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The Ogden Standard -- Examiner PUBLISHING CO C EUrtdie Jr A L cUsmaaa Publishers An Independent Newspaper J ed his place in the sun Let us! not' hope that the Incident will a with be closed for the year love one-da- y gesture Enduring which fills his heart should pay j daily dividends beats good band MACHINE j TALKING ! and 8anday published erery erenin Every 'person who saw the morning without a raazxie or A clan Matter at the United Commercial Travelers’ Entered as Second-clas- s Utah f PostoWee Ogden Established 1171 f SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier one month By mall in advance In Utah Nevada and Wyoming Three months Six months One year AU other states $100 a month one year Member of The Associated Press Press Consolidated Press NEA and A B 70 Idaho fltoo United Service C The Associated Press Is exclusively en of titled to the use for repablicatlon ft not otherwise any news credited to and also the local credited In this paper news published herein Call 252 for All Departments The Standard-Examine- r' Platform 75000 Population by 1935 A Place on the Transcontinental Air Route Control of a Pore Water apply to Accommodate 150000 People A Modern City and Coonty Building A Direct Highway lo Great bait lake- - The Monte Cristo Road to Rich coonty A High School Worthy of City Sooth Another North and terial Highway Monicipal Athletic Field Roaa Aggressive Coonty Building Program More Street Im Ogden Improved City Parks A Monicipal Golf Coarse a City of Beautiful Ogden Homes A i An so Tins ? IS FATHER’S DAY - George Washington was the father of his country but he never picked up any tacks walking the floor at night and col-he did not have to pay for any lege educations or adopt any promising young with who were the weight of a frat pin If George had been a real father he would have been so busy keeping peace at home and laying down barrages to cover his weaknesses that he would not have had the time or inclination to take on all comers in the way of national orphans Neither did he have to conduct numerous investigations as to the disappearance of his private stock Here in Ogden according to the 1930 census we have in round numbers 8000 fathers not including the bachelors and they are a bunch of regular fellows They may not have crossed the Delaware or Detroit rivers or hijacked any Hessians or chopped down any trees to make cherry pectoral or shivered their timbers at Valley Forge or refused a third term but they have made the name “Father” something to be looked up to by Brad-stre- et Dun Peggy Stewart and other credit rating agencies So important has he become that this special day has been dedicated to him by the manufacturers of socks and neckties who have given us the national slogan “Open a charge account for Father” Of course father would rather have a sock in the nose than the kind of socks he will get this morning and he can be sons-in-la- w stoop-shoulder- j i ed grateful at least that the necktie was not hemp However he can take them back and make his own selection or trade them in on a suit of underwear Mother has made great strides since George’s day She has taken her place as orator politician business and professional leader She has gotten away from the way of with a Delaware the crossing boat She crosses it with a rubber of bridge or a bridge of rubber as the case may be If the Washington affair could be brought down to date Martha would be known as the Mother of her country the American Joan of Arc and George would be passing his pay check instead of hobnobbing with Hessians in the old-fashion- ed making of history Still these good fathers In this particular locality are Just as necessary now as they were then They are as handy as a coat rack or a door mat on a rainy day With all the synthetic substitutes on the market today nothing Is offered to take the place of father In his quiet unassuming way he is doing a lot of good in the world Mother loves him if she happens to have time to think about him the children call him “Old Top” or “Rip” with a smile that pulls the heart strings and the pup wags a welcoming tail at his coming Friends of his care-fre- e days give him the warm hand clasp of appreciation that comes with ripening years The glory of mountain sunrise gladdens his heart for another day and the rainbow rays of a western sunset lights his path to the love-ne- st built when blood was warm and life was young Yes this is Father’s Day It is the day of a man who has earn parade must have appreciated the pep and sparkle the several bands provided What a falling off of interest would