Show I EATITEDAY EVENINO OCTOBER 26 THE ’ OGDEITv STANDAED EXAMINE -- of senate contempt served three months In Jail 2 Albert B Fall and E L Doheny acquitted charged with conspiracy to defraud the government 3 Fall "and Sinclair mistrial to decharged with conspiracy 7 fraud 4 Sinclair held In contempt of court and now serving sentence and Henry Mason Day sentence served for having jury shadowed to cause mistrial (No jury) 5 Robert W Stewart Standard OH of Indiana acquitted charged with senate contempt 6 Stewart acquitted charged with perjury' 7 Sinclair acquitted charged "with conspiracy to defraud the The Ogden Standard-Examin- er J PUBLISHING CO 3 r A L ClUfflUB r Pabllthciri An Independent Nwppef Published every erenin and Sunday morning without a imuzie or a club Matter At the Entered as Second-cla- ss Postoffice Ogden Utah six-mon- Established 1819 SUBSCRIPTION RATES 75c Delivered by carrier ©n month By mail In advance In Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming Three months Six months One year All other states 1100 a month Today ex-chair- y’oo 1200 one year United Member ol The Associated Press Service Press Consolidated Press NBA and A B C The Associated Press is exclusively of to the use lor republication it not otherwise any news credited to and also the local credited In this paper ° news pQbiished herein ‘ ‘ on-titl- J ed government Fall convicted with receiving bribe 8 Call 252 for All Departments In si STrrrr iial cochoan— (ictdres - Day by Day kjcci (Copyright '1929 King Features Syndicate Inc) TAINTED FOOTBALL MEN AND MICE Sd -' ' -— ' tickers on charged blackboards willwatching doubtless be spent addition H M Blackmer more usefully hereafter But usurious money lenders who associated of Sinclair has been have been charging stock gamblers fined $60000 for contempt of eight to twejjty per cent interest are court to refusing to return trom not the men to rebuke the gamThe Standard-Examine- r’ blers Europe to testify In one of SinPlatform - — clair’s trials You will hear perhaps today “big to bankers have stepped 75000 I’ojiulation by 1935 more is one There in and stopchapter a Place on the Transcontinental ' be written There is pending ped the decline” Air Route That happens after little people Control or a Pure Water Supply against Doheny a charge of have been shaken out and stocks to Accommodate 150000 People counsel Government have bribery dropped to A fine investment f A Modcrn County City and basis of verdict the ' encouraged by Millions today sorrowfully realize Building guilty obtained in the prosecu- that it does not pay to gamble A Direct Highway to Great Salt " Lake tion of Fall is preparing to press The Monte Cristo Road to Rich the charge against Doheny The President Hoover’s plan for a great County of inland waterways realsystem at the will of the government present A nigh School Worthy izes in prospect the hope of those trial of Doheny about the same that welcomed an able engineer to City Another North and Sonth Arevidence brought forth In the the White House ' terial Highway Total expenditures planned will prosecution of Fall A Municipal Athletic Field amount to $525000000- and every An Aggressive All in all a review of the sit- dollar spent will pay for itself ten County Road Building Program seems to bear out the times over uation More Street Improvements In has of what truth long taught Ogden The president observes that the us that honesty is the best annual Improved City Parks increase in expenditure will A Municipal Golf Course lf like a time looked amount for It only to the cost of policy a City of Beautiful Ogden one of battleship the figures In the oil scandal i Homes The president might have added were “getting away with mur- that in modern war the whole of would be worth less one been all have battleship der” Actually IIISTORY ANCIENT of ten cents since than punished either by the courts or battleships are now merely targets FOR NEW VOTERS disgrace and mental anguish for submarines and airplanes worth Many young men and women by The only question Is whether the nothing except to battleship 0 who are casting their first votes punishment has been severe ) this fall were only 13 years of enough to fit the crime The Carnegie foundation says colwith' age and still playing lege football is “tainted with money” SMALL Free teaching and cash bonuses are marbles tops and dolls eight CHURCH TOO — given to young men that can kick FORE I GOSHEN events took hard run fast and tackle savageyears ago when the I Elmer Reverend The ly ' place which resulted Friday in a It would be more pleasing if colverdict holding Albert B Fall Goshen’s church in Salt Lake' is leges sought great te achers as eagformer secretary of the’lhterior in difficulties and is worried lest erly as they seek great quarterbacks guilty of accepting a bribe of it will not longerbe able to Hold But no great harm