Show WEDNESDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 10 1930 gone iritcj the record Altogether this Salt Lake ease provides la striking example of how legal procedure often conPUBLISHING CO flicts with what the layman conJ U Eldredse Jr A U Giasmxnn Publishers siders the course of justice and An Independent Newspaper explains why so many persons Published ever evening and Sunday now ate j careful to refer to a morning without a muzzle or a club court Of flaw instead of a court Entered as Second-claMatter at the of justice! ss Postotfice Ogden (JtaJa Established 1879 SUBSCRIPTION BATES WHERE tVICE 75c Delivered by carrier one month By mail In advance in Utah Idaho IS ORGANIZED Nevada and Wyoming ‘No chsTshould tolerate a vice 8193 Three month 360 condition' such as prevails in ChiSix months 700 One year 1200 cago as told by the press reports All other states 100 a month A dispatch announces that “Scar-fac- e” one year United Press Associated Member of The Alj Capone has taken his Press Consolidated Press NEA Service former rivals into and m1 thinks jthat evidence should have The Ogden Standard -- Examiner in avgiant cooperative Press Is exclusively enof licatton use (or repub titled to the organization and vice privileges any news credited to It not otherwise been allotted local have credited In this paper and also the news published herein If thp statement is correct and All Call 252 for Departments It is publicly known that an organized gang of beer runners gunmen and racketeers exists and its activities are well defined the police forces of that city The Standard-Examiner- 's should! have sufficient informaPlatform tion oil 'frhich to act and acting uproot the whole organiza75000 Population by 1935 tion Place on the Transcontinental a Air There should be no Capone so Route Control of a Pure Water Supply powerful! as to do those things to Accommodate 150000 People with the full knowledge of the and County A Modern City officers of the law Building A Direct Highway to Great Salt One most significant paraR&kCo Rich to Road Crlsto The Monte graph appears in the story from with him! j j county ! By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright 1929 King Features Syndicate Inc) City Another North and South AT- -t terial Highway An Aggressive County Road Building Program In More Street Improvement Ogden Improved City Parks A Municipal Golf Course Ogden a City of Beautiful Homes clrvtyre AN ARGENTINE CHANGE WHAT MAINE DID TOO MANY LAW FACTORIES S W STRAUS A BUILDER YTHE Argentine revolution Is suc-- I cessful As this Is written former President Irigoyen Is ill and One result of the revolution may be closer relations between this country and the Argentine Irigoyen did not like the United States We grew too fast to please him and this he indicated by refusing at intervals to send any representative to Washington There is none there at this moment If he can and will come here now we shall try to prove that we are not as bad as he thought Maine elects a G O P governor and the election is studied carefully Coming ahead of by politicians other elections it shows how the people feel What citizens think of the slump and their view on "who is to blame” may be gathered from the Maine vote The dull registration seemed to indicate however that the Maine people axe not much interested law-maki- ng House-legislatin- LEGAL PROCEDURE IN SALT LAKE HEARING E W Clark a Salt Lake citi- zen on the night of June' last 7 heard steps at night near his back door Seizing a pistol he rushed out into his yard Shots were exchanged and a later Mrs Clark found the lifeless body of her husband He had been shot to death A few hours later police arrested a wounded garage employe and charged him with murder He was Russell Scog-in17 years of age Scogings was tried in Salt Lake this week and acquitted The state charged that Scogings was prowling at the Clark home and Clarkwas protecting his property against the prowler The defense claimed that Scogings had gone to the Clark home to collect' a bill for gasoline sold to Clark earlier in the day A captain of detectives was the state’s principal witness' This witness presented evidence that Scogings admitted having shot’ Clark but said he had gone to the Clark home to collect a bill afand shot only in terbeing fired upon by Clark The state sought to offer further evidence to the effect that the garage at which Scogings worked did not jell ethyl gasoline and it was ethyl gasoline that Clark had in his car But this evidence which would tend tot question the reason given for Scogings being at the Clark home was ruled out as inadmis-sabl- e the court holding that since the state’s own witness had presented evidence indicating Scogings had gone to the Clark