have taken in place had the bands not been the line of march but their place taken by trucks upon which were mounted enlarged phonographs playing march records! Yet that Is what the United States army proposes Rather than build up army bands at the smaller posts the’ government will provide a: phonpgraph on wheels for the post music Of course that Is better than no music but there is bound to be a falling off In morale on the part of the officers and enlisted men who have been accustomed to real military band music The value of band music as an enlistment stimulator was proved in war time A group of wealthy New Yorkers proposed to raise a negro regiment They sought advice as to the best method of inducing the negroes to enlist The promoters were advised to obtain a good negro band no matter what It cost So these men engaged the services of Jim Europe one of the best negro! musical directors in the United: States He organized a band of enthusiastic colored musicians' that fairly made the feet dance and the negroes rushed to en-- ? roll under the banners of the regiment that had such a band! Jim Europe’s band was so fa-- 1 mous that after the men were mustered out he launched into a concert tour and was meeting with great success when a crazed member of his organization stabbed him with a penknife and the supposed superficial injury caused his death Good bands added to the morale of war-tim- e and they can add to the Joys of peace-tim- e too to-d- these cities in the firing of these bootleg fireworks from their traveling or parked caw As the result the streets of many of our cities and many of our public highways on Fourth of July were a continuous din of noise and a continuous menace to the safety of other automobiles and pedes- George Washington The colonel says the story can’t be true because Washington wasn't there at the time the supposed incident took place The records show he wasn’t In Philadelphia during the entire month of June that year Philadelphia however can still point to the house where Betsy Ross lived The yam about Washington and the cherry tree has been classed as pure myth for a long time' We still have “don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes” and “don’t give up the ship” but attacks have been made with some success on “Lafayette we are here” and “don’t cheer boys the poor devils are It’s Apt to Happen in the Best Regulated Families! linday Morning By ROE FULKERSON "POOD morning family 1" greeted the Flapper u Sunday morning breakfast “Father befiT6 want to ask you something Don’t you have a cnV system in the bank by which you can get the G0Wl1 financial standing1 and sitting and lying?” ' Certainly we have” replied Father A b come comes from money loaned to people To' v we have commercial agencies to supply us with?de ing the people involved” “Hot cats! That’s what I’m looking fori” 5 J me would wish the “I low get you down on per He throws a big bluff flashes a big roll and snenue(fge$wls -- trians “Thus the automobile— In addition to being the greatest single cause of fatal accidents throughout the year—has now developed into a chief contributing cause of Fourth of July accidents “Many cities with suitable laws for the regulation of fireworks were unable to enforce these laws and for two especial reasons First because of the increasing activity of the sellers of ‘bootleg fireworks through the establishments of stands for the sale of such fireworks along the highways Just outside the limits of cities and in nearby towns Then from these vantage points they would make their sales to passing automobilists “The second reason for the inability to enforce city fireworks regulations was the lack of public support for such enforce1 ex-l- had experience but I don’t know whether he ils a m JJ or just bluffing" “My dear I could not think of using the bank’' your amusement" answered Father promptly “Th? confidential and obtained only for important reasons ’ “What’s more important than your daughter’s manded the Flapper “George is posing in front of tentlons Matrimony sticking out of his eyes i i£e do his stuff His line is good and I can think fast with him but I want to know the origin missinS of his bank roll” Are ydu inquiring into this young man’s financial with thoughts of matrimony?” demanded Father S Is world? such JJ the in dead thereto thing as low young people of this day and time coming to?” “Their senses darling!” laughed the Flapper young woman and I like to eat regularlv with a garret a' man you love may have been aU crinoline days when women subsisted on mushy poJtrya'I? brie tea but not for a girl who knows the 1930 priceoWD ' f Weber and