Show The west when it was called and woolly was a tame place compared with Chicago and New York of today where the crimes are so many and eUBUSUlMU CO strangely Tiew that the average u tiilred Jr L L Ciimnn reader of the news cannot ' keep Pubtlsber An Independent Newspaper up with the excitement Published every evening and Sunday Quiet home people- - in Ogden morning without t muzzie or a rlub will ask what is a “racketeer” Matter at the Entered as Second-clas- s or what makes up a “muscler-in- ” Postotfice Ojden Utah “circus 187b the Established gang” The crimes out so of are the ordinary as to ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES t Delivered by carrier one month new phrases The English By mall tn advance in Utah "Idaho require Nevada and Wyoming is being enlarged in orfLUS language Three months der to convey an idea of the Six months 700 latest One year ' deviltry of the gangs in All other states (100 a month: (120 the big cities one year The question is asked why if Member of The Associated Press United Press Consolidated Press NEA“ Service the police have the gangsters so and A B C well marked that they have The Associated Press Is exclusively titled to the use for repubiicatton ot them branded with descriptive any hews credited to it not otherwise credited in this paper and slso the local names and can point out their news published herein hotels there is not a constant the Call 252 for All Departments raiding-anbattling with thugs? CcOiCilfr When the Butch Cassidy gang operated in eastern Utah and western Wyoming and escaped The Standard-Examine- r’ after holding up trains they were trailed to the Platform their rendezvous in the 75000 Population by 1935 wilds and pursued so relentlessA Place on the Transcontinental the gang broke up Butch that Air Route ly Control of a Pure Water Supply Cassidy left for Argentina where to Accommodate 150000 People he ended his days But in ChiA Modern City and County The Ogden Standard - Examiner wild 1 i Copyright 0 1923 Features Syndicate - when he odious his name occasionally appeared in the society columns He has had a profitable business dealing in that form of which pays and is rich enough to buy a certain amount pf immunity With the good people of Chicago at last stirred to the utmost by the crimes of the gangsters there is a promise that the reign of terror in the underworld is to end 7 law-breaki- ng ' A DISPOSITION TO IGNORE OGDEN At a meeting of the federal board on hospitalization held in Washington on Monday Judge J A Howell made a plea that the new $400000 Utah veterans' REGISTRATION hospital be placed at Ogden The DAYS IN UTAH advantages of Ogden In transToday is registration day If portation and water supply were have failed to register do so you dwelt on and the statement October 28 which is two On made that any soldier discharged weeks from today another opfrom the hospital would be given will be presented for portunity or permanent employtemporary who those have neglected to ment vote to at the election on A correspondent of a Salt Lake qualify 4 November paper In reporting the It is a duty for every citizen made this observation: to register his choice of those "The attitude of the board in are aspiring to office and who was site to the Ogden regard considerably at variance with declare for or against the prothat exhibited at the hearing two posed constitutional amendweeks ago when Salt Lake City ments The election just ahead bewas represented by Gus P iBack-mmemcause of the planned changes in On that occasion the bers demonstrated great interest our fundamental laws on taxagoing into the matter of water tion is one of the most importsupplies local transportation fa- ant and the right to vote on that cilities etc while at the hearing occasion should hot be thrown today Judge Howell was asked away by neglect only one question when he had ON THE FRONTIER completed his address" That is a serious accusation of OF AMERICA closed minds which is out of Up in the mountains of Idaho - where the little town of of near with the pubspirit harmony lic service It is equivalent to Yellow Fine is a small dot on the announcing that a federal board map two hunters were lost One is made incompetent by a dis- emerged from the wilderness position to favoritism and j re? after wandering through the fusal to carefully consider all forest but the other it is feared angles dealing with making of has perished This story from the news pages important decisions" The correspondent may have of the daily papers reminds us erred but the matter is so im- that there still remains a fronportant that it should be gone tier in this ' country of ours into to determine what is wrong where men can be lost in the No administration can afford great outdoors to show symptoms of a calloused Back in the Sawtooth range disregard of the honorable and down along the Salmon river the fair in the awarding of pub- there are stretches of country lic works costing hundreds of almost uninhabited The region thousands of dollars is broken up by rugged deep and mighty mountains canyons BUTCH CASSIDY covered by forests and only the AND AL CAPONE venturesome enter either to A puzzle to smaller communities