home on a lawful mission and had been shot in self defense the state could not introduce other evidence to impeach its own few-sec-ond- pro-hibtii- on s prop supporting that structure of opeh defiance of law and order gs I COUNTRY TOWNS KNOW HOW TO (CELEBRATE Those -- I self-defen- ar old-time- se I a-mi- nd i j previous evidence The state was caught unwittingly In a trap of legal procedure and the upshot was that the only evidence before the court was about a lawful mission to collect a bill and Hence the instructed verdict of self-defen- who - tug-ofiw- nd se acquittal To the man in the street this is hardly satisfactory Probably the defense could have presented an answer to the gasoline matter and the young man still would have been acquitted As it stands however the layman something more bootlegging constructive than S W Straus who died In New York was one of the most constructively useful Americans of his gen- eration remember the town celebration of a country few years ago with its program of “speakin’”- its ball game or between the married men andj single men and the gathering beneath the bowery to partake 6f a delicacy that had been brought from town— ice cream— are the ones today who appreciate the most the new type of country celebration When qountry towns celebrate today jthy have a dairy show that would have knocked the rs eyes out jf the They compete for prizes as the growers of the best seed and produce Their pall games are played by teams of farmer boys who show the skill of professionals and the women if they are to can display products of the flower garden the kitchen and the homfc sewing machine that amaze (the spectators Without undue ballyhoo and press agenting these farm events attract crowds and excite interest and ill this is done without wear and tear on the nerves and constitutions of countless persons taken from their occupations to sell tickets or finance the event These farm events sell themselves They are constructive arid instructive events stimulating agriculture and adding to the pleasures of life on the farm What is responsible for the change in the type of country celebration? Off-hawe say the farm bureau the Agricultural college and extension service and the pgden Livestock show If the (time ever comes when Weber! county has its annual fair it wil be a great success with these (country town events serving as elimination contests to insure1 that only the best goes to thejciunty exhibition i He encouraged and facilitated building and did more than any man at the close of the war to make up for lack of some building during the war years Ignoring many opportunities for his organizaprofit he instructed tion which covers the United States to concentrate on the financing of dwellings only And he generously and wisely with those whom he knew to be competent ted builders Mr Straus’ death is a severe loss to many friends and to wisely conservative business methods It will not however affect the work of his carefully constructed organization the S W Straus company Seriously ill for more than a year past Mr Straus had withdrawn from any active share in his business for more than two years previous to his death That business will be carried on by men carefully selected by him long ago— Mr Roberts the president of the company Straus’ nephew Mr of Teal estate loans Straus brother of Straus Mr Klee Mr Laun In charge and Mr S J T the late S W Far apart in some principles Sta- lin of Russian vand Mussolini of Italy agree on certain points have They agree that when you Identified your enemies or those that ignore your orders the wise thing is to shoot them and lose no time Every little while Russia shoots a group small or large for political offenses and Italy has just executed four young Yugoslavs accused of “terrorism” One of the Yugoslavs is alleged to have confessed a Mussolini plot to assassinate The four condemned were blindfolded bound to chairs their backs to the firing squad and shot to death by 56 “black shirts” The men were shot the day after conviction under a law that punishes with death conspiracy against the life of the king other royalty and the chief of the government namely Mussolini There is no capital punishment In murItaly for ordinary ders But the life imprisonment is real life imprisonment in solitude non-politic- al spectators and in her personal says a writer in the London Times “that after theoretically “J think” as habits dry as the inside of a spending some years in America I can (give you the basic reason blast furnace American children never are As soon as can suppressed walk and talk they are encouraged to speak before beingthey spoken to and generally behave with assurance before grown-u- p people The result is an adult full of