Show THE OGDEN STANDARD newed use of silver which started with a plea made f pr silver by a former Ogdenite in a talk with President Hoover organ In the last issue of-tPUB1USHINU CO of States chamber of united the J U Eldredje Jr A L GLasmana PnbUsbers commerce 'John Hays Hammond An Independent Newspaper most famous of mining enginPublished every evening and Sunday eers made a contribution to the morning without a mnultoi a club cause in which he tells why Entered as Second-claMatter at the Postoffice Ogden Utah silver is essential to world pros- The Ogden Standard - Examiner 1 s Today he ’ J RATES SUBSCRIPTION Me Delivered by carrier one month By mail in advance in Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming Three months $193 360 Six months M One year All other states $100 a month: $12W one year Member of The Associated Press United Press Consolidated Press NEA Service f ' and A B C The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication ol any news credited to It not otherwise credited tn this paper and also the1 local 1 news published herein I Call 252 for All Departments H f(r- Ml The Standard-Examiner- - ’s Platform 75000 Population byS935 b Place on the Transcontinental Air Route Control of a Pure Water Supply to Accommodate 150000 People A Modern City and County 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 An Aggressive County Road Building Program More Street Improvements in Ogden improved City Parks A Municipal Golf Coarse Ogden - a City of Beautlfal Homes A ' 1 i l c i 3 - THE GOVERNOR’S WARNING When th? special session of the legislature was ready for work Governor Dern In Ills message warned the legislators that untried plans were dangerous He said: -- ‘‘There Is always risk in adopting an entirely new scheme especially If it is revolutionary in pharacter because it is not possible to estimate its effect on business and on public revenues Other states have done a great deal of costly experimenting in state and local taxation and we shall do wen to profit by their experience rather to rely upon our own guesses It is unnecessary for this state to embark on any untried plan” The governor’s warning still holds good Untried plans are being submitted to the people In the proposed tax amendments and before those plans are en- F fW (Copyright 1929 King Inc) Two Ways of Doing It Pray and Pray Quick Only One Woman’ Record ss 1879 6roirr4y By ARTHUR BRISBANE Features Syndicate - Established f Surprising 1 1( SATURDAY EVENING NOVEMBER EXAMINER Dorothy ‘Dlx's W v' clntyre op 1 (BEAD THE STORY THEN COLOR TOE PICTURE) rPHE pony on which Clowny rode 1 seemed very glad to have a load upon his back He pranced around and Clowny cried “I hope that Your OUVEKHnSIUW fa ypo by nek stRyicgjW is the time to CHILDHOOD fund of pleasant exto look back upon periences Memories of the good times of childhood perform more than a pleasantly sentimental function Only the adult who remembers his childhood as a continuously happy experience punctuated by specially bright spots of pleasure is apt to be happy in his Immediate present whatever it may be for it is a known fact that’ people react to their present in terms of their past If the past has been good they generally know how to see the bright side of the present For this reason (he right to joy is as much one of the inalienable to rights of childhood as is the right food and shelter Many parents take the business of bringing up their children so seriously that they forget that thexe should be fun jin i i & dont’ spill This little fellow’s very peppy and he doesn’t seem to want to stand Just watch me ride him Tinymites and you will get a thrill" “Well go ahead” one Tiny cried “You’re hopping round Why don’t you ride? Most anyone can do as well as you are doing now If you are scared to let him run get down and let me have some fun If I am given just one chance I’ll shortly show you how” Then Clowny shouted “Giddy-app- !” The pony got a friendly slap which made him start to gallop down the little winding street This made the whole bunch laugh in glee and Coppy shouted “Mercy me I hope he doesn’t run away This ought to be a treat” Around and ’round the pony went and then the pony owner sent the other Tinies out to bring poor Clowny safely back They grabbed the reins The pony stopped All of a sudden Clowny flopcied “That’s all your fault ” cried Clowny “Common sense you1 Tinies lack ” a small cart came in Just then y cried “Say that’s sight in just right for alla of us to ride The little spin” Come let’s take man who owned the cart agreed and Scouty cried “That’s all we need!” They ran up to the little cart and promptly piled right in The Travel Man stood by and smiled Thought he “I’d like to be a child and have the fun those Tinies have They’re happy as can be” Wee Scouty drove around a bit Then Coppy took his turn at it He shouted loudly “I am good! Just keep your eye on me” con-lenu- - j HEALTH taiIks it This depreciation lias emoe at a A girl bom long ago in Thrace time of world depression and obFISHBEIN By DR CHINA ASKING now called Bulgaria had written on viously could not but accentuate her tombstone: FOR SILVER GREAT STRIDES TAKEN IN PREJudge Paul Linebarger" legal it” am not of the noble Grecian I VENTING DIPHTHERIA race adviser to the Chinese govem- - HOLDUPS AND I am poor Abrotonon and bom FROM 1885 to 1895 the deatk rate ment has arrived in San Fran- MURDERERS in Thrace diphtheria in145New York cisco on his way to Washington Let Grecian women score me if for each varied