is done The $100000 from E L! Doheny arouse and great crowds church The minister games its life in men’s interest These new voters were not do- we popular college young read owes the minister $3000 and give college education to young much reading newspaper ing in back alary and must figure men from rolling mills and rear end eight years ago Consequently how to pay that and keep up the of ice wagons that might otherwise remain uneducated today they want to know what it payments in the future some ancient Hence is all about An analysis tf the Salt Lake The Swiss parliament elected by history must be recalled Its a moral and serious nation proposreveals church’s situation Away back in 1623 a few in- pnusuajf features Where most ing a law to punish blasphemy sugin person- - lor quisitive souls in the" United churches haye difficulty filling gests six months or in writing inthose that “orally States senate called for an in- their auditoriums the Goshen sult' God” circumstances church isJndifficulties because vestigation of be punished beunder which Harry F Sinclair Itdoes not have a large enough Blasphemy should and a sets bad cause it acquired from the government churchl Morning services until show's want of respect example the feelfor trethe privilege of exploiting recently were held in a theatre ings of others mendously valuable navaljbil re- A theatre was needed to accomBut is it possible for any serves in the Teapot Dome sec- -' modate 'those who wanted to human microbe on this plan Dotion cf Wyoming and E L minister- - Seemingly the hear d to puntstr heny obtained the right to drill there were no financial troubles If the rce oposeEdison you insulting for oil on other naval reserves then Now the theatre no longer any mouse “Mice don’t worry You would say in California — Is available and the congregation cant insult Edison” What the inquiry! revealed was is limited to the size How much less can any man inof the a shock to the country Sinclair church The minister draws a sult the Creator of the universe? Doheny and Fall were charged fine salary Seemingly only The Tibuna of Rome announces with conspiracy tof defraud the those who have' to an interesting ceremony opportunity in full government Suits were brought hear Goshen contribute to the Italy’s king and queen Crown Prince state by accompanied recover to the the government by collection and those who get the Humbert and other princes will visreserves A charge of accepting first Pope Pius in the Vatican opportunity to hear him preach it to- the pope of a bribe was brought against Italian visit royalty are not Numerous enough to since 1870 and the days of GariFall and a charge of meet the budget A larger audi- baldi giving a bribe against Doheny After an intimate meeting beto solve the diffitorium ought ” tween the pope and the royal famThe government was culties St j the party will enter ily to suits recover the lit- - the Salt Lake situation Peter’s toroyal at the render homage! OJfTand The United States suof St Peter proves anything it is this: tomb The proposed picturesque cornu bepreme court found that the People will go to church when renewed friendliness transactions under which Do-- - the message they receive there tween of the- Italian Monarchy and the heny and Sinlcair obtained thr interests them' pope arranged by Mussolini is of great historical interest land were “steeped in fraud” In conMost of the members of the criminal cases however the ' Poincare and Clemenceau great government was not quite so gress play golf a Washington re- Frenchman and old Clemenceau amaze their doctors successful Here Is what hap- porter discovers You can fasten is eighty-eigfrom serious illrecovery : on L by almost"1 quick a kind of joke any pened ness ' 1 Harry F Sinclair convicted congress “Within an inch of death” last — - ’ ‘ I one-ha- one-ha- lf j ‘ THE frightened cow ran right ride I’d like to flop downoni the A along sleep and It seemed that it was grass and sleep and cow I also fear the might good and strong The Tinies and sleep the Weeones still were perched fall and that would surely spill us upon its back It surely was a all It wouldn’t be a bit of fun -- ! funny sight They all hung on with all their might1 Wee Clowny kept the speed up when he gave the cow a smack Tt e farmer who seemed quite unkind was now left many yards He’d planned to spank behind the (Tinies ’cause1 they’d eaten up his corn His plan however died out now because the Tinies and the jeow 'had easily outrun him He was feeling quite forlorn Across the fields- - the fat cow raced still thinking he was being chased Then'" Coppy shouted “Hey let’s stop 'mndrest our weary bones I’ve bumped around unti I’m sore and now that we are jsafe once more I want to get down Pretty soon we’ll all be groaning groans” very good plan” Coppy cried “I’m also tiring of this f HE success-jbaUnJta-ci- vil t m-atl- on - I ht - "Sunday Clemenceau is now getting up at 7 in the morning to work on his important book and discuss politics with friends The puzzling fact for prohibition Americans to that these Frenchmen all their lives have drunk light WHEN MELODRAMAS ARE OUTDONE BY FACTS French red wine diluted with water By Bruce Catton never drink ice water French The story of the “liquor empire”' uncovered in the east by fed- and that red wine doctors even tell eral prohibition agents reads like the scenario for a melodramatic containing iron you and vita-min- es tannin movie abundance makes good in For several years the novelists and the movie makers have blood which gives health and long been spinning tall yarns about vast organizations in which millions of? dollars were Involved organizations that had palatial headquarter private armies of thugs fleets of ships extensive legal and sales departments and amaztngly-Iu- ll treasuries We always enjoyed these stories but we never quite believed them They were too much like detective story thrillers in which some “international crook”- directs a crime ring with branches in all the principal cities c But now—behold I It’s all true The gaudiest dreams of the ro- mancers are outdone by sober fact-Whave caught up with our melodrama ten agaiato some of the details of this outfit which the al men finally managed to smash into: ' of warehouses running all the way from Highlands N J to Atlantic City a fortified arsenal where the gang could resist attacks by Its enemies a private radio station branch offices in England and Canada a whole Jileet of ships many of them heavily armed a board of directors whose espionage system of the government’s movements a private hotel kept it informed for the use of employes a financial hook-u- p with banks which insured a constant supply©! lunds a private army ready to fight off rivals or government officers and of course a “master mind” of great mystery and cunning who directed operations from a distant hide-oThis sort of stuff sounds like dizzy fiction and it to be fact -- The thrillers have been outdone by reality - happens How many other similar organizations there be Is a matter for conjecture1 Probably there are quite a fewmay We have a long coastline and the business offers enormous profits It’s highly interesting— but It isn’t really anything to laugh at This smuggling outfit was an empire within our empire a group of men who lived by their own laws and were answerable ' only to themselves The situation! is extremely serious The existence” of such groups brings us a Jot closer to actual chaos and breakdown than it Is comfortable to think about Unless we can find some way to smash such outfits and make the law supreme we are going to run into a very nasty catastrophe We have traveled a whole lot farther along the road that leads to it than we imaginf rum-runni- ng - 4 j e “ A-rtri- ' ng ut liquor-smuggli- ng ’ fed-fer- life Haldane eminent British biologist says the negro race in America will gradually die out because negroes move to big cities Had they remained in the country says Haldine they might gradually have equalled the whites in number’ But city life kills them y That statement appears to be confirmed by statistics in New York City The death rate in the negro section to forty per cent higherthan throughout the city as a whole New There are 300000 negroes in York City and the health problem to a serious one ' M FIND ANCIENT CITY LONDON— An ancient city believed to be Gedi a Persian city at found least 600 years old has been Mommodern Smiles 50 from only basa in Kenya Colony South Africa According to Professor Fleure of the University College of Wales this ancient village would bear investigation by archaeologists for it contains old Arabic writings r— JAPS LIKE THRILLERS TOKYO—Detective stories are the best sellers in Japan now This nation’s tastes have turned from romance and f ictiori to thrillers in the form of detective yarns This type of novel has sold to as high as 300-0volumes and the translators of foreign crime and police fiction are said to be reaping fortunes h 00 M A Ys so-call- ur s - - i i ! i ! ‘ v first-chanc- ! ''! jo t e i £5r ! her stateroom door and upon her opening it said: ’ve come to offer my congratulations I hope you’ll be happy You must let me buy you both a bottle of champagne on the strength of it” “why that’s — that’s splendid of youj Hendy” she said overcome with gratitude for hto having taken it In what she considered such a sporting manner “You’re not going to let me down on the house party are you?” he said anxiously “Of course I shall too expect your— your husband You know I’ve— invited the guests by wireless” “What else could I do but accept for both of us?” Barbara remarked later to Ray “I'd forgotten it completely until that moment Bit of a blow to my pride the way Hendy’s taken it I was vain enough to think he’d be