in front of any crowd ’ however imposing” On the other hand children in England are expected to in the presence of elders with as little insistence as possible upon their own personality They are kept in the background On no account are they permitted to precede their parents on a room or walking in the street! Americans nothing of letting children take the lead In this way and think many others Sometimes an American daughter runs the whole house enbe done she attends to it4 If walls are to beIf dectertainingis is to taste orated it her that is consulted The son drives about in the family car and the father takes the trolley Charles W Paddock the says that the American champion without confidence isSportsman a rarity “Most of the great stars” he says “find it their best asset” It requires a great deal of nerve for a golf champion to be followed down the course by great crowds of people It is here that the British player Is at a disadvantage as he is little given to display and would far rather that nobody looked on while he is making a decisive drive We often have been criticised by European writers for giving our children their heads Of course-i- t does hot improve their manners but it gives them Detroit Free Press nca j well-kno- self-confidenc- e— wn -- be-ha- ve en-ter- mg side-steppi- ng go-gett- ers (READ THE STORY THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) every Tinymite had had his WHEN of hilltop sights they left the hill and walked down to the city streets “Where now?” one Tiny said “To old St Peter’s church we will go You’ll all enjoy the place I know” replied the kindly Travel Man “It’s a short walk straight ahead” They reached the church and my how tall It made the bunch seem very small The colonnades reached out it seemed to seize the Tlny-mitThe fountains tossed their white sprays high just like a cloudburst from the sky “I really think” said Coppy “that this is the sight of sights” ' The church within seemed larger than without Imagine if you can that fifty thousand people can be inside at one time The Tinies searched through everywhere and saw things that just made them stare Poor Clowny said “I’m tired It was those steps we had to climb” The church was shortly left behind Said one “A place to eat we’ll find” They’d had a busy day and built up quite an appetite It wasn’t very far away they came upon a nice cafe The Travel Man stopped out in front and said “This looks all right” So in they went and how they ate! The fine food served them tasted great An orchestra played music and they had an hour’s good time Then out to walk around some more Said Carpy “Where are we bound for? I hope it isn’t on a hill that we will have to climb” The Travel Man replied “Oh no! Down to the Forum we will go You will see a lot of stray cats It’s the spot where they all stay It seems the cats have made that home and seldom elsewhere do they roam The city takes good care of them and feeds them every day” es youp CUMIN L OLIVE ROBERTS BARTOH fb WSOBVMUStRVYEntC other night after dinner "pHE 1 Chee Chee’s mother excused herself from the company to run upstairs and see if her small daughter was safely tucked in for the night She was gone longer than the occasion seemed to require “I’m she apologized when she sorry” came down “but there was a bear there that had bitten her finger I had to tie the finger up and chase the bear out of the room” “Betty does those things ” said her husband disapprovingly “It’s simply a crime the way she humors all the notions of the kid A bear this time was it?” “Yes and such a slippery bear” she sighed “I tried to chase him into a corner but just as I had' him Chee Chee saw him behind me Then when I tried to run him out of the window he hid behind the closet door I was just digging him out from under the bed when he suddenly decided to walk out and down the halL Chee Chee shouted ‘There he goes now’ so I slammed the door on him hard HER FEARS VANISHED “Then she lay right down and went peacefully to sleep You see” she explained “she Is just at that age when her imagination peoples the whole world with things a bit outside of our own commonplace minds I think It best to fall in with her little brain stories and work them out with If I don’t I’m The Tinymites head for Switzer- afraid of her her building up fears land in the next ctory within herself that may stay (Copyright 1930 NEA Service Inc) - “Now that bear is out of her mind She created him then tried to get rid of him I had to help her” “Tell about the rhinoceros” sug gested Chee Chee’s father soberly “Oh thatl” she laughed “Yesterday four of us played bridge and then had tea and sandwiches While we were eating Chee Chee came in— you know she’s only three and a half— and said ‘Mother I have company too May I bring him in to tea?' DISCOVERS FARMER BROWN “‘Certainly Who Is It? Perky?’ THE HOME OF THE CHUCKS That’s the child next door! “ ‘No It’s a great big rhinoceros “All unforeseen disasters may He’s thirsty and he loves sandBe lurking just across the way” wiches He's waiting In the hall for you to tell him to come in “ ‘Well pull up an extra chair and Polly Chuck JOHNNY CHUCK their new home and get a clean cup and saucer T Polly Chuck had proved to be said falling into the trap “That’s right in regard to Bowser the right Now ask him to come ‘Mr Hound Never from that day when Rhinoceros’ I asked at the critical he had tried to dig his way into moment when Chee Chee appeared their home had Bowser come near again quite obviously some it Perhaps it was because he had large and imaginary escorting beside object realized that it was useless to try to her ‘do you take sugar?’ of roots that with the “It appeared that he did He rose dig it open young tree in the way Perhaps it very polite Very soon he rose and was because his master had made regretfully took his leave” him understand that he was to keep “Nonsense?” she repated after her away from there Anyway he did husband “I don’t think so I think children work out all sorts of Imkeep away Whenever he passed along the Long Lane as he did al- pulses through imagination and J’m most every day he would do no afraid to nip any of them in the more than glance over at the home bud” of the Chucks I approve her method thoroughly Now thatt he work of digging that new home was over Johnny had little to do and little to think about but his stomach On the other side of the Long Lane was plenty of tender grass and clover It was such a short distance that Johnny didn’t mind running over there at all Farmer Brown who was plowing By DR M nSHEED up in the corn field saw him one day “I think we had better bring a barrel of water down here this CHANGE BATHROOM TOWELS OFTEN TO AVOID SPREAD- afternoon and drown the rascal out of his home" said Farmer Brown ING GERMS to his boy as Johnny Chuck raced THE towel is one of the most im- down his doorway portant accessories to modem roller towel The face of Fanner Browh’s Boy life The clouded “I don’t want to do that” used to become so soiled and stiffened with human secretions that said he could stand alone in fact It was it Brown Farmer asked not?” “Why never removed until it demonstrata will have “That fellow probably its rigidity The modem roller family and you know a family of ed Chucks can do a lot of damage If towel Is fastened to a device which it constantly in circulation he had made his home where he keeps Is much safer The hand towel wouldn’t be tempted to get into mis- and chief I would say leave him alone is still used in many homes by sev4 As it is I think it will be best to eral members of the family seemed to desirable bacIt several water of barrel down that bring determine whether or and drown him out Probably he teriologists to germs are transferred to the has a mate down in his doorway not towel in appreciable numbers when with him” the hands are washed in the usual we wait awhile” said manner “Supposing The experiments demonFarmer Brown’s Boy “Those strated conclusively that a huck Chucks can’t do any harm now until towel will remove vast numbers of our com crop begins to grow It the skin and that a will be time enpugh then I don’t germs from towel will remove three Turkish like the idea of drowning them out times as as a huck towel many can a box in them catch I Perhaps Tests made with several Individ- trap and take them off and let them uals indicated that infectious bacgo somewhere else” may be easily transferred in “All right son”-replieFarmer teria the greatest variety of numbers Brown “But remember if those through the use of the towel whethChucks make trouble ’here some- er of the huck or Turkish variety thing is going to happen to them for sevRepeated use of the towel accumuan about eral brings days Next Story: Farmer Brown’s Boy lation of germs on the towel so that Plans for the Chucks it certainly is desirable to change the towel at least daily The Turkworth kept alive by Wall street ish towel is superior to the huck or paper towel for removing visible dirt and germs from the skin Not long ago an Investigator in So don’t' gamble or if you must gamble listen to tips and do exact- the University of Nebraska made a ly the opposite as a friend of the careful study to find out the perlate Levy Mayer did centage of germs from the skin on He persuaded Mayer to get him a underwear that was not changed deeply confidential tip from the late sufficiently frequently Millions and Dan Reid Dan Reid with the best millions of germs were found on intentions of course said: “Sell underwear