other counties can with the communities desiring to abolish explosive noisemakew and there ought to be plenty of public support in favor of enforcements from the ranks of great numbers who have been disgusted with the noise and' danger of the past few co-oper- ate years American folk songs—as sung In Paris and other European ports of entry Excuse it Kip Take me back to U S A n Where the gangs and play And they shoot the livin’ daylights Out of men who block their way gun-me- Take me somewhere ' west of Yonkers Where the best is like the worst Back where men are making millions Slaking prohibition thirst ‘ Things are dull where drinkin’s KLO— SUNDAY 5:00 p 7:00 p m— Popular vocal recording artists 7:30 p m— Dance program 8:00 p mv— “ Over the Coffee Cups” 8:30 pm— A half hour In Spain 9:00 p m — Program ' 9:45 p m —Mahra the Great ‘ 10:00 p m — Your request hour 11:00 p m —Clair Anderson organ recital by direct wire from the Paramount theatre 12:00 midnight—Good night ‘ I National Men and Affairs Senator Sliipstead Unique political Figure Belongs To No Party Yet Sweepingly Carries His State Called Bolshevik But Big Business Likes Him As Well As Radical Farmer By WM HARD ASHINGTON June 14—The unique personality of the moment in American politics Is Shipstead of Minnesota No phen-omlike him has ever before been reported on the national political sky His unexampled remarkablenesses are at least three First he has really no party at all state and yet sweepingly carries his Second he calls himself a “farmer-laboritand yet dominates the the nomination for for struggle United States ? senator among the Minnesota Republicans Third he is assailed as a “radical” and “bolshevik” and yet gathers in the enthusiastic suffrages of merchants and manufacturers and bankers It is coming to be a current prophecy of a that he is the destined symbol or new mergnew ing of scattered old 'party fragments in the whole jiprtbwestj en e” Who but this “bolshevik” The business administration of Herbert Hoover could not at this time apparently see quite so deep as nine feet It tentatively awaited further scientific soundings by engineers The regular Minnesota Republicans in the house of representatives could not persuade the house to dive all the way to a continuous and completely authorized nine-fobottom Who boldly put on the diving helmet and successfully grasped the bucket of the dredge? Not the regular Republican senator from Minnesota Mr Schall No The hero who did it was that “enemy of business” Mr Shipstead ‘ ot Alone Mr Shipstead competently represented the aquatic aspirations of our great northwestern inland Alone he filled the 9:00 a m— Morning musical market dry empire 10:00 a m —Scanning headlines upper reaches of the Mississippi with nine feet of water in Italics 10:10 a m — Household hints dying” 11:00 a m —Miniature concert (indicating Dew matter) on page of the rivers and harbors What the governor of South 11:30 a m —Screen songs twenty-si- x the as bill 12:00 reported tocomnoon— ultimately Carolina said to the governor of Midday varieties on senate Its committee — by 1:00 m echoes Wurlitzer with p North Carolina however seems his return to 'MinneUpon Halliday from White City merce wilt to stand up under what research 2:00 Gene be greeted by the sota he dow — p m Matinee melodies 2:30 p m —Chasing the Blues ’ t assembled business Interests Dt the work has been done In that state and will be borne from St 3:00 p m — Light classics Paul to Minneapolis in a golden 3:30 p m — Kings of syncopation 4:00 p m— KLO Kiddles’ club gondola He ’will stand up in it and make a speech on “the rights FIRECRACKERS AND MOTORS 4:30 p m —Masters of music of man” The shipping magnates WORRY SAFETY PEOPLE will forgive him for being present for the rights of man He will have Ogden city through its board of 9:00 a KDYL— SUNDAY Morning” commissioners has declared it- 9:05 a m — melodies Morning self for a safe and sane observ- 9:30 a m —CBS London broadcast-t- alk tic male quartet and guest arts ists distinance of the Fourth of July Dealby Hugh Walpole — — m CBS 7:00 program Squibbs p on British “An author guished ers have been notified the sale Rich’s Will Freddie and Novelist Looks Rogers at AmeEnglish and discharge of explosives Is orchestra’ rica" an 7:30 p m — Celeste Trio with soloist a unlawful and the ordinances re- 9:45 vignettes 8:00 p m —Johnny Rosell and his 10:00 a m— lating to the matter will be en- 10:30 a m —Contrasts KDYL broadcasting orchestra The Gauchos—Vincent forced Sorev’s orcheestra playing Ar 8:30 p m —Around the World with Sam and Bill's International orand Spanish music There is no doubt that