Show rat THE OGDEN STANDARD EXAU1NER 8 FRIDAY EVE1TING FEBRUARY 14 those who argue that since prohibition is the' law of the land th law must i obeyedOn the other side we have a -group that believes with! Chairman Graham that no minority PUBLlSHjNU CO ' j U CUredfe Jr A U Obumanti or majority is authorized to I’uollshers abolish a fundamental right and AT LEAST HALF OF US’ ARE An Independent Newspaper BUYING GOODS ON THE INPublished ever evening and Sunday that liberty to choose what one or a a muzzle club STALMENT PLAN ACCORING without shall drink is a fundamental morning EXPERTS— The Ogden ODAY - Standard Examiner blatter at the Entered as Second-clas- s Postofflce Ogden Utah Established 1379 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered fry carrier one month Br mail in advance m Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming Three months six months O n e y ear All other states $100 a month! f right If we belong to the first group we obey the law even though we do not respect it If we belong to the other we satisfy our consciences when taking a drink 3$a I dd or mixing a crock of home brew l2to by restating our contention that one year frese United it is proper to resist the snatchMember of The Associated Press Consolidated Press NEA Service ing away of fundamental rights "and A B C Confirmed prohibitionists will The Associated Press U exclusively "en titled to tn use for republicatlon of continue to be prohibitionists any news credited to tt not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local and confirmed wets can never be news published herein made Tdryi Nevertheless there All Call 252 for Departments are millions in the United States who are neither wets nor drys C&t They are like the great group of American voters who are aligned with no political party but who The Standard-Examinerswing one way or another at election times and determine Platform election results 75000 Population by 1935 Should the debate be confined A Place on the Transcontinental to the Issue brought forth by Air Route- Control of m Pure Water Supply Graham the arguments advanced to Accommodate 150000 People in the debate might swing this A Modern City and County Building1 great group to agree either that A Direct Highway to Great Salt are those right Who obey the law lake or those are right who resist the The Monte Cristo Road to Rich county as unjust If that should law A High School Worthy of the ' we might approach sethappen City Another North and South Artlement of our major issue which terial Highway is far from solution today beA Municipal Athletic Field Road causewe do not have enough An Aggressive County Building Program enthusiastic prohibitionists to More Street Improvements in make enforcement successful and Ogden not enough revolters to bring Improved City Parks A Municipal Golf Course a City of Beautiful about repeal Ogden l-- ‘ ’s ? ' Homes LEARNING TO USE NATURE’S PLAYGROUND Tis a long distance as the crow or airplane flies from the Scandinavian peninsula to Alaska r yet Ogden will have brought them together tomorrow when the first day’s program of the winter sports festival takes place For dog racing has all the flavor of the Alaskan country and some of the drivers are veterans of that romantic area and everybody knows that Scandinavia is the place that produces the most enthusiastic ski performers as the names of the professionals assembled here indicate To pick up a section of Scandinavia and a section of Alaska ahd bring those sections to Ogden $'as no smJl task but great results usually follow major endeavors and hence all of us who haye grown wildly enthusiastic about winter sports In the seven months they have been talked to us look for two tremendously Interesting days tomorrow and Sunday Decision to conduct an annual winter festival in Ogden is widely applauded from the entertainment standpoint but more so for its effect upon the people of this and neighboring communities Sports festivals last only two or three days but the enthusiasm they1 inspire for outdoor life in winter lasts the year around It is because these races VALENTINE DAY THEN AND NOW If you want to know what a strong hold Valentine day has upon the younger children of today live In a home for a few hours where there are two children under quarantine that forbids them to go out to deliver friendly missives and causes them to doubt whether their j will have enough playmates to come and leave val- courage merce's enthusiastic advocacy of winter sports We live in a matchless region Nature has provided us with a magnificent playground and we foolishly have let that playground lie neglected for a' good six months every year A few winter sports enthusiasts have shown us the opportunities we have To them much overlooked thanks HAVE WE A RIGHT TO TAKE A DRINK? To celebrate the first inquiry in five years into conditions attributable to the prohibition laws Chairman Graham of the house judiciary committee trotted out the doctrine that the right to choose what one shall drink eat or wear is as fundamental and sacred as the right to choose one's religion The veteran lawmaker no doubt meant that declaration to be the keynote of the investigation with the suphis