Show f I 8 THE OGDEH STANDARD EXAIHITEH -- The Ogden medico-philosop- Standard-Examin- er PUBLISHING CO U Eldredyr jr A L Glasmana J happens to be philosopher as well as healer In a paper he prepared for delivery before the Association of Life Insurance Presidents Dr Cook discussed many aspects O GDEN 20 hy Years ' Ago GTomrr hal coomANr Pt CTunss From Our "Files of modern American life from Publishers the medical : standpoint ' He An Independent Newspaper Councilman Joseph Dana and Published every evening and Sunday found occasion to criticize the hisCity brother C R Dana has Just remorning without a muzzle or a club manner in which the modern turned from an extended visit to Entered as Second-cla- ss Matter at the American - takes exercise His southern California and Arizona Postoffice Ogden Utah They report that Mesa Ariz was comment in part follows: Established 1879 blanketed with snow December 4’ the SUBSCRIPTION RATES JSe Delivered by carrier one month By mall In advance In Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming hree month! Isix montha One year All other states $100 a month one year ? 1200 t Member of The Associated Press United Press Consolidated Press NEA Service and A B C The Associated Press fs exclusively on- titled to the nse for: republication ol any news credited to it not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein Call 252 for All Departments "Few men who own a horse would be so neglectful of its welfare as not to see that it was He properly exercised daily would injure or lose a valuable animal Nor would he keep- - him In a stall all week and race him in a steeple-chas- e on Sunday Regular physical exercises baths and rubs from childhood to old age were a daily part of a Greek gentleman’s sacred observances It is no wonder they attained to unexcelled national beauty and health In Greece time even was measured in units of sport— the four-yeintervals between Olympian games Subways motor cars buses railways elevators have eliminated for us exercise during the week To put seven days’ normal exercise into a Saturday afternoon or Sunday morning is probably more injurious— especially after age fifty— than no exercise at tall Vicarious exercise at a baseball or football game where thousands sit uncomfortably and watch 18 or 22 men Is a poor substitute for moderate individual participation Stewart Chase wisely says: ‘Modern play takes on too much of compulsion to win rather than the privilege to enjoy The nervous strain and exalted egotism of modem college major team athletics is of very questionable benefit to participants and spectators The growing custom of gambling in sport 'and social affairs carries the strain of business competition into the all too short periods allotted to recreation It is besides a confession of inability to enjoy and appreciate 'the quiet and restful charm of nature or of congenial human intercourse It is a part of our national prodigality in burning the candle at both ends" t many Americans have the Idea about exercise that the Americaii Indian was ’supposed to have about medicine— if a small dose is good a great quantity should be better ar The Standard-Examine- r’ Platform 75000 Population by 1935 A Place on the Transcontinental Water Supply Air Route Control of a Pure to Accommodate A Modem City Building: A Direct Highway 150000 People and County to Great Salt lake The Monte Cristo Road to Rich county A High School Worthy of the City Another North and South Ar- ‘ terlal Highway A Municipal Athletic Field An Aggressive County ' Road Building Program More - Street Improvements In Ogden Improved City Parks A Municipal Golf Course a City of Beautiful Ogden Homes CHRISTMAS IN PRISON FOR THESE YOUNG MEN Four young men who today should be looking forward happily to a 'Christmas with relatives or friends will spend that day Instead at the state prison The four were sentenced Wednesday to serve from one to twenty years after they had pleaded guilty to looting the Hermitage hotel in Ogden Canyon They also admitted their participation in other robberies here over-exerci- se Three of the young men became acquainted at the Utah Industrial school They had been sent to a detention institution for offenses and failed to realize that crime doesrt’J pay For these TO RELIEVE THE three the training they received TEDIUM OF TRAVEL at the school failed to bring A Sunday newspaper contains about a change in their conduct an article describing how a railbut their detention there prob- road company carries a recreaably protected society from other tion car on some of its trains to "relieve the tedium of travel” depredations during that time What can be done for the “The tedium of travel!” Think Juvenile delinquent to prevent of that Travel is becoming tedihis growing into a young crim- ous inal? Even those who have had Why it seems only yesterday the most experience are not cer- we would put up with almost tain and admit the problem is a anything to travel even a few difficult one Most