a ma- 11:00gentine chestra a m—CBS Ballad hour-- old t 9:00 p m —CBS Coral Islanders— jority of the citizens favor this and new ballads Hawaiian music by Walter Kolo- policy of safety and sanity but 12:00 noon— Noonday rhythm — i moku director presenting his 12:15 m varieties Qulsh perhaps there are others who 12:30 pp m —CBS Conclave of Na famous Honoluluans group and believe that since they were pertions— address by foreign ambas poetic readings by David Ross 9:30 p m— CBS Midnight melodies mitted to risk loss of limb and sador with Dative music —Aim Leaf at the organ hour— com eye and make plenty of noise in 1:00 p m —Cathedral ony 10:00 p nn — Beehive salon orches- musical plete religious their day the same opportunity v tra orchestra Columbia : :t 10:30 nu— Buck-nashould be accorded to the choral singers Lillian p Song hits soprano Stanley Maxted p m— Varieties younger generation now tenor j John Barclay baritone ll:p0 11:30 p m —The dance parade A few words from the National and others midnight— Signing off- and p m — CBS Joint recital— Tos- - 12:00time Safety Council may cause them 2:00 cha report Seidel world viorenowned to change their minds A bulletin linist’ and Adele Vasa soprano Just Issued says that firecrackers 2:30 p mv— Blue Rhythm KSL— SUNDAY were bad enough in a day when 3:00 pi m — Ballads and light classi- 8:00 a m— Informal program -music 10:00 a m— “Sunny Side Up” ' there were no automobiles The 3:15 cal p m —Watch Tower program-lect- ure 10:30 a m— NBC National Light combination today has been by Dr Leltoy D Swin- Opera company11:00 a m— NBC proven a serious menace in many 3:30 gle m— Metropolitan CBS Columbia string p Echoes communities that “let the kids symphony-classi- cal music 11:30 a m— NBC concert ? celebrate" last year 4:00 p m—CBS The Globe Trotter 12:00 noon— NBC Hour” “Friendly The chief cause for this In —experiences of wealthy New 2:00 p m — LDS services from the York clubman as he visits differ crease of noise accidents and ent places while working way 3:30 tabernacle —Vocal and instrumental m p deaths as reported by the Na around the world : : ensemble tional Safety Council was the 4:30 p m—CBS The Crockett 4:00 p m —Dramatized headlines Mountaineers— family of six 4:30 p m— NBC William’s Oilomat- increased sale of fireworks' Crocketts in a program of hilly- ics large percentage of these were billy music 5:00 p m— NBC “Enna Jettick Melodies” “bootleg" fireworks purchased 4r45 p m— The World’s Business-addr- ess from Washington by Dr 5:15 p m— NBC concert outside the cities which prohibitJulius Klein 6tl5 p m— NBC hour ed their sale And the greater 5:00 p ml— Melody moments 6:45 p m —NBC “In the Time of p m— CBS Jesse Crawford RoseSi” part of these “bootleg” fireworks 5:30poet of the organ assisted by 8:00 p m — Musical ensemble ' were brought into the forbidden Mrs Crawford Paul Small ten- 8:30 p m — recital Organ or wlthv Louis A Witten as 9:00 p m —L territory in automobiles The D S church services master of ceremonies council’s statement continues: from the studio 5:45 p m — Musical shower ' 9:45 p m — “Television” concert “Moreover the drivers of such 6:00 m— Majestic theatre of the p quartet automobiles were the most fre air— variety program with Ar- 10:00Criterion p m —NBC concert hour nold Johnson’s Redorchestra 10:30 m —Utah hour quent violators of the laws of ferae HoUinshead tenor Majes- - 11:30 pp m— “Vagabond of the Air” 8:00 8:30 a m— The Yogi’s Crystal a mi— Breakfast club r mr-“Go- od f nxr-Org- i service-symph- - m -- - i ? ’ - 1 and gasoline! ride hi ! “If a goodly knight dressed in stove ery other forward form of agrariana er ontd our lawn and tried tocarry me pipe joints away to his He is progressive revolution a cop on a motorcycle would catch him before he terrible man comer take him to the station house and open him wi'’ Mr Schall seeking renomination can opener to find out what made him tick pf to the senate says that in it he has t knee a britches like mandolin anB a bf I “If a minstrel with always done his best to bedesirour to across lawn a Christianson Mr walked feather sing roundelay tmdem Shipstead Brother Fred would think him a souse freaT ing to wrench Mr Schall’s sena- dow you-otorial seat from him says in effect querade ball and throw a bucketful of water out If tbi" he will move on the senate j v' KLO—MONDAY 7:00 a mi—Band concert 7:30 a m —Good morning - i -- Who is digging the Mississippi down to a depth of nine feet aU the way from St Louis to Minneapolis? mr— Ye Olde Towne Cryer 'iut two-fist- ed non-partisansh- ip1 RADIO PROGRAMS r 4 ment” BETSY ROSSSTORY legal Give me TAKEN FROM US thrill Will this