prospect for gold to hunt or to are the operations of the gang- search for cattle sters and the methods of the Prospectors have found their police of Chicago and New York way into those wild areas and Chicago has one hundred or it rich' have started more well known gang leaders striking booms building camps which who are' murderers and abettors like Roosevelt have appeared of all forms of crime Like A1 over night only to become ghost Capone the gunmen come and towns where the hooting owl go almost undisturbed until finds a nesting place their acts are so startling that With population pushing back every one wants to khow why the frontier not many years will they cannotTbe restrained Then pass when even the wilds of there are spectacular raids with Idaho willbe cut by the trails the arrest of “Three-Fingof modern civilization Jack” White notorious labor racketeer George “Red” Barker There Is always the ' danger “muscler-inlabor union ” and that if Heywood Broun is electClaude Maddox leader of the ed to congress he might feel Im“circus gang ” and suspected of pelled merely because he is a connection with the St Valen- writer to be author of many tine day massacre bills an -- er clntyre li YORK CITY reveals an judicial situation Magistrates and some higher judges buying their seats then making what they can out of them dealing with criminals dining with gangsters and racketeers and refusing to waive immunity thus confessing guilt when invited before the grand jury ‘ NEW - - ’ protest against a corrupt judgment by the criminal sitting on the bench he would go to jail for contempt And probably the people of New York will do nothing at the next election to change a system ithat suits the few that are' of any consequence Men get the kind of government they deserve Wall street is Important in itself and because of its influence on other f enterprises When stocks drop business becomes frightened Gamblers in wheat being also gamblers in stocks wheat drops when stocks drop Of late however wheat has shown ability to stay up when stocks go down an encouraging sign - - Statistics show that in September of stocks dropped almost eight billions of dollars and this made worse by last week's slump that can run faster frightens thosereason than they can Yet the real loss is in public con' fidence Nothing else has been lostin’ Railvalue roads alone have dropped about one billion dollars But they are ail there tracks terminals roll' ing stock intact are of men minds in the Values and fear does to them what fire does to a- forest The General Electric company has posperfected a device that makes sible the production of ultra-violir rays from a light bulb inserted an ordinary socket This ' means probably a socket providing alterwhich would be a nating currentreason! for installing very forceful the alternating current everywhere Owen D Young and Gerard violet rays Swope bringing ultra within the reach of ' every family have rendered a great public service It is impossible to exaggerate' the importance of the actinic rays to human health - Even “the upper classes’ that can afford Palm Beach or the Riviera for their actinic treatments will be interested for ultra-violrays work wonders with dogs and horses ' King George had not won an Important time racing event for a long ultra-violThen his trainer gave ray treatment to his best horse all through the winter and ‘ it won a great race in the spring It makes the blood stronger and stronger blood means a stronger- animal- two legged or four legged t t Science makes it possible for industries to utilize the nation’s resources regardless of location The power that went to waste In miles NiagaraAis used hundreds of Detroit company is about away to build a gas pipe 390 miles long to bring natural gas one hundred and fifty million cubic feet’ of it per day to Detroit factories The pipe will cost $25000 000 Sir Henri Deterding head of the the-valu- e - - 4 - al ing (READ THE STORY THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) walked 'round the TIE bunch and then somebody said “Let’s take a hike back to Geneva and then get a good night’s rest Tomorrow Is another day and there’ll be lots of time' to play If we all want to feel in trim I think this will be best” “You’re right” replied the Travel Man4 “We’ll sleep real sound and then we can be on our way to some new spot We’ve seen aplenty here I think we ought to head for Spain A visit there won’t be in vain Say how about a nice train ride?” That made the Tinies cheer Wee Scouty cried “That’s just the thing Of walking we have had our fling and if we ride a train awhile we’ll want to walk again It’s rpally fun to switch around from in We’ll the air to on the ground take a train and then a plane I like that now and then” So into town they promptly went and there a restful night was spent At early morn they started out to take a speeding train The walk down to the station was a pretty one because they made it sort of round about right through a winding lane This lane ran through a valley where small houses stood up in the air and nearby flowed a tiny stream one that glistened in the sun Said I’ll bet the fishing’s good I’d like to try it if we could” The Travel