are agreed miles If we could get ten miles however that if gangs can be away to a neighboring town a split up and the members sepa- springless wagon Vras nothing to rated the chances of continued complain about Storms were good behavior are better Birds faced with" utter indifference in of a feather flock together and open vehicles so long as one was when the bad ones congregate traveling some place The hairy-chestcrimes too often are plotted and boys of those days would executed have thought a windshield a reIn this Ogden case three for- flection upon their masculinity mer inmates became cronies and Then when some obtained the a fourth entered into the asso- wherewithal to take a ride upon ciation All became criminals did they need a recreaIt is easy to become discour- tion car to “relieve the tedium aged over the young criminal of travel?" We’ll say not The problem What for instance are scenery along the right of way the chances that when these no matter what its nature was young men leave prison they will sufficient to keep tedium miles adopt an honesty is the best away policy attitude? Their first lesAnd here we are so son failed to register deeply traveled that railroad today' companies enough to keep them out of find It pays to provide facilities trouble Will this second lesson so passengers will forget they are be effective? Some persons traveling it Of course a few do make good seems when given the opporafter a fall and the efforts In be- tunity to travel prefer to dance half of the young offender must Instead or look at moving picbe continued Otherwise we must tures come to the conclusion that the Truly we are becoming soonly thing to do with those who phisticated and blase Even the seenr to possess the criminal advertisements of the airway mind is keep them isolated for companies contain pictures oft 3fe for their own and society’s the airplane passengers reading a novel instead of looking out the protection windows and down upon the MEDICAL PinLOSOPHER much traveled world DISCUSSES EXERCISE Dr Henry W Cook an InsurWhat some after-dinn- er ance company medical director ers need is not a watch—speakbut a like many another physician calendar ed in s FINE WORDS AND FACTS man to front of my bank” says George M Rey- nolds to tell every passerby ‘this bank is in wonderful condi-UoI d work up a run in 24 hours” Mr Reynolds the mistake of those who "doth protest too much” understands Good work has been done these recent weeks in the effort to restore the national confidence weakened by the developments the stock markets Most of this had been in the way of sound edu-in cation in the realities of business The country had gone crazy speculating in the evidences and hopes of wealth The inevitable setback came' It was necessary to be reminded then that what was swept away was a purely paper wealth This involved of ownership of real wealth but not the destructionpainful lifting wealth Save for the changed minds resulting from the of any things were about as they were before- Some harm had been panic but nothing critical We needed to be reminded of this again-an-done again The work has been well done A time comes however when the' talk of sound conditions must eventuate in the predicted sound results Wheels are not turned except by solid facts Banker Reynolds suggestion recognizes that the process of restoring mental balance has gone far enough to go farther would result in substituting talk for act Nowto business The president and industry and labor have agreed that jobs and whirring wheels can and will be maintained Now ’ n°W or toe whirring wheels: now for the iobs WS Day t n’ - -- d A i The Marines Seem to Be Doing a - Thorough Job in Haiti— TheyTe ’ Killed Over a Thousand Haitians and Until Recently the Country Has Been Very Quiet s Forester Gifford Pinchot fZQ ©129 UlMTCFf StMVtOC a tMC MU BV (EEA0 THE STORY AT THEN- - COLOR THE PICTURE) revolver and rifled the cash register of $150 Policemen pursued him fired 10 shots at close range the gunman returning the 4 fire but no one was hit d Tour Children By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON(Copyright 1929 by4 NEA Service Inc) - DON’T know any tipiA better than the Christmas season to teach the children that it is better to give than to receive The lesson of kindness and generosity is missed entirely unless it embodies the spirit of sacrifice and children should not get the idea that to present something to somebody that has cost them nothing in renunciation or personal trouble is real giving If we get a dollar from someone to buy a present for someone else we are not real donors And children who get Christmas money from their parents to shop around for gifts to give their friends are not really4 getting all that they snould out of the great spirit of Christmas True it is all right in theory to say that they should save or earn their money Nobody' realises more are not al than I that these-idea- s ways practical Parents usually do have to make at least a part