after one day and the your watch chain and cuff buttons number increased steadily the longer the underwear happened- to be and buy so and so” Levy Mayer’s inquiring friend sold worn so and so through a broker recomThe modern woman wears very mended by Albert Lasker and made little underwear and the same are worn again and again money without dry cleaning or washing No Illiterate people form 40 per cent doubt much of the infection of the of the population of Spain fifteen skin on the back and chest of which years ago the figure was 50 per women complain may be credited cent to this cause lasting friendships are with printers on newspapers I ride an hour and walk an hour In different directions of New York every evening rain or shine and have for seven years I have a sister living in Kan s&s i!My sole extravagance is ties pajamas shirts and socks that are never used but packed away would not part with them but could not use them all if I lived 200 years All of which is damnably selfish :!I listen to Floyd Gibbons on the radio when possible I rarely look at my copy after it leaves the typewriter When I do I want to write it over again I cannot write double space and my articles with hurried corrections are the despair of a syndicate office It Infuriates for anyone to touch ipy newspapers before reading them or bother anything on my desk have been at it too long to be sensitive to criticism about writing About everything else I am super sensitive I sometimes have two and three manicures a week and then go a year without them j Burgess Thus the good dry ladies of Illinois including the W C T U may defeat Mrs McCormick who is dry at heart and elect Mr Lewis who is wet inside and out sincerely believing that the rain falls for grass and cows not for human beings One big banker says we have been wallowing in a wave of pessimism and it soon will pass Wall street hoped so last Saturday when it managed to work up what is called “a boiling market” selling more than 1400000 shares of stock in two hours One thing Is certain prosperity will come back eventually bigger than ever for we have everything In the world that makes prosperity And many things are selling now far below their true values which will be realized later with some bitterness On the other hand other things are selling for-mothan they are re h "" S My wife writes the prettiest hand Thave ever seen Nor have I seen ahy chirography like it The three cities where I find writing easies are New York Los Angeles anc Paris I work best in artificia light The book I enjoyed most this year is “Seed” by Charles G Norris The show at which I laugh ed loudest is "Flying High” I am a sucker for pop com balls Stories i -- 1 1 wouldn’t stand on the roof of the Chrysler building and — things go black thinking about it— look down for a fortune I usually awaken at 5 a m for an hour and think of the dandiest topics to write but how banal they are when I try them out! I am always in a flutter over something I lose and immediately find The only enemies I know about are those I have i for people who Inherit fortunes to throw them away In senseless extravagance and bring themselves down to dire poverty You would think that if they ever got hold of any money again they would clutch every dollar with the fist of the miser but they don’t Their experience teaches them nothing and If by a fluke of luck they come Into money again they waste it as they did the first Perhaps the two things that we are surest that we would do differently if we had our lives to live over again are the choice of our life work and of our life partner Probably nine business men out of ten think they would have been great surgeons or writers or lawyers or moving-pictuactors and an equar of professional men are certain that they wouldproportion have been millionaire merchants or manufacturers if only they had gone into bus-- 1 —— — iness TF I had my life to live over again I would be an artist” says the' dreamy bored lnefficlent'owner of a messy little grocery store “If I had my life to live over I would go in for something practical that people will buy Instead of painting pictures that nobody wants” says the artist for each Imagines that the other has an easy road to fame and fortune Undoubtedly there are occasional round pegs in square holes but for the most part the qualities that lead to success in one line lead to success in all and the man who lacks the intelligence the initiative the industry and the to make a go of whatever he attempts would fail equally in anything else marriage that we are most emphatic to saying that uDUTifItweis about had our lives to live over again we would do differently Probably there is not a single husband or wife to the world who if they told the