debunking business Where Bill Thompson boosts the never end? Colonel James A eagle Moss president ! of the United And each home supports st’ still States Flag association says there is nothing to this pretty story about Betsy Ross fashioning the first American flag after a conference with General SUIIDAY UORKlNr DOPER STANDARD - EXAMINER r that floor always to within one inch of the inspiring whispers of Shipstead Meanwhile Shipstead goes brought them nine feet In the Mis- out to the summit of the Blue Ridge in Virginia and associates with his sissippi most loved companions trees and himself bis greatest plea He is all for the esthetic archi- gives serene contemplation tecture and introduces bills for He has no political party to send to the aid of either Mr Schall or beautifying the residential His farmer-labof private property in Washington Mr Christiansen He is all for international free- party was never much more than a dom and strives to rescue the Hai- wraith and is now not much more tians from our alien rule He de- than a wreck What there is of it nounces the league of nations as Is in fact largely against him’ This an engine of militaristic imperial- man consists of just simply only istic predatory piratical etc pow- himself He has no party to hold ers He hurls the world court into up his hands and no party to tie the same fiery furnace of radical his hands He is the freest man in He votes for equalization American politics and Increasingly wrath fees and for debentures and for ev one of the strongest S mmmmmmmmmmmmmrnm sky-lin- es or Hollywood Works Out to bring him to “Romance was a good thing for old maids with inhibit' road about' but when people tried to substitute robmen charge account at the butcher shop they soon tired t wished they had arranged about eating regular instead cin T ing “Old Omar sighed for his ‘thou’ with a loaf or bread song and a Jug of wine in a wilderness The old boy the jug of Wine Even if this is a prohibition cornf man who tries to live In a wilderness with his ‘thou’ oat k bread and a song needs the wine to keep soused Ante couldn’t get away with it ' “No girl in love these days has any business letting n get board and lodging ln her head She’ll do enough foait without tripping up on romance " ' ’“The only man I ever got really romantic oyer van fessional dancer One night after he had changed but clothes he took me to a cafe and made love to me He lets the check because he had left his money in his dancing i so I passed him up from then on sending Tubby Childs t few nights later to collect the dough for me Tubby had tot en- to pull his earn and nose off to get it! j “Romance is all right In hair covered trunks m attics doesn’t fit into the present day 'traffic situation tny or ' a coach and four! “No girl in the world coul herself into a man’s arms w and good looking child Father but before I fling myself U like to know whether the man catching me is able to feed £? “Singing in the rain is aU right for people who hare of good shelter to go to wheii they are tired of it put peep have no vine and fig tree to shelter them get hoarse andfc j singing in the rain as a steady diet “Then there are my children Think of thosi little ones! Loving them as! I already do I won’t! select it of spinach and ora:? for them who can’t give them plenty ' ” and whole wheat broad and “I don’t know what we are going to do about the worlds er rose “When young people abandon romance anu ‘Romance with proper protective measures as ijo reguhrf is our slogan! laug! bed the flapper as Father left Ithe rocs (Copyright 1030 McNaught Syndicate of - j r-abo- ’ i r 1 ’ I i 1 Grotesque Ballet Is Staged By Workers in Water By Opening and Closing of Valves On Diving Suits Director Watckes Dance in Clear Sea From Boat Above Some of the technicians only one of whom was an expert diver hac done the same thing but they had 14— eventually been able to scramble HOLLYWOOD June are the latest back to equilibrium Lindon gazed dismay at the recumbent apparmagic worked by Hollywood After in atus put a tentative hand under it sound the the subduing and camera has dived beneath the ocean nearly took a nqse dive himself to see what it can see and hear as the big bronze hunk Instantly rewhat it can hear Instead of re- sponded He had forgotten its loss weight through water displacecording action and sound on a spe- of With one hand he lifted It cially constructed stage in Holly- ment wood the newest camera recoils ac- Into position i Lindon also discovered the possl tion and sound on the floor of the biliUes of compressed air while Pacific ocean The story of this achievement is a building a rock