contribution toward the junior budget ' But the valuable ‘little lessons to be learned now it seems to me should be very precious Besides the opportunity won’t come again for another year If it is possible I believe we should consider them seriously at Yuletide while the time is right to put them into effect' PAY FOR ODD JOBS Instead of just simply handing over so many cold dollars and cents and saying “Here’s your Christmas shopping money” why not put the children into the position' for the next few days of doing piece-wo- rk that is pay them lor odd jobs? Make out your schedule and post it as one mother I used to know' did and put a price on service as "Washing dishes and putting them away — 15 cents “Chipping ice off pavement—23 cents J “Cleaning car— 35 cents "Vacuum all carpets — 25 cents "Paring potatoes — 10 cents "Darning —stockings and sewing on all buttons 50 cents” And so on ad infinitum— fixing the furnace running errands setting the table making beds- shoveling snow— there are so many things children can do If you have never paid for these services make an exception now Just before Christmas if you possibly can It 'does miracles toward getting the house ready for the great day too It is surprising what children can do if they have an incentive to work LITTLE CHARITY WORKERS Well' that is one lesson — the effort to get money to buy presents to give aw’ay Still another lesson is to have each child choose one or two other children he knows about poor children who won’t have much Christmas —have him go and buy tie up nicely and deliver his personal goodwill offering toward their happiness The third lesson is having them make some of their own gifts Not hurry-togeth- er d stuff but things that require planning and careful workmanship They must not get the idea that just anything does for a gift It must be the best they can do OhJ no! They ‘need not try things too difficult or that make them nervous or unhappy Just simple things well and carefully done it is the thought and not the result that counts These are the three most important of the Christmas lessons -- - slip-sho- D &R G VALUATION SET AT $101500000 Dec 19— (AP)— final valuation of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad company was fixed by the interstate commerce commission today as of June 1919 at $101500000 The' corporation’s own book valuation on that date was given as $179722857 Since the valuation the commission’s report said the Denver & Rio Grand Western railroad has succeeded to ownership of the property which is mainly composed of 3384 miles of main line track locatA WASHINGTON - ed in Colorado Utah - New Mexico and ±4 WON’T ALLOW THAT Impatient Diner: I suppose wait- er I can sit here until I starve? - Waiter: I’m afraid not sir - We close at 10— Answers ' ttog cirls fkirlj good-looki- ng We are tired of Wish for change and adventure The the grind of office ‘work and —— t only future before us ts to I4 By MILTON BROXKER men and to spend the bal- -j Eiarry working 4 - NEA Service Writer ance of our lives in monotony —For a good many We can indulge our desire for travel and I WASHINGTON our gallant U S adventure by traveling with men in an marines have been killing those pesunconventional manner but hesitate to Haitians for their own good ky "V toko this step and burn our bridges behind Nowlyre else in the world have and lose our families We have all spent our bnd e boys so convincingly demonstrated their superiority over a ? of years in office work and the Idea of continuing is very depressing Your foreign populace They have killed some 3500 Haitians advice in the matter will be greatly ap-- i according - to ' : Haitians themselves 1861 according predated to the secretary of the navy’s reELEANOR ALICE AND MARY port for 1929 and only about 1500 ac‘ ' cording to the report of a senate inANSWER: x committee vestigating So are of tired the grind of you Only a dozen marines have been daily work and the idea cf marrv-in- g killed- by Haitians and although a poor young man doesn’t apthat was enough to provoke senpeal to you and you are allured by sational stories of atrocities and the Idea of going off with 'some human sacrifices in this country the DOROTHY DiX ratio of casualties shows what our strange men in search cf change t leathernecks can do when and adventure fighting for their country NOT SO COMMON NOW do 3‘°U will find it Ii will be deaP lf rhani vnTf Of course there are 'those in been honored and respected and always Washington who think it wasn’t treaSSuih to have other women look at you with con-Ky- es to kill so many Haitians necessary an1d men eel ree to insult you And —Senator King and Senator Borah °l change 111 the attitude of the men with whom for instance But for all your corg?of£ you ha3 ever been able to respondent get out of the state or navy department the killings were a blessed and atototog and make love to von boon to Haiti They occurred in the 111 yoa to wonderful thing they win do for carrying out of the American occuPitched your caps over the windmill y°1ThTe 1915 and for the pation beginning in different song Yoa will be bullied last ten years until recently few n? have every vile epithet thrown in your further killings have been necessary face and you won t be able to resent it because of the thoroughness with which the Haitians were their taught lesson toink it would be a gad adventure to go oil The immediate background is still S from to town New places Sntlnu- aSv Wh! ? ft little vague One cannot be quite alf Bay aJ?