the doctrine and proporting hibitionists assailing as false and the nation at large to draw their own conclusions and join one camp or the other If the debate” were limited to discussing that one question the hearing would be lengthy enough but it seems that there Is no intention of so limiting the discussion and the people can prepare themselves for days of talk about hellish conditions or great benefits according as wets or drys are bearing their testimony We shall know little more at the end of the hearing than we do today if every day of the hearing is like the first two On the other hand we might have a point or two cleared up if all hands talk to the issue raised by the chairman— namely that the !! right to drink Is fundamental Today we have on one side Nearly all the families questioned than $3600 a year the majority on between $2000 and $3000 But there appeared to be no relationship between the size of the income and the extent to which goods on the Instalment plan Families with incomes of from $1500 to $1800 used it as often as those in the $2700 to $3000 group In a larger survey of which the one described was a part it was found that most of the federal employe families operated at a deficit although some had surpluses at the end of the year Subsequently it appeared that there were larger deficits among the families buying on instalment than among the others though some of the articles bought are “more or less of a permanent character and add to the family capital investment” As indicating the relative Importance of various commodities in the instalment plan survey the bureau presents a table showing what the 210 families bought that way in the order of the frequentcy of the articles The number of families buying specified articles is as follows: Furniture and house furnishings 137 clothing 28 radios 25 automobiles 21 musical instruments 20 (12 pianos seven phonographs and one saxophone) stoves 16 washing machines 15 sewing machines 12 vacuum cleaners 12 coal 4 miscellaneous Items one Among finds two Instalment purchases each for books automobile tires jewelry electric refrigerators awnings and furnaces and an investment In water spouting a cemetery lot and a radio battery eliminator : PAID $132 A YEAR The average cost price of the articles paid on was $322 and the average amount of instalment payments per family in the year was The average Instalment-payin- g $13274 family still had $165 to pay on its article at the end of the year The average price paid for automobiles was $58414 and the average amount paid on the car In the year was $26504 This applied to 21 families with an average income of were operating on an income of less were-boug- j - house ar£ done by electricity now The system will not be perfect however until some high voltage invention is worked out for discharging the cook Receiving seta with a high gree of selectivity are being exhibited at the radio shows There doesn't seem to be much improvement along that line by the people who make up the programs however de- The questions and answers department has received several requests for information as to what useful work radio announcers used to be employed at The slogan in Hollywood seems to be “ Tis better to have loved ahd lost than never to have been on Page One at all” antl-prohibition- ists M York ’ and ski tournaments stimulate sickly gush that once was read in us a desire to make the hills by blushing maids with great and trails a playground in win- emotion ter as well as in summer that we Most of the jobs around the welcome the chamber of com- : KIDNEY LENT MAD WE STILL SEEK WITCHES SUGAR AND YEAST MAKE an article you accused us youngsters of being a ungrateful and unappreciative of our parents and of never beWHISKY ing willing to sit down and talk with them and be companionable to them” said a young girl to me the other ANGELES— The New York day “It is true sthat most of us try to avoid LD3 National bank is to be Our parents' society as much as we can but congratulated on making a loanCu-of the fault Isn’t ours It Is theirs They won’t ii- ' eighty million dollars to the let us chum with ban government Our nation lent billions to European nations using "Now take my case My father is the money to kill each other It is dead My mother Is one of the fortunate that we hare private most attractive and intelligent and bankers sufficiently intelligent women I have ever met yet I am near a finance to progressive help will friend absolutely (miserable when I am that neighbor and good forced to be in her company because use the money constructively It Is I she does nothing but find fault with a good loan Cuba Is an immensely me She makes me rich country and her people are honorable and 111 at ease because she is always ’ ' half of WASHINGTON— Nearly or necessities on the instalment plan as nearly as government statisticians can figure out Furniture and house furnishings come into the home on the instalment plan four times as often as clothing which is our next most popular Instalment purchase These conclusions are based on a relatively small but unique survey conducted by the bureau of labor statistics among the families Of 509 federal employes in Baltimore Boston Chicago New