from 125 to men are abroad city Desperate to confer with President Hoover they please 100000 of the population From 1915 these nights When armed as I was the mother of to 1925 the rate varied from 10 to on the proposed loan of silver 20 for each 100000 of the popula' There has beenialk of 200000-00- 0 was the holdup on Friday who Those lines will live longer in his- tion ounces being placed at the shot and killed Albert A WhitNotwithstanding (he fact that the tory than if she had written “I am - disposal of the Chinese but the of the United States infrom ran who population Abrotonon barefoot are an Ogden grocer they ley 75000000 in 1900 "to twenty-ffrom creased billion of a in back to talks Athens and Thrace special envoy 1930 menace to a serious 120000 life our and Helin there was a steady swam the hours then ounces to be made a loan for 50 times breaking the wo- decrease in the diphtheria rate allespont eight property years at 2 per cent interest man’s record in each case” though it is much nearer a permanent level at the present time1 women are records for The real will the face This winter to police be into melted The silver is 1890 a few yfears before antiof Hanks In mother held Nancy by bars and shipped to the Orient a difficult situation Jn trying to Lincoln Olympias mother of Alex- toxin became available there were the Great Bertha of the big 38000 deaths from diphtheria in the t obe coined and in that manner safeguard the welfare of the ander of Charlemagne the United States with the population feet mother necesbe stimulate the trade of China community and it may a humble French tanner about 65000000 wife of In 1930 there The Chinese propose to use the sary to increase the force in the mother of the great Pasteur and would have been between 70000 and 75000 deaths from this disease if silver in constructing roads and business district although the other mothers the rate had been maintained not will of the patrol not to The actual fact is that the numImproving the farming resources multiplying BrUlshers make u a of China America to directly prevent every skulking fellow tell all they feel but1 if they brougnt ber was near to 10000 an indicatoin bonds to help their good ally of the way in which scientific medibenefit by the machinery to be with a gun on him from robbing French France when the war began it cine is controlling this serious diswould be plenty if they only told part ease purchased and general demand and murdering over the of what they feel now There Is a crime-waEighty-fiv- e to be created for American per France will pay Britons that from diphtheria occur in the jjoods French bonds with francs of first five years ofusually are Children bought life It begins to look as though stern resolve on the part of the j the present value Francs that the much more susceptible to the disbought with good pounds ease than are adults and the dissomething substantial is to come decent element of society to fight British were sold to them at 20 ease is likely to get a better start sterling from the agitation for the re down the gunmen cents apiece’ They will be bought in the child it is properly back at something less than four diagnosed andbefore treated than in the a loss to British cents each j - ' chair i Furthermore a wife has very little liberty to go around and the one at the window right enjoy herself Not for her are the dances and the joyrides and the and back of my desk to remove first He flirtations with boys She has to stay at home and if she so much as looks finally got it loose and asked me if cook and wash and sew and baby-ten- d I would mind holding to it while at a sheik husband is green-eye- d over it and raises ructions So he went for a tool ' He must have don’t imagine that you will better your condition by getting margone for it by the way of Bridge- ried port Fifteenonminutes later I was But one could weep over the stupidity oi parents such still holding pale and growing as yours who in trying to protect their daughters are twittery them into the very arms of danger and in trying pushing Had he not arrived when he did save to their girls are taking the surest way to ruin themto I would have had to let go or foltoo to be strict with girls is a more fatal policy than For lowed the whole shooting match to too be lenient To try to keep them prisoners is worse than the pavement six floors below And to turn them loose without let or hindrance I don’t follow awnings gracefully I asked Him to hurry “Go right on There are many parents like yours Maybelle good conscienbanging the typewriter” he replied “You won’t bother me” That’s the tious fathers and mothers who love their children and are anxious kind he was for their welfare They see many young persons running wild and Well sir for an hour with chill to save things they should not do and they are determined winds through an open window doing follies that these other girls own the from their committing girls playing tag up and down my spine do So they swing to the opposite extreme of the lax parents and he fiddled with that awning He in their homes folded unfolded and refolded it make their daughters virtual prisoners A counted the parts and at last announced: “There is a bolt missing And the pity of It is that they are not progressive But I was too played out obviously to see that there has been a revolution of youth enough to remark there would soon be a the whole status of the young girl has been and that nut missing' too changed and that you cannot deal with a modern