°ut totoby little hotel rooms In sure about official claims that the sSbb? would know nobody and tofn dowhere Haitians love us and our occupation there wander except up Main street and and regard Brig-Ge- n RusIL John wtodows and for amusement sell the American high commision-e- r tna go occasionally poor little movie to see a reel that you saw live and as dictator Santa : Claus himself eaUnv? toiserakle Even If one is assured that the appeared eG°USh t0 Ye tC 1115 d0£ “ a motheUt§?? Haitian bandits are a bunch of banf dits whom every-10cent Amper should-hateerican It must be remen oin take you off in palatial pri- called that General EmMley Butler cars ° b yacht that were Xrv is reported as having explained in floating palaces to far- -' f to® worId H they were aeSj°I a 'Pittsburg speech the other night going to load yoawith Jewels out in Paris finery then one could see that in Haiti the marines always girls might be tempted to go off Stv h°r’ eveng if it formally branded as bandits those meant sacrificing their good names who opposed American policies Ev en President Hoover declares solu dishonoring themselves and breaking with their families tion of the Haitian problem "still r ” ' : obscure”so fascinated you that you felt t But the previous facts in the sit- without them would had be cinders ashes and dust one can Vee o4 uation are well known Marine kill£ay "All for love and the world well lost” But that is ings and other tactics of subjuga tion robbed the Haitians of their Jou don fc c?re aY°U raP tor the men themselves Thv traditional pastime of killing each fn three1 bI tIred t0 deatb cf them aays Besides they are T0uld other There is plenty of debate poor drummers makin? x—iaii as to whether occupation has done VH1KiCain you nothing in the way of luxury and who the island any great good but it woud probably leave you stranded homeless find penniless at soe brought an unprecedented period of tank station within a month The incomparative tranquility cumbent Haitian president Bomo 1 1 we nT firI vho isn’t a bom idiot has been kept in office by the AmZ r2jtnJ °tU selling Ajide from the wrong of the erican bayonets which gave him his ’ woulJ evcn consider making such a Job but of the 25 Haitian presi’°Ck'd-°dents who preceded him 15 were -- “ ' in ot h1 la- -' P driven from office anri several were 1 1 murdered The mass of Haitians j are about as backward as can be ftrtvewhreiLlJ toat adventure is for the and there was ft time when even ft my£esr and that means that to put the thrill and cannibal or two attained the presi ourselves A mouatSn Is ouly ' dency of dirt tat2 rock or it Is a however' Strangely according to the wav looK at it A city is just a huddle of pea the occupation enough streets coincided with at- you and houses or it is tempts toward an American treaty a strange place where anything can happen as you 'Teel about it which would have given up control vSrt?uee5 toings can happen in Squedunk as there can in New of the country and allowed us to esor Shanghai The that you work with every tablish naval and military bases day have life stories as romantic people as ever furnished cf a Also the Haitian constitution which 10 E0 hSna to we promptly abolished provided that adventure xou can find It r£f°n your elbow if you look for itsc no foreigners should hold land there despite the fact that there were some valuable plantations The Why' love and marriage and birth and death joy ind may come t0 you within the next twelve months immediate pretext for the marine Your fate may come into the office any minute landing was the assassination and of the day cutting to pieces of President Sam ft bloodthirsty gent whose recent beinS monotonous so is all life Anything that massacres had irritated his subiects we do day after day year after year becomes Flying CONGRESS WAS FIRED must have become monotonous to Lindberghmonotonous Making pictures The Americans disbanded the to Mary Fickford Making millions monotonous to Mr Haitian congress abolished the Rockefeller Going to parties monotonous to the debutante constitution installed ft president of their own and took full fiscal and ?Tay' 'Y ca? keP life from being monotonous virtual political control of the counIs to continually infuse fresh interest into try As a substitute for congress jobs bv Irving-to do them better and In new ways ©ur which was dissolved because it rethat 'fori Try fused to adopt the new constitution change instead of running off with strange men which we handed