furioiis” “He’s too clever to be furious” Ray remarked under his breath That same afternoon just before the boat docked at Southampton Leri Hickson found Ray packing in their cabin “ hear you’re leaving us” the little banjoist remarked “and I can’t say that I blame you A man would be a mutt to work when there’s no need for him to do so Lucky devil you!” Ray felt his temper rising “You’re wrong about my not working Len I am going to work and work hard” Len laughed derisively “I guess your chief work will consist in keeping the other men off Baby Millions No harm meant sonny” he added hastily “Didn’t mean to speak disrespectfuLof the wife Fine girl I'm sure but If you i i t don’t see to it that you’re in clover the rest of your life you’re a bigger fool than I think you are” Ray muttered something between he saw the futility of arguing with Len and as soon as possible he left him and went up on deck "Here he hoped at least for a few minutes’ peace and- - quietness but no sooner had he stepped out of the passageway than he heard Barbara’s name mentioned hto teeth i ’s married that young saxophonist?' one woman’s voice was saying “Of course my dear” another replied “Amusing isn’t it? They say! he hasn’t a cent to his name butlshe has more than enough for both of them And I guess that a penniless husband is a little luxury tha Barbara Landon to w ell- able to afford!” i HUSPJ I A’ LUXURY RBARA was not a little surprised when some 10 minutes latejr Ralph Henderson knocked on v I 1 f ve Lan-don- ed - -- that Barbara 1 ’ - “Did you- - hear X ! rd - j f to topple in a heap” Then Clowny shouted “Whoa there cow Please stop your crazy racing now We’U find some nice fresh grass for you if you will Just jtist stand still” The cowl Per-hap mooed and picked up speed! it didn’t care for feed There seemed no chance at present to I wind up the Tinies’ thrill And then a barn appeared in posing to marry She is merely a temporary convenience and you ajfgoiag to chuck her out of the door when you sight and frightened Clowny Tiny-mi- teI no longer need her and are able to better yourself yelled “Oh gee look ahead ' I guess that bam to where we’re bound” And sure enough the e you-havmust consider that Certainly you superlative charms cow raced in The Tinymites beif ymf think any woman is going to waste her youth and beauty on Said Scouty “We Miss O’Keefe gan to grin on ’the principle that -even five years of marriage with you is now) Mrs' Alfredl y6u — will loiter here and see what can “vStieglitz was a drawing teaqfeerlir be found” the Amarillo i:puhlio-®ch66i§he sent charcoal drawings of 1 onay flowrs few (The Tinymites-'- find to a friend I in New York place to sleep In the next story) with instructions to look at and bum Service 1929 NEA (Copyright them The friend instead took Inc) them to Mr stieglitz now her husband who conducted an art gallery There are men who marry women in their early youth and He saw the hand of genius and over who take the women’s devotion and service- often their services Miss O’Keefe’s protest gave an exandfame achieve them fortune and then when these that help hibition And Miss1 O’Keefe be- men success divorce their 'wives and marry do reached have they came the sudden center of a core of more to them in their altered women who other ate congenial artistic Few of her drawings light t I E 0 have been sold about 100 in all al- status But they do not plan this wrong against their wives at the she has thousands She was beginning as you are doing It' comes about ‘ through the accident They’ both laughed and passed on though recently paid $25000 for five draw- of growth mowhile down the deck f Ray stood lilies of ings tionless his hands clenced by hto The man goes forward the woman stays still The ’ sides So that was how-- they regardman develops the woman never changes He reads studies ed him 1—As a luxury—a luxury educates himself gets wider social contacts She never Barbara was able to afford I He would have to get used to remains the dull little provincial with learns anything and comments such as that he told I of narrow j her interest — range himself bitterly Comic wasn’t it? He Ray Lowther regarded as a There are many such mismated marriages! Sometimes the luxury a luxury husband Sudden -man sacrifices himself and endures the old wife Sometimes he &ly as though he saw some ironical trades the old wife off tgr the new one but whether he does or not humor in the situation he threw full of heartaches and tears back hto head and laughed it is always a sorry businss ' ’ t A week later Barbara and Ray were dining at the Savoy hotel in So if I were you I should not go into a temporary London when suddenly Ray uttered Divorces are messy affairs and it is harder to marriage an exclamation of surprise and half DOROTHY DIX of wife than you think! a rid get rose to iis feet Iv “Why! if it isn’t old Bill Foster are the What is of DIX— The big question today over there! You remember the felDEAR MISS to demanded am of have11 One and to? them I I ‘‘What right people coming low I told you1 about in Chicago younger jour-wh- o at" naltotie-upstar- to of week Last be I can know the what writes S D C thinking olderpeople in the gave me my orchestra This t to great! 