Man replied “We haven’t time It can’t be done” They shortly reached the tostation beat and the train the band “It’s ready now to start Let’s run” wee Scouty away roared The others figured he was all their right and so they ran withwas pullmight Just as the train aboard ing out the Tinies hopped The Tiny mites have a sea trip In the next stpry -- choo-choo- ed (Copyright 1930 NEA Service Inc) Burgess et et et - 22-in- ch ' Dutch-Briti- Shell sh Oil company that begins to dominate this country Oil buys surplus gas from Standard of California takes It from the hills fields where every 4000 barrel well wastes ' 100000000 cubic feet of gas a day and uses it to stimulate the flow of oil in old parts ly exhausted wells far away Ket-tlem- an 4 - The British duke of Northumberland dies leaving $12350000 and the government takes $3000000 from the ' estate as inheritance tax At that rate the government would soon own all of the big fortunes i' — “best” United States financial minds” still have good reasons to be grateful Income tax makes them sob But- our government does not bite 35 per cent out of their' fortunes at one mouthful Imagine taking $300000000 from the fortune of Henry Ford John D Rockefeller Andrew W Mellon or George F Baker- - which Britain would do If anyone of the four died a British - " - ? subject health TALKS dr ll nsnsExn CAUSE OF PAINS IN BACK DIFFICULT TO DIAGNOSE back is onfe of the PAIN distressing conditions that afflicts mankind It is seldom due to any single cause and the effort to find the exact cause and its cure is therefore a difficult One It must be remembered that the human being probably developed by an evolutionary process walking originally on four feet and then standing erect and that as a result he places stresses on parts of his anatomy not originally expected to v carry these strains His age his occupation his height his weight and his general health as pointed out by Dr J T Rugh may all be of importance - In explaining the reason for the pain which he or she may have in the back The actual fact of the matter in-th- e -- - but' it remains a perimentations - &y ELIMINATE THE RECKLESS jkJEW YORK— Some 500 plastic surgeons in New York and at sanitarleast a dozen private-hom- e iums attend to the growing demand of those who want noses bobbed ears pruned and sagging cheeks ballooned Not all are theatrical folk aching for a whirl at Hollywood A large number are merely beauty mad In New York and Hollywood— the plastic surgery centers— some 4000 faces have been reconstructed since the advent of movies and talkies Boys and girls who fail in screen tests and have the price usually romp to a face fixer to take a flyer in surgical Strides have been made in plastic surgery as a result of war time ex- 1 i The New York state commissioner of motor vehicles has announced th$ names of motorists whose care registrations and whose licenses to drive were taken away from them in that state in the three weeks ending August 30 f" The number of them was 723 Reasons for- loss of license included driving while intoxicated leaving an accident without reporting third speeding offense reckless driving and several other more technical offenses That is an indication that this kind of penalty-revoca- tion or suspension of license— is one that can be enforced It is an irresistible that in New York state the fact are taken away for serious enough offenses that licenses can be andassumption deters many an otherwise careless driver Still another obvious benefit- from imposition of this kind of’ penalty is obvious It is the fact that the hundreds of thousands of other drivers on New York roads and streets are spared the danger of competing for room with the 723 who have been “given the hook” licenses to operators of Controlling larid traffic by first fast machines and then revoking thegiving licenses if they are abused is merely an application of the age old maritime principle On the sea it always has worked and on the land where applied it seems to be doing fairly well— Des Moines Tribune-Capit- SHOULD ADOPT ONE— UNSYMPATHETIC Inc) Hole-in-the-W- all Building A Direct Highway to Great Salt lake The Monte Cristo Road to Rich county A High School Worthy of the City Another North and South Arterial Highway Road An Aggressive County -Building Program in More Street Improvements Ogden improved City Parks A Municipal GoU Course Beautlfal Ogden a City- - of Homes IS A MAN WORSE OFF WHEN IIE MARRIES?