York and New Orleans The study was made for 1928 applying to all instalments paid during the year BALTIMORE HIGHEST RATIO It was found that 210 famines or 415 per cent had made Instalment payments in that year Among the other families of course were many which had used the instalment plan at one time or another It was found that about 60 per cent of the Baltimore families canvassed were paying instalments about '50 per cent of the Chicago families' 33 per cent in New Orleans 35 per cent in Boston and 29 per cent In New are made In good faith as additional compensation for personal services actually rendered provided that when added to the stipulated salary the total does not exceed ‘a reasonable compensation for services rendered” Donations made to employes which do not have the clement of compensation or are in excess of reasonable compensation lor : services are not deductible Pensions paid to retired employes or their families and sums paid as compensation for injuries limited to the amount not 'compensated for by insurance are proper deductions When the amount of tht’ salary of an officer or employe is paid for a limited time to his widow or heirs in recognition of services’ rendered by the deceased such payments may be deducted Salaries paid employes who are absent lit the 'military naval or other service of the 'government but who intend to return are ' allowable deductions ' - f - — t v — 1 BEER DIVORCE — - William Lead-betthad to have his twelve gallons of beer each week And that was too much for Mrs Leadbetter who charged that that was too much for his capacity She sued for diA WASHINGTON vorce er - ' HOOKEY E M Pollard secretary of the Nebraska department of welfare i says In an article in the United States Daily ' “Statistics show that 90 per cent or more of the criminals of today start their criminal career by absenting themselves from school” Statistics that are no more definite than to heave an “or more Into their conclusion immediately raise a question as to their reliability One would like to know how and by whom they were gathered how many criminal careers they cover and how widely the they are diffused over the country whether they orrest on the school unsupported testimony of the criminals interviewed records have been checked against them Such a startling statement naturally inspires the thought that here at last crime has been tracked to its lair — in the schools The criminologists have been sniffing around under the wrong brush piles- and baiting their traps In front of the wrong holes By concentrating on the schools they could bag ninety per cent of the crime and that’s as good an average as anybody could expect even in prohibition enforcement r The simplest way would be to close the schools and thus abolish the temptation to truancy just as we have put an end to gin mill originated crime by abolishing the licensed liquor traffic But that is a drastic remedy which we aren’t prepared to adopt We are rather fond of our schools We believe they do infinitely more good than harm in spite of the truancy which their dullness causes The problem then resolves itself into how to keep our schools and make the kids like themk X Having carried the crime question this near to the point i of clarification we now pass the buck to the schoolmaster and school-ma’aAll we have to suggest to them is try and do It —Omaha - - - m World-Heral- d A CRY THE ‘COLD’ OF COURSE WE LOVE OUR MOTHERS YOUNGER GENERATION ‘BUT YOU SIMPLY CANT PAL UP WITH ANY ONE WHO IS ALWAYS PATRON- IZING YOU AND LAYING DOWN TIIE LAW TO YOU’ ‘ IF RUSSIA GOT REALLY By RODNEY DUTCIIER NEA Service Writer entines afc the door And if you desire to know how sickly sentimental another generation could be dig into the treasures of the pa§t that repose hr ancient trunks and blush for your fathers and mothers as you gaze upon the bef rilled contraptions of cloying sweet sentiment Postmaster Gamer says the stamp window shows that Valentine day is enthusiastically observed but it Is observed by the children A glance Into any store where Valentines are sold provides further-evidencThat ia well and good The children are entitled to all the Joy they can get out of the occasion but most pf us give thanks that adults no longer Indulge in the foolish business that obtained a $2885 generation ago It just couldn't be imagine what a bold young flapper of today would say If her boy friend with a courtly ' bow presented her an expensive NO 12 contraption addressed “To My An employer may deduct from Valentine” and containing the gross Income the amount of bonuses paid employes when such payments e (Copyright 1923 King Features Syndicate IncJ TO GOVERNMENT AND WHEN WE DO WE USUALLY BUY FURNITURE ‘Doroth v T)ix Talks 1 BRISBANE By ARTHUR X9S0 HTTIE othe day in '7 - self-conscio- Mexico imitates Britain raiding private offices of the Russian government in Mexico City seizing papers etc as In the case of British violently raiding Russia protests against the “unspeakable violation of (READ THE STORY THEN COlOR THE PICTURE) THE little folks who came in New York 1 sight began to sing alt hall their m? t The Tinles stood and Not a- - wee voice went really was a pretty song and very smoothly rolled along