1 must to employ the first person T’ Bet- tended a public dance with some frifends and found there1 were only rush over and haye a word with ters such as the elder Bennett Mur-r- at school children present Girls not more than 15 and boys of 16 or Halstead and Henry Wattersori 17 and we older ones said to each other “What can their parents i him” not did think themselves important be thinking about? The parents most likely were too busy with to he?” asked “Where Barbara enough to go beyond ‘We’ Such “Over there at the piano their own social Affairs to trouble themselves about their! children is sublime” i Excuse me a moment I’ll bring him egotism I believe that my generation ill make the best parents the Ye3 and you know what? 'You over to our table if he’ll come” world has ever known They will understand the child's need for It happened to be an interval can go fly a hawk! and its parents’ companionship and they will be broad-minde- d After Bill Foster had almost emof the in advisers will chief be children’s and way teachfers Jed their to went who as France Kiley braced Ray in public he consented a soldier and remained to become the world instead of to learn them by experience only allowing to be led towards the little corner the club kingi of Paris has PAULA night table where Barbara was sitting come to back America after 14 years As they came within sight of her and has been sold down the river to Bill nudged Ray ANSWER as a scenario writer Ev“You sure were some pickef when Hollywood in Well you see Paula there is not only a youngerTgen-eratio- n Montmartre knows it came to a wife My she’s lovely” erybody “M’soo Kee-lay- ” hto snow and There is a youngest generation and you are al- white And Ray agreed with him for Russian wolf hound that no doubt Kiley and ready relegated to the rear with your ideas Barbara1 was lovely that night She Charles MacArthur the playwright You are shocked at seem to the was wearing a pale green chiffon went ' antiquated to war together and their - your parents giving your little sister the liberty that you ' gown that brought out the red met- pranks onva certain allic lights in her closely shingled been handed down to general have have been demanding for yourself just as your older beposterity head sister was shocked at you and her older sister was horrified tween the covers of a book “Who was she?” asked Bill (Copyright at her and so on ad infinitum 1929 McNaught Syndl- t “Some one in the profession?” — I i cate Inc) “No" said Ray and promptly at consternation Each generation has thrown up its hands in changed the conversation Somethe was that and what the younger generation prophesied doing how he did not want Bill to know world was going to the dogs because the boys and girls were treadthat Barbara had been the wealthy a different measure from what they did when they were young Miss Landon when he had married ing ' Not long ago I was looking over an old Godey’s Lady’s Book that her Barbara tried to be sweet to Ray’s We have heard was published in 1859 It had antiquated pictures of ladies in the friend but for some reason she HOLLYWOOD— mules fashion of the mode big hooped skirts and scoop bonnets with varifound herself ' resenting him This ous other animals being and trousers and blue coats with and gentlemen in mascots she knew to be unreasonable and for football squads! but the other strings whiskers and there were mutton brass buttons and chop flowing mean but she could not help her- day was the first time we ever quaint diagrams about how to knit tidies etc' ' self i of a heard film director put j “Any idea of taking a job over under that classificationbeingEddie so ’was one article that But there was up to date It here Ray?” Bill asked presently Cline who directed the entire Uniwritten today It was about the younger “I’d love to have you with us One might have been were of Southern California team our sainted and revered grandpar of our saxs hasn't been any too fit versity who "Forward Pass” in generation is the : ents and it told at length how inferior they were to their man For this seasonrecently lately” at Eddie least Ray laughed a pleased excited to the official mascot of about how wild and abandoned they were Sarents and laugh eleven and he will be on the bench their morals and unmannerly in their con in “I wouldn’t be good enough for at every game dress and it gloomily prophesied that the coup-tr- y duct and your bunch Bill” would be wrecked when it passed into their hands “Forget it You play a dandy saxplace like this! I’d even give a