girls as her parents did with the dependent help-ile- ss And if there is a young man in little girl who had never been outside of her mother's New York just embarking on a shadow and her own home in her whole life Nor do they career who hasn’t picked see that the modern girl who works in the outside world is on me as prospect No 1 to try out las sophisticated at 17 and better able to take care of her-- -! his- sales talk I’m just a high-struself as her mother was at 25 And don’t pay imaginative nit-w- it any attention'1 One thing of which I’m sure If I visit a restaurant Nor are they wise enough to realize that forbidden pleasures are and there is a' girl just starting in ever the sweetest and that no girl is so as the one who is the waiting business 1 draw her never permitted to speak to a boy nor that if you lock a girl up in a You can’t talk me out of that room she is sure to crawl out at the window Nor do they realize that youth must have the pleasures that belong to them and: if it Last evening I barged into one of cannot get them honestly it win steal them those tea rooms which strives to The Tinymites meet the carnation fulfill the hackneyed description Cerainly any girl of 17 in these days is old enough to I was in a gastronomies! cozy man in the next story dates and go about with boys to all decent places of have two lamb for 1930 NEA Service glow! chops plain Inc) (Copyright amusement and her parents have no right to deny her this baked potato avec outer hide and a salad of lettuce and tomato In i privilege That they should know with whom she goes and such moods I confess to a certain where she goes and that they should put a reasonable limit testiness — an old family trait In upon the time she should be home at night is perfectly urgetx Scotland today there is a saying: No girl will resent being bound with these restric-jtioobvious “Never deny a McIntyre a bakec if father and mother enter into her pleasures and EDTIMB potato avec outer hide” They all show her that they want her to have a good time but the remember my of time a nice girl should have sort' good bakwas a McTavish There ed man! Any It is a criminal thing for parents not to make their girls’ boy way a pleasing and prettily dimpled lady took my order But when friends welcome in their homes because it is the only chance they CRAFTY OLD MAN COYOTE it came there was a potato startling have of getting acquainted with the boys and finding out what ly nude and without its outer hide son of company their girls are keeping And no parents can do “Beware the crafty! Oft their smile One of the Old McIntyre rages over- their daughter a deadlier than to deprive her of the backIs put to cover hidden guile" came me The lady’s eyes brimmed ground of a home It is wrong a greatest protection for no man “I’m new here ahd you are the first treats the girl whom he visitsgirl’s home the lack of respect in her the thunderstorm was person I’ve waited on" she murmur he shows to the little flapper that he pickswith on the street who up AFTER Littiest Bear remained ed So I ate what’she brought and has no one to look after her no one to whomjie must account for for some time in the top of the tree tripled the tip In such la charitable the way he treats her and the to he takes her which places to the proprietor going where she had sought refuge The glow I said sun came out and the Green For- out: “A wonderful waitress that Girls will be girls They will have boy friends and dates est was no longer silent Little by girl who served me” He beamed will go to dances and places of amusement with their ittle Littlest Bear got over her with appreciation and replied: “One They more even of us best was the Been if the parents are reasonwith she But eight fright parents' knowledge and consent onesome than before and she want- years” able without it if the parents are unreasonable So it is up ed more than ever to 1find Mother to the fathers and mothers to decide whether their Sadies Then — and O the pity of it! — Bear Mamies shall go around with nice clean boys they 'and is that riotous riveting at the She climbed down from the tree there or sneak off with some blind date who may take know Waldorf across the way I’m and started on and as before she new God knows where them mad at them The higher they whimpered Now whimpering that still the noiser the din And they way was the worst thing Littlest go So iwake up parents This is 1930 not 1876 Bear could have done J3ut she have 22 more stories to go Twice I I O pinions of Press OUT OF WORK t When a man loses his job he Realizes s instantly the full sig- causing bond buyers of $120000000 A foreign language newspaper par-t- y seeking to help the Republican Presifor which It works said dent Hoover was about to declare cent beer and in favor of 44 £o per' use up surplus open breweries grain and employ labor The false statement escaped from the foreign language and spread And the cabinet is said to think President Hoover should issue a j prohibition statement now nificance of the problem of unemployment He can’t buy his family the food it should have to keep strong and well - The payments stop on the things he has been buying on like the radio and the flivver and the washing machine and they are taken away He can’t keep up the rent and has to find a place to live cost- is not so good for his children ing less where the neighborhood to The presi- of avoid doctor and nurse and dent is electednppd comes tries he illness When to enforce laws not to make them He didn't