Perhaps you’d like to know the words All right They went like this: “Real happy Valentines are we as you will very shortly see We come to see the folks once a year and this is our big day We make folks happy That’s our aim If we did not ’twould be a shame Now if you Tinies like our Bong just loudly shout hurray!” " The Tiniest promptly Joined ’ In cheers’ - that almost seemed to crack their ears “Hurray I Hurray I” they shouted "Welcome here you Valentines We think your song was was simply great Please sing some more Don’t hesitate We like the swinging tune real well and al?o listened ami6s It -- like the lines" So once again the wee folks sang Real sweetly all their voices rang scarecrow too was The very thrilled He tried to join the song His voice however seemed real flat and Scouty shouted “Don’t do that! The song was fine till you joined in and now it sounds all wrong” This made the Valentines laugh loud The scarecrow very calmly bowed and said “Oh I am so sorry I will gladly take 'the blame” The Valentines then said “NOw we will move as quick as quick can be and show you how each one Of uns can use a little frame ” Into the frames they Promptly crawled while every little Tiny sprawled upon the ground to watch them It was quite' a’ sight to see When everyone wras in his place a smile spread on each Tiny’s face And then they heard wee voices shout "Now Valentines are we!” - Day by Day By O O MTNTYRC YORK — Thoughts while MEW 1 strolling: Who remembers when the word “lousey” was whispered even around the livery stable? Co? lumbua Circle soap box prophets warning again of the end ox the Frederick Door Steele the world artist who created Sherlock Homles in black and white A rubberneck wagon megaphonisi calls out “The home of DavidWhile passing the Hotel Marie Antoinette But it isn’t! Bernarr Macfadden on the 'long (dally hike to his office Never see anybody in those places The clatter and bang at 66th street and Broadway The artist colony on West 67th street— Flagg Brlnkerhoff Christy Fisher ana scores of top notchers Apartments over stables The Hotel des Artistes Fanny Hurst with her portable Pom- The fresh air addicts who sit on the park wall benches reading Glenn Hunter w - Be-lasc- o” Drive-Your-Own-- - Big John the traffic cop at 72d street Crones with gunny sacks who pick up dry twigs and waste paper Children with their nurses on The Mall The amazing changes in the Fifth avenue skyline With Millionaires’ Row now only a memory Colonel Frank Knox a Boston Mass boy who made good In the city The exclusive Metropolitan club And the thicket of hotels around the Tuxoed clerks in Plaza fountain Ahd the the The scarecrow has some bad luck very British "Very good sir 1” flunElmer kies at the Savoy-Plaz- a in the next story (Copyright 1930 NEA Service Inc) Rice the playwright White shaggy dogs that suddenly sit up for no f reason at all An ancient cabby shouts: “I used to drive President Roosevelt” Lou Tellegen’s rakish velour People Who ask you how you ire and don’t give a hoot Bus riders who lift hats tire cathedral The gassing craze seems dying out Limousines at the 5 and TO’s Ladles: Who parade their: beautyas something apart— marketable The OLIVE ROOfRTSBKRTON parvenu e with rummaging eyes and a lapel nosegay And the professional poor who sling along mumsneers Aged clubmen' with a little girl of three or bling side white whiskers reddened noses ONE day said suddenly to her moth- and gold headed canes ( er: “I don’t like Mary” “Why?” The white of an egg as a tem“Oh I don’t like her 'at’s all!” porary face lift was a discovery in was the small edict make-u- p It is now featured stage And consistently enough she nev- in and one specialist parlors beauty er played with Mary again She de- is doing a land office business at $8 fied all efforts to make peace al- a treatment The is smoothed though there had been no quarrel over the face afteregga brisk masShe Just- - wouldn’t play and permitted to dry’ Then it Both mothers were puzzled but sage is with cold water and with sponged no amount of questioning produced contraction the all wrinkles disapany light or for five four hours pear After a few months Mary moved away and a family with a little boy A policeman near an entrance to moved into the same house Central park tells me of seeing a essoon were Diplomatic relations dusk young girl tablished and the children rode up the other enter the park after evening glance around and down the street together on their small wheels made snow- men furtively and hurl something away next on snowy days and wept to house- She then hurried on The area he hunted in and tht morning on each other's porches on found a keeping wedding ring That evesunny ones and began to Bobby was invited into Betty’s ning the girl returned his find she exhouse and the compliment was re- search Presenting turned On the day of her first visit plained: “We quarreled but made as Betty’s short legs were striding up” through the lower hall toward the The' same policeman told of “the stairs she stopped and said suddenwalkers" When the moon ly to Bobby’s mother “Is Bobby’s moonlight full there are ft dozen regulars bed pink?” “Does he have blue shiny is come to the park for a walk chairs