platform for the story of mechanical wizardry Per- camera Grasping a rock that he haps because the thing seemed im- could not ordinarily have moved he possible is why the demons of in- closed the relief valve in his suit genuity in the cinema capital de- filled it with air and floated majescided that it ought to be done Af- tically upward rock and all Over ter months of research and experi- the spot where he wanted the rock ment Paramount grabbed a scenario he opened the valve and sank Come all about a sea god in a diving suit of the other workers adopted this put Richard Arlen into the suit fantastic idea- By opening and closlowered him among the brilliant ing valves they staged a grotesque fauna and flora five miles off the ballet visible to the watching direccoast of a Pacific isle and yelled: tor and all to the merry until lines “Eureka” got entangled and the pirouetters SPECIAL CAMERA were to the - : It required a special camera elec-a surfaceIgnominously ’ hauled trically controlled from the deck of It Is said for the newest Hollytender It required a special micro- wood that It has extraorphone lowered to a point Just be- dinaryplaything outside the mopossibilities yond the camera’s vision It tion An underpicture industry special sound recording ap- seas camera for example may evenparatus on the tender’s deck It also be used in the investigation or required a device something like that tually of sunken wrecked salvaging of a glass bottomed boat through which the director could watch the action After that it required only a system of signals and the same sort of procedure that obtains on a regular talkie stage Enclosed in a square bronze box the camera has a glass porthole seven inches across and thick enough to withstand heavy water pressure Through this the scene DRYING CURTAINS is photographed Before the camWhen you wash your glass curera has been seated into its box it pre-ar- ts tains this year try this method of then lowered ironing them while they dry Wash to the ocean bed and a cameraman and rinse thoroughly and then run in a diving suit goes below to ma- on their own rods and through their neuver it into place The recording hems run a heavy rod that will apparatus ordinarily carried on hold them down Spread them out heavy motor trucks can be stored in along the lower rod and they will be a dozen fibre and metal cases the straight and look as If they have size of small traveling trunks been stretched on stretchers At depths ranging from 4 to 6 fathoms they took the underwater FRUIT CUP sequence between ten in the mornis better to Nothing ing and two in the afternoon when mer meal than filled grapefruit! Cut brilliant sunlight penetrated the clear ocean so effectively that no ar- grapefruit evenly remove all pulp tificial light was required Natur- and Juice nnd chill shells Fill with ally conditions were best when the pieces of grapefruit from Which all seas were calm Since the seas were skin is removed diced strawberries not always calm they used up two and fresh pineapple and a half weeks shooting the underwater scenes WINDOW SASHES These were remarkable weeks for You should oil your I window the group in diving suits who all sashes with linseed oil technicians or camera men except ter of dry heat To after a winkeep them in Arlen floundered down through 24 perfect condition to 36 feet of water for the ultimate oiled each month they should be n thrilling of the public Lionel camera man wore earphones ' PINEAPPLE PUDDING and a mouthpiece inside his helmet so he could telephone the director in You can ' make the glass floored contrivance above brown Betty with pineapple instead With Arlen Lindon established a of apple for a change Serve hot signal code using hand motions to with hard sauce and sea if your signify “camera” “cut” “retake” family doesn’t approve and “Okay we go up” By JESSIE HENDERSON Special Correspondent of The Standard-Examin- er out-of-do- ors - re-qutr- eda Household Suggestions r' v " " ’ Lin-do- old-fashion- ed 1 CAMERA MAKES LEAP WINDOW SECRETS Once the camera mounted on a The secret of clean polished winheavy tripod weighted to tip the dows lies in the clean soft cloths scales at 450 pounds gave a convulsive leap while being lowered and y£?Hwlpe them ith Rinse them off landed onto ear tet5dnts leet 4 ' dotted tUrpen‘ I I - t For as Little as $2 rent a box in the safe Deposit Vault of the OGDEN I STATE BANK for the safekeeping of important papers and valuab There arc larger boxes also at erate rentals for those who ieed them Come in and inspect our mocern equipment— you will be welcome fill! 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