—WHY THE BACHELOR WOMAN WHO WANTS A CHILD L King A regular clearing house for “court fixing” exists with fixed charges for various politenesses extended to criminals The greater the crime the higher the fee paid by the crim— inal d A fourth offender certain is convicted to go to prison for life under the Baumes law' can buy Immunity for $50000 J Only the high 'grade criminal can afford this But bootlegging racketeering and other prohibition crimes enable many criminals to pay the price If is enlightening to see judges products of modern gang politics selling immunity to the most dangerous criminals while refusing to waive immunity when dragged before a grand jury cago AlCapone who is the A graceful rotten system a shame Butch Cassidy of the Windy on the community Lthat tolerates it the direct govCity helps city A corrupt political system enables ernment from the underground the rich man to buy what he wants He comes and goes and until and that satisfies him The little man doe§ not counts If he shoum of late became too 'X- - tA Uijx-VUL- Politics Business Money Who Talks of Anything Else? Judges for Sale New Lamps for Health - - GTOrrYj By ARTHUR BRISBANE 1 kft hlft HAk Stories BOXER SEES THE TRIPLETS AGAIN “Day by" day learh something new Thus will wisdom come to you” v Green Forest and PEOPLE of the Meadows soon forget troubles that are past Boxer the young Bear who had started out into the Great World for himself wisely heeded the warning of Mother Bear to keep away from that part of the Green Forest where her home was and not seeing or hearing anything more of the three little cubs which as you know were Boxer’s two little sirters little brother-anhe soon forgot all about them There was plenty to do and as there were the weather grew warmer new and interesting- - discoveries to be made every day Now all this time Mother Bear’s triplets had- been growing and learning One day she led' them farther from their old home than usual She had sent them up a big hemlock tree and then had gone off a short distance to pull over some old logs and tear apart some old stumps in search of ants You know Mother Bear like all Bears is very fond of ants The very full of life triplets were feelingwere as lively as that 'morning and only thfee little cubs can be They chased each other about in the branches of that big hemlock tree and did their best to knock each other off Now it happened that Boxer came along that way shortly after the cubs had been sent up in that tree He had nothing in particular on his mind- - He was just roaming about He was startled by a noise of f to one side Instantly he stopped to listen There was a great thrashing about among the branches of a certain big tree Now and then there was a snapping of broken twigs and dead branches BoxeT became curious Very carefully and silently he stole forward until he could see up 4n that tree Three funny little black clearly forms were scrambling about up a that tree They were having no end of fun ‘Boxer recognized them at once They were the three little cubs whom he had almost forgotten Boxer sat down and watched them and as he watched some of his old anger and jealousy re turned Next story: Boxer Decides to Get d - - -- Even - - your BUN OLIVE ROBHiTS mm j93QBV Hi a M EVICT me CHILDREN aretheperpetual stage on which Their parents act Yet most mothers and fathers feel themselves to be in a secure niche away from the Observation and criticism of the youngsters They are likely to deceive themselves Into thinking that the children are so busy so interested in their own lives that they have no time to notice what their elders do This is apt to’ lead to a certain carelessness" of habit" Anything to keep the children up to the mark but no driving necessity to correct our own little failings and unlovely habits To go on with the simile we as sume that we may call orders from the wings like stage directors from the shadows But that is not our part in the picture We play a role for them just as much as they do for us and our acting is more potent than our orders They will imitate the one and neglect the other The father who insists that his boy be on time for meals and then repeatedly comes in from his golf game an hour after dinner cannot expect much beyond the lmita tion of his own tardiness The mother who tells her little of girl never to speak unkindly people and then proceeds to lay out her neighbors might just as well save her breath A BAD EXAMPLE “You must be a gentleman in the house” says father “and not throw caramel papers around” Then he proceeds to leave cigaret stubs all over the place and throws his newspaper on the floor for someone else to pick up “Tob much dessert Isn’t good for you” — Mother vetoes a ' second serv ing But she herself eats every thing she wants and as much as she wants with a limber apology about it not being good for her “but she is just cannot starve” something she knows nothing of “Be prompt my boy It is the secret of success Up on time — to bed on time” ' Then Father is late at the office next day because he and Mother were at a oarty and neither of them could get up Certainly parents should have a little latitude If they are full ot faults and habits it is only human But the great truth remains that they will have to be object lessons first if they want their words to be taken in earnest Children will obey parents in whom they have faith and confidence If they see their elders doing everything in the world they are forbidden and not doing the things they are commanded to do it is making bricks without straw The highest type of is that which imposes ondiscipline itself the same rules it makes for others or at least shows the same as it expects others to ob Self-contr- ol self-contr- ol serve O GDEN 20 Years Ago From Oar Wow SECRETARY ALEXANDER Harriman rail system in New York made a trip of incutspection over the Ogden-Luci- n off and returned to 'Ogden "much satisfied with the project He considers the