it we created an DOROTHY DIX I executive council” of 21 members to elect and assist the president At HEAR DORO'HIY BIX— I am a boy of IS Have been working last reports 14 of the 21 were Bor-no- ’s store-fo- r department months at eight and now Sty relatives The marines staged a have me a more important position $12'aweek more responsibility and "national referendum” to put over but giten $2 more pay I have to take the the new constitution In the effec- who only bawling out of the rls’ make mistakes in getting addresses but tive maimer which has been exstood itthik-in- g I would get more pay and have less troubleI have But plained by General Butler- - and the advance have hadno and I am getting discouraged What shall I Ido? official report on the vote showed I have to 93294 in favor and 769 against give all I make to my family as my mother Is sick and my father makes little and sometimes I feel like crying A BOY IN DOUBT ed Whether any marines were for allowing those 769 votes is not known but there have T ANSWER: been many loud horse-laugat the to son 1 Promotion your job always come slowlv figures- at first because to have "sell” you yourself to your emA few weeks ago President and see make him ployer that are worthwhile you Borno who is commonly supposed to have to prove yourself and show that' you are efficient You take his orders from Russell anand j trustworthy - 2 nounced that he would not be a candidate for in 1930 Sub’to ia 5toy to novels that boys jump from the bottom to the top sequent developments in Haiti are of the in a single bound In real life you have to work your discurrent being explained in way up inch by inch and fight for every toehold and this is hard patches and discouraging No doubt about that and it takes more grit thaw the average youngster has to toil on with hard werk and smaU pay no weH-educat- ed j last each soldier 'had a gun NeV York 4 best I understand that Santa Claus has left our fate to you” "Well let me see now” ‘Coppy said: And then he stood and scratched his head’ “Oh I know” he exclaimed at last “You soldiers follow me While' waiting ’round for Chhstmas eve the place for you I do believe is in a great big box I’ll make you comfy as can be” And so the soldiers trailed along and Coppy found a box real strong “Climb in” he cried “This is the proper mace : yen to stay Just be real patient Do not grieve It won't be long until you leave in quite a wondrous ride in good old Santa’s Christmas sleigh” The soldiers promptly hopped inside “I’ll see you later” Coppy cried And then he went to join the other merry Tinymites them' in the big doll house where s quiet as a mouse And as he spotted Clowny he said "Well of all the sights!” And ’twas a very funny sight he saw Wee Clowny Tinymite was sitting in a little chair A doll 'was in his lap! Said Clowny “You will laugh I guess Just 1’cause I’m sewing this doll’s dress But 'what do I care if you laugh? I am a helping chap" "This Tittle girl ‘doll’s dress was looking qu te forlorn I’m trying to make her look real nice So you all run away and do not bother me right now I’m Sure I’ll get it fixed somehow Then she' will tickle some small tot who gets he? Christmas jday” The Tinymites try out the mechanical toys in the next story ' (Copyright ! 1929 NEA Service Inc) J -- He-foun- d all-wa- - T z Day ’ 1 Day ' : oyor - YORK— Thoughts v wide-shoulder- ed -- A Rockwell Kent lithograph attracts a window crowd Lads who put on dinner Jackets to stand about lobbies on first nights —but never see the show ' Nothing so interesting as a cabinet display of theatrical photographs Harry Hifschfield is getting snow white too Clare Luce swathed in black furs And they say you can pick up a mink coat for a song thesa the playdays Sammy-Shipmawright A dollar an hour punching bag studio Don Marquis - from California Ruddy and beaming! i -- “He" proves — chtmctcr by tset Who when in trouble does his best” i Swift was SOOTY the Chimr troublerj He had met with an accident There was no one to blame for that accident but him- n -- 1 ii ’ When a theatre ballyhoos a new self ' It was cue wholly to his own production - as a "limited engageheedlessness He had been socager ment” it Is another way of saying to catch aj big fly close to the sur- they do Viot expect It to linger long ' face of the Big River that he hadn’t y noticed a big wave and that big writes someone’ “does "Why” any wave had i knocked’ him down and mention of a night boat to Albany broken right over him on the stage always inspire a guilty When Sooty had struck the' top of snigger? I chuckle that wave jit had knocked all the I was never on one” myself though breath out of him You know he to I had I wish that’ was all - J ' i worryflies very fast and' so he had hit about ' the top of that wave very hard Before he could get his breath ' Just now I am concerned about that wave had broken over him and the statement of ' a distinguished poor Sooty swallowed more water scientific gentleman at a dinner than ever he had taken in