invent delays so long that death results hospital and sometimes The man out of work with a family dependent on him knows prohibition J what the problem of unemployment is statement real prohibition But when we who have jobs' are clinging to them and read in Thecome at will we are so not of the about the the paper jobless likely If it Indicates that hard problems and to get this poignant personal picture of pinching poverty imthe made have idleness people row as a of We get statistics that stand figures and often patient the president may say what mean but little They mean so little indeed that whether the total is necessary basing It perhaps on of unemployed today is the 2500000 that the cenjsus bureau says the interesting advice that King 1 or the five million that labor leaders assert Lemuel it found for last April got from his emother see seems different in but Proverbs need degree chapter thirty-on- son “What employment ' of my But multiply either figure you choose by the families depend- - my son? And what the Mn of my And what the ent on the Idle men put those families in the precarious position womb? of the one we kiiow of where the wage earner is out of a Job vows wlne’ it is not for tings w ct the consider the suffering the hunger the loss of ' StvesSpne dSik unto lower standard of living the bad health the lessened opportunity mm that 'is ready toperish and the and the fact that there are today with winter coming on two unto those that be of heavy million three million or five million men out of work and the full hearts Let him drink and forgetj his poverty and remember his misof the national calamity can be better realized significance We congratulate ourselves Tn the middle west because this j ery no more” has not been experienced so sharply and pinch of unemployment ALKIES FILL NEW CHURCH here We should not however permit ourselves to become T painfully N J By taking talk NEWARK hard-heartso that we are indifferent to the fate of a jobless ing on Broadway the shown pictures to be around the corner and we Rev man just because he happens has succeeded in Rose R Henry - can’t see his sufferings We should have enough of human sym- - filling his church here every Sun to embrace the hundreds of thousands of men in New York He has lantern slides made of pathy he in Boston in Chicago Philadelphia and Detroit whose needs are day the 'films and on each picture are now so pressing as well as the few hundreds or thousand or so delivers a sermon as the slides I who need work in Omaha — Omaha World-Herashown He has shown slides of “All t iiS t I Stories self-respe- Le I : ed ld ct ng sales-iriansh- ng ip ng - j boy-cra- zy f - i 20 after The most and the antitoxin Schick test is the development of a preparation called toxoid which is now used in the prevention of diph theria Toxoid has the advantage that it does not contain the serum of the horse or the sheep and that therefore there is little danger of producing sensitiveness to serum by its use self-supporti- potato-avec-outerhi- de ps toxin-antitox- woultFse-le- great-great-grand-fat- her toxin-antitox- recent-advan- y good-looki- B wasn’t old enough or wise enough to know it She was lost and lonesome and so she whimpered Now always there are sharp ears n the Green Forest It happened hat there was a pair of them that leard the whimpering of Littlest Bear They were the ears of Old Man Coyote The minute Old Man Coyote heard the whimpering he stopped to listen He crouched down close to the ground and waited His eyes gleamed He wasn’t afraid of the little Bear In fact that little Bear would make him a very good meal But he was suspicious That little Bear might be lost but Mother Bear might not be far away Old Man Coyote wanted to take no chances Silently he circled quite around the whimpering little Bear All the way he looked listened and tested the air Finally he made up his mind that Mother Bear was not about How he grinned! He would have adult a dinner of Bear Cautiously he Among the advances in the con- stole nearer and nearer to Littlest trol of diphtheria that have taken Now littlest Bear was a badly place since 1890 are first the discovery of antitoxin which was and frightened little Bear’ That very still is of the greatest importance fright made her more watchful and for the treating of the disease and suspicious She suddenly became for a while had certain usefulness in aware that an enemy was near She in couldn’t have said how she knew It prevention: then came by which human beings can but she did know it She stopped be made resistant to the disease for and turned a period of sexen to 10 years or Old Man Coyote stopped but he longer From 25 to 30 per cent of didn’t stop quite soon enough Litchildren have a natural immunity to tlest Bear saw him and like a flash the disease through the passing over she ran for the nearest tree and of resistant substances from the scrambled up to safety' Old Man blood of the parent Coyote sprang after her but he was It is estimated that approximate- Just too late ly 65 per cent of adults living in Next story: Littlest Bear Has a cities will give a negative reaction to the Schick test so that it would Shock seem to be desirabel that the Schick before test be made on gTOwn-uin in giving them times of exposure to diphtheria On the other hand girls who have been raised in the country and who come to study nursing in the city are only immune in aboi 35 per Years cent of cases toxin-antitox- taker-awa- ns j 4 j !j The! awning and-Carp- - ve e - -- no-st- MISS