crossing of the lake by rail is a wonderful engineering feat Wj H Reeder Jr fresh from school in the University of Pennis preparsylvania ing to open up his office for law practice here law-departme- " Joseph E Evans and his brother Isaac Blair Evans have1 gone east to study law one to enter the Chicago school of law the other to begin a course in the Harvard university law department They are the sons of Thomas B Evans J E Evans has already been admitted to the bar but prefers to take a furcourse ther that the woman past middle age is just as frequently a sufferer from pain in the back as the man who may have lived a harder life Obviously it is not possible to diagnose the reason for a pain in the back merely by asking questions of the patient It is necessary to examine not only his back but also the hips the legs and the feet and indeed the entire carriage of the pais - -tient In many Instances the reason for the pain in the back is not in the back itself but in some other portion of the anatomy It is therefore necessary to examine the patient standing sitting and lying and to test the movements of his limbs under various conditions It has long been recognized that a pain in the back may be due to infection of the appendix to an Infection in the prostate gland to some disease of the intestines or in women to diseases of the organs associated with childbirth There are innumerable cases on record in which removal of an infected appendix or of a 'fibroid tumor in a woman has resulted in complete cessation of the pain - in the back ’ - Officers of the police department were hurriedly called to the foothills' east of the city last night to capture what was thought to be a couple of wild men or bandits When the officers reached the scene they found Lon Rogers Ogden precinct constable and James in excited gesticulation 1 practicing the parts they i are to play in the Moose performance next Saturday Races were run at the fair grounds track yesterday afternoon in a sea of mud It gave the ponies the chance to show their speed and strength as “mudlarks” Alfred H Lindquist brother of C J A Lindquist died In Pocatello yesterday afternoon He was born in Logan in 1830 but had lived In Ogden for a time associated with his brother in the 'undertaking I mm 1 Alexander ‘W Rankin died at his home in Ogden yesterday after a brief Illness He was born in Glasgow! Scotland March 21 1859 and " dangerous expedient Surgeons with big names have faced enormous suits for damages by those disfigured Many men wear long beards and women heavy veils as a penalty for bungling Despite the successful operations the conscientious surgeon- - admits there is always an element of danger Fannie Brice’s nose bob was a success and permitted her further to continue on the screen Belle Baker a prime vaudeville favorite refused to submit to the knife Screen luminaries submitting to plastic surgery are Bebe Daniels Mollle O’Day Ruth Taylor and Vivienne Segal Among the men are “It is Me Georgie” — and won’t someone please tell him? — Price and Harry Richman Due to mighty sockings Jack Dempsey and Georges had their Carpentier bridges propped up Valentino was the first screen hero to have his ears trimmed It was a minor difficulty but until performed he was not permitted to show himself full face Nearly all screen Idols who are past 35 have had face hoists an operation which has become more certain in results than most New York society women travel chiefly to Paris for such operations In this isolation they are able to avoid tabloid publicity However two tragic instances of such expert ments abroad are recorded The ladies have set and frozen ' smiles and have never returned to America ‘ - - HUSBAND HEAR MISS DIX— I am a man of 30 very lonely very much in y love with a nice girl but when I talk about marry ing herif allth of my married men friends advise me against it They say were single once more nothing would induce them to marryr as times they could have much better and wouldn’t hae to work so hard What Is your advice? A BACHELOR f Answer: If you are in love with a nice I? girl and she loves you I say on with the marriage Let the wedding bells ring out and don’t 4 listen to the croakers who tell you that you will be happier single It isn’t true Man was not madfto live alone and he is better off 'evtv if he is married to a woman whop doesn’t come up to all the specifics- tions of a perfect wife than he is a bachelor Why it is better even to have somebody to fight with than It 'Is to be by yourself i That at least keeps you from being lonely’ Of course there are a lot of pessimistic husbands just as there are a lot of pessimistic bankers and grocers and doctors and lawyers Nearly every man you meet makes and of himself a sort of a human red light danger warns you not to do as he has done " J Talk to a grocer and he will tell you for heaven’s sake not’ to be foolish enough to go into the grocery business The banker will tell you that there is nothing in banking except-wor- k and anxiety The doctor will tell you that the life of a doctor is a dog’s life and so on You see we all know the difficulties the trials and tribuatlons of our own lot and we don’t know those of the other