and' curtains with frizzy who around the gravel path of the reserf fringe?” He voir says to all appearances “Why no! His room is very plain they are not acquainted but seem You can see it when you go up” merely to find odd fascination in A STRANGE ADMISSION at such a time All promenading like "I I'll guess Betty sighed he said appear can’t stand pink furniture In meditation to be completely lost Bobby I and jolly pew wallpaper and fringy blue curtains” In my neighborhood Is a priestly Nothing interrupted the friend- looking gentleman I often see on a so while ship for a long time street certain when taklng my dog were state millennial lnthls things a for stroll He walks midnight one Bobby’s mother remembered with arms folded behind and day to repeat Betty’s cute but puz- slowly head bared— mumbling words with zling statement to her mother ’ connotations Mike ' the Latin ! long cried "Why for goodness sake that startled lady “Then that’s the service reason—” She stopped and finished Lower Fifth avenue for years has with “Yes she is a queer little observed two women In black who wonder what sometimes I thing the late appear at the same hour-iwhim she took so suddenly?” So Betty had been Jealous of evening and walk northward on opsides of the street and at Mary I She remembered that Mary’s posite room had been fixed up for a birth- 34th street turn back and go over same route Each seems obliv day surprise a little heaven of a the of the other and yet keep in ious room it was It was the following week that Betty had ktruck her col- perfect step ors Then too there is the Phantom One day Bobby’s father brought felhim a pup Betty's mother watched of Times Square a cadaverous sickly white of a flounder’s closely Betty begged for a pup of low the her own but she didn’t cut Bobby belly and with luminous bright eyes off her list because of his new pos- who stops suddenly 3 in the—middle a m crosses session She was over at Bobby’s of the street about himself and scurries away Twice I house more than ever gone home with One day a big van stopped at the have seen him-anneighbor’s and some long rolls were the horrors 1930 carried in An hour or so later Bet- (Copyright cate McNaught SyndiInc) ty at the open front door looked in : to see a new Oriental rug spread on the hall floor a gorgeous blue Chinese rug in the living room and a flash of old-govelvet under the black dining room table beyond She turned and walked out : --- ---99 “I don’t like Bobby” she lisped when she got home “I won’t play with him any more” Jealousy again To see an actor or an actress of screen kills the illusion and the the FLOWER TOUGH romance in the mind of the public” If you have little money for — Adolphe Menjou home decorations buy single flower vases at the five and tencent “How marvelously war hardens stores and purchase just a couple fhe fiber of a nation”— Rebecca of daffodils roseson carnations West Place vases at either side of the “Virtue- has always been contable and the effect will be pleasceived of as victorious resistance to ing' Bherry-Netherla- nd YOUP CHILDREN a - U0TATI0NS ld 1 - diplomatic rights” At present Russia’s' pretest Is not Important But later flying machine development might make It important Russia could resent such incidents by sending raiding j parties through the air striking at great population centers of other nations Retaliation by the other nations would be difficult Russia is made up chiefly of two hundred thousand villages Bombing ten thousand of them would produce no decisive ef feet Moscoar and Leningrad amount to little as Cities and attacking them would not mean much to Russia But if you destroyed Paris or London you would subdue France or England And If you destroyed New York you would convince some boyish bankers that their foolish loans to the czar were not as important as they thought Modems smile reading of the over desgreat Alexander traveling ert wastes to consult a soothsayer and never suspecting that the lady had been told in advance what the conqueror wanted her to say But desire to consult the future through any kind of witoh from Endorimto Los Angeles craving for the possible still exists among us Mrs Mary Stewart who lives here says she gave Mrs Blackburn $25-oto help her carry on the work of the "Divine order of the Royal Arms of the Great Eleven” 0 And Ollfford Dabney gave to the same worthy cause Mrs Blackburn you must know has in her possession the “sixth seal When that is broken everything will be revealed Who would not pay million dollars $45000 or forty-fiv- e to know everything assuming that he would know what it was all about when he heard It? oo ’ $45-60- Jeans the astronomer says if the universe could be explained to us accurately it would be more Incomis now as prehensible to us than itdifferential though you explained calculus to ft hoptoad Mr Dabney surely got his $45000 worth It is-- testified that thanks to Mrs Blackburn he saw wonderful visions including one of Mrs Mary Baker Eddy walking down Broadway And he saw two disciples and same angels on the same street The witness did not say whether it was Broadway New York or Broadway Los Angelesbut it was probably the latter Too many speakeasies near ' Broadway New York - i