truth hasn't had moments when he or she thought that if he or she was single wild horses couldn’t drag him or her to the altar And probably there are not many old bachelors or old maids sitting alone in their rooms with nobody to listen te their symptoms or rub their rheumatism and with no love or tenderness to solace them who haven’t thought that if they had their lives to live over again they would marry when they were young and have about them a wife’s or husband’s companionship and sons and daughters to fill their lives with fresh Interests And assuredly there are not many husbands and wires J who do not have their times and seasons in which they think that if they had it to do over again they wouldn’t choose the ones they did for life partners and stout and looks at Mary and sees her grown middle-age- d as looks to He JJOHN and about a out to write song mentality nothing listens to her twaddle about the house and the children and the a new idea to twenty neighbors and reflects that she hasn’t had to live over again he life if he his had that thinks and he years would pick out a woman who had more pep to her and who read and kept up with things-an- “ who would make a more entertainre half-starv- stick-at-ivene- ed ss d - My wife has never seen me cry I ing companion sit taut in airplanes but haven’t any And Mary looks at John and sees him fear I drink from six to 16 glasses of water at each meal When anand bald and shabby and glum and she thinks that if she gry a moustache of perspirations could live her life over again she would pick out a man who pop out on my upper lip There is was more of a sheik and more of a money-mak- er and had a? small mole on my left shoulder of conversation a line keener j I cannot spell occasion without first looking it up Any other questions? wouldn’t They would marry Just 'the same kind of (Copyright 1930 McNaught Syndl-- I BUT they people Every woman will tell you that when a widower pro- cate I bay-window- ed 1 HEALTH Inc) TALKS U0TATI0NS ------ 99 I AM Just a suffering girl” — Aimee Semple McPherson l‘It Is not a question of Inches in length of material but of how the garment is worn I have confidence in the morals of French women”— Cardinal Verdier archbishop of Baris In The Golden Book I I “In New York people live in a World bound in by subways high Windings ferry boats and noisy ed ! City I i old-fashion- telling her he is asking her to marry him always begins by so goses he she much of his first wife And statistics reminds him show that even divorced people marry to their type And that a woman who is parted from one husband because he was unfaithful to her will marry another philanderer and that a man who 1s paying alimony to one nagger can’t be happy until he gets another’ ’ So perhaps it is just as well that we only have one DOROTHY DIX chance at lifeCopyright by Public Ledger 4-- 4 nts v whistles and roars”—Rudy Valle e was traceable to incompetent ex ecu crooner tive and operations personnel” — Ma“The country Is far better off to- jor General James E Fecbet day than it was a year ago”— Henry r Ford “At 13 I had never kissed a girl despite all my philandering in their movie “Nearly all grief which followed In direction”— Buddy Rogers the path of early air line’ ventures star " ‘ : sr' d over-garme- r r" " i Mrs Ruth McCormick an intelligent woman well fitted to represent and work for Illinois in the United States senate may be defeated by the “drys ” and especially by the votes of women An independent dry lady running elected but against her cannot be she may get enough votes to defeat Mrs McCormick and elect Mr Lewis SPORTING CONFIDENCE He is and always has been as wet Many reasons have been given from time to time as suggested Mrs McCorexplanations of the supremacy of American over British players as the gulf stream at polo golf lawn tennis and other gamies where important de- mick while she would obeywet her is state’s mandate if it voted ciding matches are played In front of crowds of self-confide- WOULD WE REALLY DO DIFFERENTLY IF WE HAD OUR LIVES TO LIVE OVER AGAIN?