitous assistance but i "How about the younger gen out o£ him have been dldnking "bathtub to a ccjle of development originatScotch" without Knowing it ing frpm the powerful expansion H igh grade bootleggers' fancy ofiAmytican production and This demonstration customers "only Satisfied with ' ' the a rather general ruined off have Just virtually goods ship" 1 dolimxression millions of and drunk aniong business men bought lars worth of horrible stuff made that the! war really was responsible of denatured alcohol redistilled Leaving Houston Friday night mixed in ordinary bathtuos with the ambassador had to get to New-YorTHE COST OF'MEDICAL CARE malt and water The malt giving SUnday noon to s?e his wife ' ' He (Chicago Daily News) j off for Europe children and old Scdtch that good smoky faste sent Recognizing that the cost of medical and hospital service is becomhis army plane on to New Oring all but prohibitive to persons of moderate meansi— that is to the J J Donovan chief of the coti- - leans and went himself on a sleepgreai majority of jthe population— the directors of the Julius Roscnwald plracy section in one branch ofJ er At 17:3 0 a m he took off fore fund propose to extend financial assistance to cfficient the administration Montgomery had coffee and gaso-fSnprohibition and flew cn to Fort clinics sold at this stuff 6f that have thejre pay apdhdspitais fancy prices adopted the policy ' charging their where he dined and took Brgg patients distinctly moderate prices This wisely conceived effort to Ji' also ofhad a fancy effect on the another the best families that meet a great and pressing need( should lead to sleeper landing in- New lining benefits ' it drank The fund will not establish competitive institution of its wn but in British Guinea supplied the idea V will help tojsappdrt those which give good scientific! service not tod & Ohio progresThe Baltimore fHjser from a plant that now using to be of out the of reach di costly small incomes sive railroad orders clocks run persons in England and already by There are such institutions and as yet they are not radio Not necessary to make any yields three or four million pounda The great value of this extension of the field of the Julius Rosen- - allowance distance in such a year wald Fund Will be generally recognized The average Ibhysician is wil- clocks Theforelectric impulse movdf to his time and'skill give ling freely to the poor but he is iopposed td ing thfevhour or second hand goes clinics that profess to charge and yet fail to charge tbk full equivalent Jt 60 00 miles a second The dif- cents a poundXthe plant grows of the value bf the service rendered Such clinics are necessary how-ev- ference between the Faeific and seven fe?et high and is "stripped" and are beginning to appear in many places despite shortsighted! the Atlantic would be only the It is not a blossomx cotton criticism Tley need and deserve such aid as the Julius Rosehwald thlrty-M?con- d Only tjhe coarsestgrades of cotpart of a second Not offers them The example thus set well might ue followed by other fund enough to make you miss your Bal- ton can jbe made froirYxIt however philAnd experience teaches that subtimore & Ohio flier anthropic foundations In due time the medical profession itself by stitutes jare more numerous than croun V cotton America's succesifiiL growing regions In a posi yiouitooiiu fuuuciu lucuivuo ut uisamzauon may put'ji itself will be interested mildly in a new i iJ-JHenry! Ford's plan to produce lion to reuueo mo nign cost or mw nnp ctirrP in a That goal is definitely favored by leaders of the profession but it still "cheaper"' cotton developed in cheap Hnen by treating hemp modern machine made manner Ungland CLVLUO iMJOiaMi A small bird weaving her nest scerms nibro promising A Bife COAT OF sibekiaaA beA"R I " j By AHERN MV MAeMlFICBASrf' FRANZ SCHUBERT STOCKS AND TEACHING ' have a good job with good prospects and live in the most interesting ige the world lias ever known" the cheerful one replied "And why do yjou call this the most interesting ge?' was the next question and jthe one who had just reached forty replied: "Just think of the marvels that have become common place in my "young life I saw the incandescent lamp put the coal oil man out of business the telephone became a fixture instead of a wonder the automobile rout the horse from the city streets ajnd the radio ac cepted as casualty as the kitchen WEDNESDAY EVENING NOVEMBER R OUR BOARDING HOUSE vertisement has jan interesting king" Dropping a few million miles compelling statement — a bombshell Nearly as much fuss has been from Schubert to the level of the to attract attention so to speak made over this affair as though stock exchange did you notice that His (Statement about white crosses Rothstein had actaally jpeen a use- - in five and a half days last week and new millionaires mansions fur citizen He was not of course brokers sold rhore than 31000000 was such a' bombshell It sounds He was famous simply fbecause he shares above 5000000 shares a harsh but perhaps it Is true And rolled up a fortune Of $10000000 day? it Isj advertising the 'legion's legis- by gambling! H§ was accused of Exchange authorities are getting share days lative program rather effectively various shady deals h£ apparent- - readyifor in10000000 this column long since predicted iDittle people especially the foolly was not e'en that curious ano- ish that gamble should beware of FORTY YEARS OLD maly a "square kambler" Wall street maelstrom with that ANb AN OPTIMIST But after all he had $10000000 the dollar marks on it But uni a id age any man fortunately advice is wasted Ana in tms aay ''(" "Why so happy and peppy?" one who has that mujc h moijiey pan be The Inexperienced including friend asked anotier sure of fairly re sjectful attention many women from take "tips" "I jam happy because I am forty when he on those more ignorant than thempasses yearis old today in good health selves and some will wish when i STANDARD-EXAMINE- r-l- - :'Ln -- i !rV' IT |