The federal grand jury at Spring-fiel- d us picking on (me as the children say “It is ISally don't sprawl Sit' up straights in your chair If I buy v 4 a new dress it is always the wrong shade or too long or too short or It Jr makes me look sallow or fat or s or something If I am reading a book she doesn’t know why I waste my time on a silly novel like that or why I addle my brains trying to understand ab- struse work that is beyond my comprehension ' OHE criticizes all my girl friends and finds something the matter a with every one pf them She pulls all my boy friends to pieces until she doesn't leave them a single decent characteristic and until she succeeds in disillusioning me about them “She broke off my engagement t6 the only man I have ever really cared for and for no reason at all except that she didn't like his nose and the cut of his collar Whenever I try to tell her about it so that it takes all of the any hope or plan she I even try to pleasure out of it and I give up my ambitions before realize them hemp-shoulder- ed ’ ‘ - r wet-blank- ets - : i "Perhaps we young ones do not need to have our ego deflated but it Is a dam unpleasant process and hone of us hang around those who feel It their sacred duty to per- form surgical operations on our vanity and that is why I dodge mother as much as 1 can and we don't have any of those long talks about which ' we mother-and-daught- r read in the i i i cr — I novels goody-good- y ’ j ' ! ' i U r "THE reason my mother and do not enjoy each other” said the second girl “is because she treats me as if I were a feeble minded female infant I gave a pretty good wccount of myself at college and X hold down a responsible job in a big business firm but that doesn’t convince mother that I navjs enough intelligence to wash the dishes without her standing bver me and saying “Now use a little soap in the water Always put them through two waters! Wash the glass first” and so on and so on — - t i— ' T “Every night she tells me not to sit up and read but to go to bed Every meal she tells me what td eat Every time I go out' of the house I am put through the third degree about where I am going and why I am going and who I expect to see and when l am coming back’ She listens in on my telephone calls and reads! any letter that I leave lying around and she supervises my incomings and Outgoings and feels she has the same right to dictate to me as she would if I were 3 years old and not very bright at that ' — X ¥ "THE result of this petty tyranny is of course that I am always mentally In a furious rebellion against mother and that I balk her prying curiosity by never telling h$r anything about my affairs and that I make a sneak of it just as often as I can You can’t be chummy with a dictator and x have never heard of any prisoner who loved his jailer ’’ - ' j ' to loathe with T just go my mother” said the third girl “because she simply submerges me and makes me seem like a Dumb Dora which J atp not4 People must think or a congenital Idiot without an that I am tongue-tie- d ' idea or an opinion of my owti for mother never even lets me answer a question She does it for me -- IvM'' "THE other day we were at a tea and I was asked would I have tea or coffee Instantly mother replied: ‘She will have weak you have one lump of sugar or two? Mother ‘She doesnt take sugar She takes lemon Somebody askedreplied: me if I was going to the symphony concert-Moth- er replied: ‘Yes she Is very fond of music’ Somebody else said that I had on a pretty frock and mother replied: ‘Yes as soon as I saw that I knew it would Just suit Alisia I like those long straight lines and so on and on — “Mother doing all the talking jf or me and me standing about consumed with fury at having the words taken out of my mouth and wishing that I knew some way cf shaking her so that I could show that I wasn’t such a fool as 1 ’ ‘ - tea-'Wil- l 1 1 : looked” Hi accuse two great corporations of conspiring With bootleggers to break the law Bootleg whisky 71 Y MOTHER” said the fourth girl “is also a monologuist and calls for yeast and sugar One of the main reason that I never have any dates is because when the two corporations makes sugar young men come to see me she thinks their are to her and the other makes yeast— that is their that it is her duty to entertain them so shevisits comes in the living business- - and it is legal They sell room grabs the conversation and holds forth until they leave ‘ it to any one that willbuy The And and never i come back they law does not say that it is their business to make sure that the V "Of course we love our mothers but you simply can’t yeast or sugar will: not be used to up with any one who is always patronizing you and pal make alcohoL :lj — J down the law to you and trieating you as a baby who laying This emphasizes the difficulty of ' never grows up DOROTHY DIX prohibition enforcement The laws Copyright by Public Ledger of Chemistry and of nature work to j — X - — j f produce alcohol even manufacturing it inside the body of the loyal prohibitionist after he has swallowed his sugar in an innocent form non-alcoho- llc ‘HEALTH TALK'S however the corporations have knowingly supplied bootleggers and tty DR £L FISHEEIN wilfully