— WOULDN’T WE MAKE JUST THE SAME BLUNDERS AND CHOOSE THE SAME LIFE PARTNERS THAT MAKE US TVTEW YORK — '‘Write some more MISERABLE NOW? of of those details yourself the more intimate the better” postlady and thus THERE Is nothing that? we say oftener than that if we had our scripts a beautiful lives to live over again how differently we would do It We are bludgeoned Into It on a bleak melI here read goes! my very certain that If we were given another chance we would avoid ancholy day home town paper daily although the mistakes that we have made Wa there are scarcely any names J would not stumble into the pita kiiow anymore again Into which we have fallen Wa The cook’s name is Kathryn the would be guided by reason Instead oi maid’s Anne and the chauffeur Impulse We would always walk the Fred All are German Furnishing straight and narrow road Instead ol an apartment costs three times off Into flowery bywhat I expected and it still looks paths skimpy I like thin slices of yellow cheese for breakfast and floating lskrnd for dinner Oh we would all be models of I read the American World In wisdom and discretion and the morning and Telegram and Sun and marvelous successes at night I buy almost every period on a Blind we if could live our lives over leal at George's Bryant park comer aI wrap one leg around again But would we? If we the other at typewriter and concame Into the world a second out reach lift up something tinually on the desk and put it down quicktime as ignorant as we were the ly first would we not be just what I’m depressed visiting hotels where our temperaments and environI lonce lived A clock on my desk ment have made us even as we tells the time in all parts of the are would we not react to and world at any minute For no rea every situation just as we do? son I often look to see what time it Is on the Canary islands My hair even if some kindly fate permitted us to start out on the is1 muddy gray My dog sits in cor AND Incarnation with all the dearly bought knowledge that ners on one hip we had in our first would it gained change our desI am a sentimentalist except Would we make better Jobs of materially our lives than we are makwhere money is concerned The tinies?Would we be happier and more successful men and women? only mother I ever knew was a ing? who reared me My Would we save ourselves from the blunders we make? grandmother own mother died when I was a child in arms I have a charge ac Is more obvious than that most I think not for count at Cartier’s and in 10 years of us learn nothingnothing All of us know for from experience it: has totaled $2— for silver polish instance that health is our most precious asset and that and repairing a button hook without it everything else in the world is just cinders ashes il do not believe scandal about and dust and yet every day we eat food that has disagreed others All scandal mongerlng is with us a hundred times and that we know beforehand will — : malicious and malicious persons will us indigestion We have had nervous breakdowns but give invariably lie I never saw anyone we still go on overworking and overplaying and burning of film importance drunk in Holly the candle at both ends until it is snuffed out In & sanawood I had two nicknames “Dunk” torium or the grave and “Splinters” I’m particularly EVERY drunkard knows the depths into which he descends and fond of old people that he is wrecking his own life and the lives of his family (The only person I wish to see in prison isn’t yet Some of my most hut that seldom makes him let liquor alone It Is a common thing r Chicago j “Many Ibf Capone’s former enemies have been killed or so President Lowell of Harvard says factories national harassed (by the police that they our too numerous and too busy He are have left stown speaks of 49 law factories grinding What ah Indictment of the po- out laws at high speed referring to lice of a great city Any officer the 48 state legislatures and the nacongress who lends himself to the en- tional He might say 98 factories the uptrenching of crime of that kind per and lower houses of the 48 is worse than a thief a robber states plus the senate and' house in or a tyoldup When a police- Washington and the White suggesting most propman becomes the tool of racke- erly makesbythe number 99 teers and the protector of gangPresident Lowell says that there sters and! gunmen he is low beexist in America more statutes than yond redemption and as vile as a automobiles which is perhaps an cut thrbat exaggeration as automobiles numThe (dispatch from Chicago ber about 25000000 Of all the Jaws the only one that may be inade up in great part attracts much attention is the of the f rpth of sensation but if law and that1 is unforit is based on an actual condi- tunately flouted by the “respectable” exploited to the tune of biltion of (organized crime the good lions by the criminals and citizens should not rest until takes aupyear the energy of government they have destroyed the last that ought to be concentrated on A High School Worthy of the ‘Dorothy Dix sioirr' hal cocHRANPtcTimssiiria a prisoner In the military barracks at La Plata and strict military law rules the country For some time after a white flag was displayed from the government building at Buenos Aires it was pot known partnership what had become of Irigoyen “ B C The Associated A iODAY ‘ All Prices F O B Factory Detroit HUDSON -- ESSES DE AILED S EVEDYY7E3EDE |