one absolute night that we have no ar time in his whole life before 'But last looks that like what proof this wasn’t the worst ofit’ No sir rial object — say a chair — is matethis wasn’t the worst of it He was more than a mental imageanything That thoroughly wet He was soaking Brakes you catch at your thumbs wet And when he tried he couldn’t rise into the air No sir he couldn’t Those who remember ' doogan’a rise at all His kept Bluff in Harlem as mostly shanties him down! and roaming goats dump Poor Sooty! If ever there was a should heaps see it today Ramparted one was bird' He he that frightened skyscraping apartments it is a knew that? down in the Big River wth of light at night The there were great fish who - would fairyland Polo grounds— so called because polo like nothing better than a bird for is never played there—occupies a a meal j vast acreage with its baseball amphi“There Is just one thing for me to theatre Along the Harlem river do and that is to get to shore as stretches the famous with quickly as I can” thought Sooty Its stone parapet and Speedway pro"There I will be safe from the big cession of costly cars' constant fish anyway and I can hide until once dotted with coal In the river barges there ve dried I can’t are now high-spee- d my feathers motor boats swim but perhaps I can flop along yachts and collegiates in sculls are using my wings to help me” constantly rushing along On pleasSo Sooty bravely began to flop ant Sundays the promenade is filled toward shore straight to where Pe- in the late afternoon with ter Rabbit was sitting men and fashionably dressed Flop flop flop flop went Sooty women who enjoy a three-mil- e and each flop brought him a wee bit straightaway may walk without crossing nearer that shore Oh how far a street intersection away it seemed When he was in i the air the Big River didn’t seem so On the slant of Coogan’s Bluff was It big nothing at all Just there is an to nothing at all to cross it then But which a trickle of people spring is always now that Big River seemed as wide a "back home” touch few as half the Great World And with mounting— can resist each flop Sooty wondered if the next flop would be his last one How Come to of It there isn’t he did hope that none of those big much to anthink artichoke But there fish were anywhere near is no vegetable you order providing ' Next story: One Fear Overcomes so much genuine fun Another Fear And if there is anything provid—H ' ing a gustatory tang like a bowl of hot chili on a wintry night I have IDAHO YOUTHS TO never found it Indeed it doesn’t have to be hot 1 have often IN COMPETE OGDEN always enjoyed It off my vest' cold ' 1923 SyndiSUGAR1 CITY Dec 19—CAP)— (Copyright cate McNaught Inc) Future fanners of the Sugar City-Sale- m High school have decided to SEAPLANE “FIELD” DESTROYED enter a seed judging event at the STUART Fla — (AP) — Seaplane Ogden livestock show January II accomodations destroyed by a hurto 16: The team' as made an ex- ricane here have not been cellent record in hr te competition hut temporary facilities are restored affordthis year! ed until future rebuilding ' - j -- wet-feather- - 1 hard-workin- ’ ’ - - - silk-hatt- ed ed ‘ -- J ’ ‘ sky-pierci- ng - r court-martial- hs ‘ and - By DAN THOMAS NEA Service Inc - s old-fashion- ed red while A tea' room' called “The Meeting House”’ Who remembers when isolation homes were pest houses? Fake raincoat sales An old fashioned quilt shop Ralph Barton a 'Kansas City' Mo boy who made good in the city Joe Urban’s back resembles the back of i a hack Most of the old Waldorf employes are now at the Hotel Governor Clinton ‘Those nervous fellows who are always twisting their necks in their collars So many chauffeurs wearing horn-rimm- ed glasses The snow T white Fifth - avenue bus with safety mottoes in gold Frank Fay Boys who wear the Ulsters And puff pipes The new cageless banks— like a somber paneled wing in the Metmuseum Shawled old woropolitan men who resemble Ruth Draper’s imitations Short ladies grown tall in long skirts Rothstein’s apart ment house the Fairfield now the Franconia - Winter-- ' panhandlers who wear several suits of heavy underwear And go about without overcoats— for sympathy Cockatoo ladies with white streaks in their hair Those deferential assistant hotel 'managers who stand about —bowing from the waist Louis Bromfield the novelist W' R Hearst Jr resembles his father’ Foppish Japs - with slight mustaches and beady bright eyes scouts who talk of Vaudeville Immaculate "catching an act” of flappers with upturned sickles hair plastered on their - cheeks What’s become of all the diamond bracelets? Dean Palmer Easy money boys of a few weeks ago - begin to look seedy Purple New so-call- ’ By D O MTNTYRE tinted Chows SOOTY IS IN DREADFUL TROU- ’ BLE by - ’ ¥ ‘ -- Coppy’s little task was A customer of Young’s cafe in done One little soldier walked right and said “What shall we do? Salt Lake asked for a sandwich at up We have pur guns and we are 3 a m today then arrested the