fellow and that always makes us think that his is j : -- snal t better ! Your married friends think of how much it costs to support a family and that they can't buy new golf clubs or take a vacation because little Johnny’s teeth have to be straightened and little Mary’s adenoids taken out They think how nice it would be to be free to come and go as they please without having to furnish an alibi to anybody They think how peaceful it would be not to have a woman nagging them about smoking too much and drinking two cups-o- f coffee and needing a haircut and a new suit of tlofhes And they forget how pleasant it is to go home of an evening to a comfortable home and a good dinner what a ’ thrill there is in having little faces watching for them at and little feet rushing to welcome them the window-pan- e at the door They forget how lonely it Is to go home to a dark room and how desolate it is to feel that no one gams ' whether you come or go or are sick or well t I - ' - ' : ! ! The newest of the young temperaYour friends tell'you that you will have to Work hardef after mental eccentrics of the town to be are than before Doubtless that is true but suppose you publicized is Werner Janssen son of you do? married What of it? That is no fatal objection to a man who is a cafe keeper Besides writing music and filled with energy and ambition for several plays he captured a a Rome Fellowship for a composition to success as has been Moreover a wife Is a first-ai- d He accepts dinner engagements and shows up next evening sails for long a men million few times get anywhere until Very proved are married When they are single they are sort stays in Europe hurries back on the after they same boat and all that Dear dear! of dillettante They move about from place to place and i job to job and do not settle to anything But when they William Collier years ago sighed marry and have the responsibilities of a family on their’ “No one gets temperamental with a shoulders they dig in and put their hearts and their corner cop” backs in their jobs and begin to climb That is why employers prefer married men to single men If was interesting to watch a ot bouncer handle a disturbing And don't believe you will have your money for yourself drunk in a restaurant last night The disturber roamed from table to stay single You won’t As long as you have no wife and children all of your table wearing a hat check boy’s of your own to support every borrower you know and " tambourine cap He chucked strange relatives will have their fingers in your pockets ladies under the chin and hecklec floor performers The bouncer stood 'And as for having to spend your money In supporting-you- r for a volley of guttery epithets while wife and children what else is money for? It takes patiently jockeying the drunk to an mighty little to supply a man’s needs anil the most fun he ' exit Then after a swift smack he gets is out of buying pretties for some woman he loves or him across the sidegiving advantages to his children Believe me you will get walk “There goes Yale for three more kick out of paying for the baby’s milk than you will yards!” cried a passing taxi driver out of buying bootleg liquor for the boys J The bouncer today due to hooch must be more handy - And as a final proof that your- - friends don’t mean what- they than ever witn his dukes He is now say about their aversion to matrimony and that they would never called an “assistant manager” A never marry again if they were single look at what happens to number are paid $100 a week Their practically every widower Does he cherish his freedom and cling problem is to coax annoy ers out- to it with both hands? Is he a burned child who dreads the fire on side What happens then forestalls the hearthstone? Not much As a general thing before his wife suits for damages against the has been dead six months he Is beginning to take notice and by ' the time a fairly decent period of mourning is over he Is sticking “Pan” Duffy was a bouncer in the his head in the matrimonial noose again: The country is full of t days of McGuirk’s Suicide Hall widows but widowers are few and far between whither forlorn - ladies drifted to So there you are The marriage estate isn’t perfect any quaff acid in their beer Duffy pa tient and amiable would always more than anything else on earth but it is worth trying wait to be hit Then he woulc once anyhow DOROTHY DIX pound his victim’s head on the floor bite out a chunk of ear and spit it DIX — I am unmarried and I do not wishx to in his face In 12 years of bounc DEAR DOROTHY My childhood was made miserable by the heartless ing he mangled nine ears treatment that my father gave to my mother and for that reason In a Bowery dump one Saturday I have no desire to tie myself to any man But above all things B want a child of my very own not an adopted one I am amply able night with if memory serves Francis Albertanti the sport writer- - “Eat to provide for it Do you think it would be' unfair to the child to ’Em Up” Jack McManus rolled In deprive it of a legitimate father? I do not think so for so many aflame with Bowery “smoke” anc fathers are greater hindrances than helps to their children: ' bear His gaze surly as a — SARAH i fell on me of all people! “That mug of yours” he rumbled “needs f ANSWER: a good smear so you won’t look so canons are civilized of what The being society they prissy” I don’t know how I got Sarah and its rules being as inflexible as the laws of the i there but my next lucid interval ' Medes and the Persians you could not commit a greater — took place in my hotel room very to deliberately bring a fatherless child into" crime than clown and white twlttery the world just for the -sake of your own pleasure in having f a child of your own “Get that Gallipolis complex out of your head” counsels F D A It would be a piece of incomparable selfishness because unfair “You are now in New York and- the and unjust as It is the illegitimate child has to pay the price of its year is 1930” as long as it lives And the child has no mother’s That gritty noise is my face tun- sophistrieswrongdoing to console itself It has no philosophies with which ing up for- - an old fashioned wince about a woman’s right to maternity about her glorious privileges (Copyright 1930 McNaught Syndi- of independence and freedom to live her own life and decide her cate Inc) own conduct It can only writhe and cringe under the contumely by upon it by other children It can only grow up shadowed had lived in Ogden since 1889 He put i I across its escutcheon sinister bar that was a member of the L D S church and filled a mission for his Not long ago an English writer who thought as ou ‘do church in Scotland and Ireland and who had the courage of her convictions told the story of her experiment along those lines and frankly confessed footThe first game of inter-clachild a terrible that she realized that she had done her was ball of the high school will be a baby ‘and ( as as child said She her that long wrong on this field at afternoon the played In was a motherhood but adventure small it Twenty-fift- h glorious street and Harrison very avenue The game will be between in a little while the child began asking why it had no the senior and junior teams father to play with him and be a companion tohimandf then in a little while other children began taunting him r The first woman to be baptised ' his birth about into the L D S church in the wato receive him as a pupil and although schools refused Good ters of Bering sea at Nome was the break has not yet come between the woman and her son its Mrs A W Anthony formerly Miss when the day came is she and her felt that upon premonition Bybee of Riverdale daughter of Mr when she had to tell the whole would turn upon iher the boy story and Mrs C A Bybee The baptism ’ ? i was given September 22 attracting with hatred - So don’t do this harm to defenseless" ' child any poor ' much attention by adopting a baby It Satisfy your maternal craving not with exactly the same will teach you to love it Perhaps P J Moran Salt Lake contractor own but with an affec- child would has opened an office at 2578 Washgive your feeling you tion that will feed your hungry heart And' in after days ington avenue his extensive business in Ogden necessitating the the child will arise and call you blessed for having taken action the stigma of illegitimacy off it whereas your own child curse you for having put it upon him would W W Browning has been chosen DOROTHY DIX to act as chairman of the Democratic central committee of Weber — me but there is pne county He states that he will soon DEAR MISS DIX My husband is very good to When cannot understand about him I am happy camthat I open headquarters and get the me over a me about is he but when makes fuss and full force crazy big just paign going I am blue he never sympathizes with me or tries to cheer me ! up SURELY WASN’T u E G Do you think he really loves me? She — You are not listening to f wli&t I fifty J ANSWER: - Husband — How ' do you know no sign a man doesn’t love you because he doesn’t : is It dear? want to listen to your hard-luc- k stories No man ever does4 She — I asked if I might spend He of all them gets enough day long In his business and $100 on my new spring outfit and comes to be cheered up wants he when home he — Passsaid you “Certainly darling”' ing Show Men just naturally hate gloom anyway Women get a sort of THEY ALL DO THEN morbid pleasure in going to funerals and seeing people in trouble Bertha — Well I know one woman but a man just has to be dragged by the hair of his head to a fuwho thinks her husband is perfect- neral or to see anybody in trouble He wiU send flowers or checks ly wonderful or anything to the afflicted or do anything for them except let Beatrice— So you’ve just come them weep on his shoulder from a wedding? —Answers So my advice to you Mrs E G is to can your blues and off your tears and keep your troubles to yourself and turn INVITATION be jolly and lively when your husband is around home He— You are the breath of my He has given you a tip as to what he likes in a wif Bet life DOROTHY DIX She — Let’s see you hold your heavily on -the red and be cheerful breath — Answers it (Copyright by Public Ledger) go-get- ter j -- - - ) j- -: - six-fo- if-yo- u 5 drop-kick- ed highly-kipper- ed - i 5 sore-foot- ed S‘ ss - 4 - - ! 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