good ophone You’d like it here Three ‘deal citito be standing up there and But it didn’t you see They settled down Into respectable hundred a week and taking into never so 1 And we sax themselves accountrof zens old consideration the private shows and gave a pretty good playing my again now” “You’d rather be playing In the feel called upon to shudder over what youth as a whole is doing It play at we’re doing fIne’t Ray was leaning across the table band than dancing with me?” she will cease to be flaming after a little while and knuckle down and his eyes shining hto attitude1 tense asked a hurt note in her voice go to work and have babies and go to church and amuse itself by “Bill it would be wonder Then with a sudden' vehemence asking: “What is the younger generation coming to?” has al“Oh how I hate that old saxpohone ful t ” be because will and ways been our favorite indoor sport always “Weil I’ll let you know if there’s of yoursl? us think that surely we are the people and wis- our makes vanity t tears saw much in her He eyes Been angry doing anything doing stuff of your own-latel- y Ray? If and reached under ' the table for one dom will die with us ’ you’ve anything1 good I wouldn’t of her hands “You know dear I’d rather be But I think you are right about this young generation mind' giving it a tryout here” and the he added with you But do try to realize how ' making super-excelle- nt parents because it is time for enturning towards Barbara “Guess you’re proud of your hus- much my music means to me” sterm that to for and the parents swing pendulum She swallowed twice f band We’U hear great things of forced discipline to come into vogue again r I’ll “I’m sorry Ray him some day Hto stuffs good— try” DOROTHY DIX But she did not den’t you agree with me?” Had he been a composer of classThere was a slight pause and Ray a pianist on the con- HEAR MISS DIX— I am a young man very handsome and popu-l- ar commented a little ruefully “Bar ical music or — bara isn’t interested in my compos- cert platform that she told heragain and I I am 23 and have been divorced and married self would have been different love with another young lady than I am with my more am much in ing Bill” ‘You don’t mind my having a wife This young lady is married but doesn’t care for her husband Barbara flushed and was more With old Bill before turnthan glad a moment later when few words divorces and marry each other or stay In?” asked later that night Would you advise us towegetare? he rose to leave the pianist ing Cn W J She said “Of course not” But all discontented the way “Mighty glad to have met you” he said as he held out hto hand the same she did mind ' ANSWER She felt vaguely afraid of the' in“You’re lucky I know for Ray’s a Bill Foster might exercise as fluence as fickle added he A man you are should get divorced and dandy chap” and to Ray ' over Ray and In that moment she could hold your fancy tot long “See you later boy” woman No stay that way Barbara found Ray curiously dis- was glad that they were dated to tie to Is so It upVith any particular lady yourself folly trait during the next few numbers loin Ralph Henderson’s house party see some one that you liked better and You would always his eyes were fixed upon the orches- the following day always be allured by some passing skirt Youofats not bustra and once she heard him saying (Copyright Dial Press) so matrimony in the futurp fight shy band material as though to himself “Gee ” and thereby save some unfortunate woman from troublef Bbt Barbara does not find happiwouldn’t that bo great husbands are no good These part-tim- e ness at Henderson’s house party “Wouldn't what be great?” “To have my stuff tried out at a Continue the story tomorrow (Copyright by Public Ledger) LUXURY SYNOPSIS: Ray Lowther learning his fortune to lost flees his from Barbara Landon sweetheart because he feels her wealth and hto poverty make marriage impossible They are still in love three years later When they unexpectedly meet but Ray refuses oifi ship-boato change his opinion When Barbara makes a desperate- effort to convince Ray she reeds him hs relents and they" 'are married Ray insists however thathe must make his own liv- -' 4ngtoyjwritfng Jazz compositions apd playing in an orchestra Ralph Henderson an English- man with eyes on Barbara’s fortune is chagrined by her marriage but lays a clever plot to separate her from Ray He invites them both to a house -nartjjJ&’herer he hopes- - B arharar srtlrte disappointed in her husband and grasp the opportunity marrying— Henderson’s pros-£ctititle and debts r CHAPTER 10 two-legg- ed - THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) (HEAD THE STORY 8 Ex-Secret- dry i CALLOUS YOUTH WHO FLANS A TEMPORARY MARRIAGE OF CONVENIENCE— WILL THE NEXT GENERATION OF FAR- By O O MTNTYRE ENTS SURPASS PRESENT ONE? PART-TIM- E ' HUSBAND YORK— Analysts of New York’s moods manners and