attention of two customers with a dressed and to behave we’ll try our nickel-plate- ‘ - co-oper- ate Hooper thrce n 4 V Orson W Hewlitt Salt Lake member of the executive committee of the Utah Good Roads association met with' an enthusiastic gathering of Davis county residents in Farmington They pledged themselves to in building a model highway through Davis county to connect with the roads built by Salt Lake and Weber counties Mr and Mrs C W Hestmark are to leave for Los Angeles California to visit with their eldest son for four months v Wheelwright Brothers have a new firm member An eight-poun- d baby boy arrived at the home of Mr and Mrs David R Wheelwright as an early Christmas present Marriage licenses were issued to Raleigh Campbell and Rifle Ballan-tyn- e both of Rlverdale William Nathan Barker and Eva A Bailey both of North Ogden Maurice E Kennedy and Mayme V Carter both of Ogden and Edward Penman West Weber and Ida M Jones OF PROMOTION -- Other forestry officials from 'Washington D C will also be in 2 ox STRAIGIrr TALK T0 GIRLS V1TIO WOULD RISK THEIR GOOD NAME FOR THE SAKE OF ADVENTURE— ENCOURAGE- MENT FOR THE BOY Wno DESPAIRS — will be in Ogden the early part of January to speak at the foresters’ convention to be held January 7 to 10 The date of the convention was formerly set 'for January 10 to 13 r t kkck first snowstorm experienced by residents there In more than 15 years U Dix's Jetter ‘Dorothy ciif— The short Hollywood going to be ousted by the new ankle-lengt- h style Women are going to cling to it because it Is more comfortable and allows greater freedom cf movement That at any rate is the prediction of Ann Harding lovely Paths star “I doubt if American women will ever adopt extremely long skirts except for evening wear” says Miss Hardingankle-leng“An skirt is beautiful and picturesque at formal dinners or at a dance but it la easy to see how it would interfere with driving a car playing tennis golf or hiking "Women of today find such keen these outdoor sports that fleasure in not permit cumbersome dresses to take away their freedom of movement th appreciation But it pays in the end son because we do is cumulative and even if we only go a feweverything inches a day we are that much farther on the road and that much nearer to success’ So stick where you are There is no gtwwi In changing unless the work you hare is so distasteful to you that you bate to do it cr unless your employers never reward merit o you' get Into the work that you lilt 'If your Job is Is one in which there Is no chance cf advancebetter If your firmrepulsive ment go where you will have an opportunity to make good and then stick Change gets you nowhere because there is mere to learn about any business than you can ever find out and it is crJy by making yourself proficient in some one particular line that you can achieve success The never amounts to anything It Is the expert who gets the big pay envelope And dont worry too much about your salary while ytu are so young1 and inexperienced Concentrate on your werk If you do good work the pay will take eare of itselfJack-cf-all-tra- des DOROTHY BEX DEAR MISS DIX— Being left with two small children I married second tune The girl I married had a good position and she had saved which money along after we were mar“However this does not neces- ried Eh has been all that I could helped ask a good wife a good for sarily mean that they’ll keep on housekeeper a good mother to my children recently she has found wearing the- extravagant short out that for several years I have been going with other wcmcn and backless ‘frocks of' last summer or she says that she cannot live with me if I continue to do this It that they'll go without stockings seems I have lost ’her confidence and trust and we were always sgaln next year And I suppose street frocks will reach a little far- such good pals Do you think she Is right in taking the stand she PUZZLED HUSBAND ther below the knee than they have eoes7 in the past” And there whether you like it or ANSWER: not is what Miss Harding thinks Your wife has given you herself and her She ’ about modern styles has worked to take care of your children and money make them a home She has given them a mother’s love and tender-n- et HUH? V and you repay her devotion by being unfaithful to her Some Americans were standing in Do you think that it is possible for a men to be a greater front of St Paul’s Loncathedral in cad than that? I should think you would be ashamed 'to don Ae fellow -- countrywoman drove Jock yourself in the face when yoa shaved of a morning up and stood near them—apparently cainthe drinking majesty cl the thedral’s beauty Why a woman such as your wife is even bothers ruth a man Suddenly she turned to one of the such as you are parses my comprehension I should think she group "What do yea suppofe that would sweep you out cf the door with the other trash and rav good church-weighs?she- riddance to bad rubbish DOROTHY DDL ysomethe - ! - ’ ’ -- ” (Copyright by Public Ledger) 1 |