connived at the breaking of the law prohibition enforcement may reach them and should do so COSMETIC TRADE RECALLS EARLY DAYS OF PATENT Failure to reach an agreement MEDICINES Concerning the Boulder dam imthe dawn of history women provement shoas the need of a FROM the water jised cosmetics When of any change in control excavated the tomb of powers that possesses national Im- archeologists Queen Shubad ' of Ur who lived The various states in- about portance 6000 years ago in Egypt they act Colorado river terested in the number of receptacles which found a in good faith as do their congresscosmetics had been If v - ingredient- to it putting It up in a fancy package and giving it a fancy name Here the old is at work making womenpsychology pay a high price for something merely because the exterior gives the idea of value The cosmetic Industry today is where the patent medicine industry was years ago AH the hocus-pocof secrecy the magic of mystery surrounds the sale of these mixtures to the credulous sex The promoters conjure up the weird legends of discovery which used to be the basis for snake oil for rheumatism for dyspep-sia and pink pills for pale people j — M - ' us herb-medicin- es - These each seeking to protect its contained with that she the buried queen Meanwhile the citizens’ interests ’ might have her favorite preparawater and power go to waste tions available in the hereafter Makeup From that time until the present toview of of the the public point It is as though a family of chilCHICAGO (INS)— Parlsierme wocosmetics has changed greatdren Inheriting ft great estate ward the with men ly apparently began They and American flappers ' are should let it lie idle indefinitely a period passed through new tricks cf eye makeup through failure to agree on divi- highest when they were affected only by learning sion The nation is interested nd the veiled woman of the the from demimonde and are today used unselfishly And the nation should by both high and low In every lYench colonies of northern Africa settle all power and water disputes of society where the only part of a woman's when states fail to agree after a stratum In a survey of the subject H face visible are her eyes and hence reasonable time The settlement Stanley Redgrove notes that tlve she attempts to make them as at-- 1 might not be perfect but it would point of view has changed and also tractive as possible put an end to foolish waste that the chemistry of cosmetics has This was the declaration cf Ruth Moreover there D Maurer of New York beauty speadvanced greatly one’s vital desire to do this that has been developing an art of cos- cialist who said that modern worn- metic application Far too fre- en’s tight fitting hats crush or the other”— James Branch around the eyes Women: quently cosmetics are used to make the female countenance hide dus form a squinting habit I and soon “The modern world belongs to rather than to bring out the finer tiny wrinkles appear unless the: eyes are exercised properly the half educated a rather diffi- beauties Gentle manipulation of the facial Among the earliest of cometic cult class because they do not realize how little they know”—Dean was cold cream apparently dis- area around the eyes will aid in covered by Claudius Galen who eradicating the wrinkles she exWilliam Ralph Inge lived just after the beginning of plained as well as the application of the Christian era Originally cold shadow creams “This is not the age of man It cream —was made from almond oil is the age of insects Man is a water rose and beeswax spermaceti an newcomer he is not yet experiToday there are various formulas ment”— Le land O Howard Fortune- —for cold cream but In most? of them Play J borax or lanoline is used as the DOG GOT niS BED Aids agent add liquid paremulsifying MILWAUKEE — Sleeping with a affin has taken the place of the al' dog didn’t appeal to Steve Briks 60 mond oil The spermaceti is usualLONDON— (INS)— All' concerned so after three weeks of married life ly omitted and modem cold creams de45 in he the London production of “Jourwith hii wife Helen do not become rancid various perfumes ney’s End" the famous war play cided to seek a divorce He charged Furthermore in elevthat his' 'wife permitted her dog are used to modify the cold cream which is breaking all recordsthe forto sleep Mn his bed The Judge It is doubtful that cold cream can en countries will share in from tha H made is tune to which the more make being wasn’t the right do much than agreed that that -a to diif sharing it his flexible profit proposed and to Steve skin and do protect gave play thing j ' : ' scheme is carried through to com- weather vorce against wind and most remarkable of the One pletion f Actors clerks stage hands and Martin Van Buren was the first aspects of the cosmetic- industry is call sell to is tt boys will be banded together who the the United fact States that cf possible president company giving had not been born a British sub- cold cream under a variety cf names Into a 'permanenttenure cf some them unnecessary security addins merely by ject j men Yomcn Learning Tricks ' I j -- i the'-muscle- s i — ‘ Is '' For Actors I' t I -- - 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