reHEAR MISS DIX —I am a young man just 21 I am noi earning actions discover the metropolis is u enough to support a wife and' will not be for some years to come mentally more alert between 10 a m as I am going to work my way through college but I am! thinking and noon than any other time of of getting married though ! have not yet This Is my plan day These fleeting two' hours hisany particular girl in view a nice-lookiI intend marrying tory shows record the city’s biggest healthy j tomboyish girl who can support herself achievements Probably the girl that I would marry now The staggering coups in Wall will tire of later on so I shall then diI street have been executed then The vorce her and marry a nice intelligent most' enormous real estate deals gieducated woman who will toe fitted to be gantic building projects bank mergmy mate when I am a professional man as I intend to be With the first wife I ers and' such have been similarly consummated There are many exshall have no children- - With the second ecutives so convinced of the magic wife I shall have children as I desire a of these hours they will discuss I shall deal frankly - with both family heavy affairs at no other timeenterthem why I want to marry them telling girls Save in the theatre every and what I expect of them and let them prise seems to benefit by this odd know exactly what they are getting: that morning hurrah Fifth avenue shopis myself Wbat do you think of this plan? pers do most of their buying then R R F ahd jewelry establishments say the biggest sales in diamonds pearl and ' DOROTHY DIX all precious jewels are at this peANSWER: t riod I think it is the most coldIndeed the superstition of “10 to selfish YmeSI have ever heard of and that you bloodedly 12” has even touched the theatre must have great faith lit your personal charms if you think oducers like to sign up stars then It will work d calls for talent to report back stage for new productions are set And they assert What makes you think that any girl would be fool enough to fojr this interval e most promising1 material to marry you if she knew beforehand that you were offering her just ! found a temporary job as wife and that as soon as you were able to suproadway immediately after Iff to port a wife she would be fired? Certainly you would have to hyplike a placid pond suddenly ruf notize one to make her do such a silly thing as that and that the fled by a sharp breeze Everything only-wa- y to over a woman to such an extent the comether put swings Into motion in big office that she takes Is senses leave of her by making a few love passes buildings and appointments are al- at her and as I gather from your -letter you don’t even propose to most Impossible Fifth avenue bex comes tangled with vehicular and do that ' pedestrianic traffic WalT street to Side streets are Nor do you Intend to support your wife! She is to per- gorged menacing with cross currents x all the various duties and functions of a wife to make ' form But after the noon hour Mana home keep 'four clothes in order bear with your you hattan skids through the rest of the moods and tempers'make all the sacrifices that every j on its early momentum It all day woman has to make of her own tastes and inclinations to -suggests- the brief rush of the sky her husband and then on theideher is to go out and rocket No other city after 12 beearn her own bread and butter comes so leisurely It to almost' imto catch possible important people In their offices after that time This basis of living Is one put forward In ‘the companionate - “luncheon New York’s theory but that presupposes that the man and woman marriage hour” is really a three-hostretch are so much In love with each other that they cannot live apart — that is from 12 to 3 New York man’s devotion to the wife repays her for the hard- and that th? exercises little prudence Iq its midof lot her in doing double duty as wife and money-earn- er ships day snack It gorges arfdL conse- Also woman in such a base expects to get her reward in her the becomes quently torpid Generally speaking it to through for theMay husbandJLoying and cherishing her more and more as time goes on and looks forward to pleasures Ofx the night But you don’t pretend to love this woman you are pro- x -- i ’ I I i — - j ' Time wasted i ng One solemn New York banker thinks the drop in stocks “will send back to work many people who have been sitting around brokerage offices on the trail or easy money" f - t - Rogers told RECENTLY Will Seattle Post Intelligencer “there never was a time when so many fools were making money" Today he can tell them there never was' a time when so many fools were losing money so rapidly i f Dorothy Dix s vettercBbx ! IT WENT UP IT COME DOWN THE PRESIDENTIAL PLANS th four-mon- th i By ARTHUR BRISBANE t VT Cldredpe New York X I ' i In Hollywood peg-topp- ed the-Troja- n l t I j : I ! -t I ( 4 |