DIX—I am 17 but I never have the privileges that YORK—Ten years ago I used JJEAR All-thgirls of my age in my town go IN to wonder why people had to around with boys have times but I am never wonderful have and get away from New York every now out anywhere My to allowed go and then and check up with themwont even let a and father mother more Just a selves But not any me home from the show boy brtfig few moments ago answering a door see a girl they to time I and go every “Does buzz a gentleman inquired: a me through questionnaire as if Mr Willard Gilmore live here?” fiut were didn’t and he adjudge and jury and I I replied eyeing were a criminal Of course I slip off me coldly the visitor said: ‘“He must” And he was so convincing I and go riding with boys but they ran through w the house asking my would haveMit if they found it out and cook if he wife mother-in-laThere is aboy whom I think I love really did I even peeked in a clothes on the sly He wants whom closet we never use in the rear The off me run and to marry him Would visitor finally departed shaking his home and to do it get away from you head: MAYBELLE some have liberty? No sooner had I hunched up over the typewriter than thf phone rang ANSWER: and the girl announced: “Mr WilNo Maybelle Don't run off dashlard ’Gilmore calling!” So I a boy you don’t know with ed to my wife wringing my hands even to be cerwell enoughdoes live “He here and moaning: tain of your feelings about and we have moved into the wrong of Instead in order to get away him then Right apartment” the buzz there was a loud knock from a tyrannical home because ‘the chances are that I opened the door and cried: “It would be just jumping is all right Mr Gilmore we are that out of the frying pah into the fire There isn’t much packing:’ But it wasn’t Mr Gilmore at all it was a man to take freedom in marriage A wife has to stay put and you would down the awnings The why where find that a husband could ask you ifiore questions about and whence of Mr Gilmore is still a where yoir had been and what you had done and whom deep mystery but the fun of the and father can you had seen than even your mother day had just begun Draw up a — fVTEW one-six- th I Jitter Box ! the British perity and international trade of rTHE New York Central wants per-- 1 “India has about mission to Increase commutaSince the world’s population tion fares 40 per cent And condithere are no savings banks each tion may Justify increases to take care of accumulations of But there are various ways of transportation problems and individual must find his own way meeting one is to use your brain and adopt wealth In many lands such new methods Railroads have not wealth is habitually put into land done that They have been handiby a stupid law that forbids but none is ordinarily’ available capped for efficiency and econcombining Such a people is likely to put its omy But the main fact is that they been have contented with the revalue and of articles itno savings meetsults of directors meaningless hide them away It accumulates ings instead of thinking and changjewelry and precious stones or it ing hoards precious metal” says Mr A few years ago in Detroit a Hammond man without a dollar was tinker“Because of this habit India ing at a queer little gas wagon with a stick has been known for centuries as steered was laughed at just as you Ford hole of silver and gold would be laughed at if you took a the sink Its opportunity to acquire gold new idea to a railroad directors’ has been slight but silver has meeting with his queer wagons But been ever present and has gone Henry today Ford transports more pasmore miles every day than steadily into the hoards’ of mod- sengers are carried by all the railroads of tne est individuals of merchants who United States with all their thouof millions of investments acquire wealth of political po- sands Ford did that by’ using his and tentates This penchant for brain hoarding constantly has drained silver from circulation but the Why don’t big railroads try that silver has as constantly been re- - method? They have brains or can hhe them They have rights-o- f placed by Importations from the way without speed limit or obstruc west World prosperity depends tion dont they utilize the small-o- n markets and it erwhy unit of transportation the light- expanding seems obviously unsafe to wreck er engine the before des- plan with 100 miles an that currency through which the tination most numerous groups of the hour speed? world’s population tie into comWhy in heaven’s name don’t they try something? The little automomodity consumption bile has destroyed passenger traf“Steadily through the cen- fic why not get it back? you of a female turturies streams of silver have They remind on her back as she over tle turned poured into the Far East just as comes down from laying her eggs they conintue to flow today Un- She thinks she has explained everything when she says “they turned doubtedly the major part of the me over” world’s silver has gone into the hoards of the Orient There is no Another one of ten thousand tragedies in prohibition and bootleg basis upon which to estimate the ging amount of it that is still there or John Bugeio driving his car with country how much of it has been lost by beside him thought he was bound hoarders who die without reveal- - for a good time at Coney Island and picked up two friends on the way ing their hiding places Since When reached the church of 1 19S0 FOLLY OF PARENTS WHO DRIVE THEIR DAUGHTERS INTO EARLY MARRIAGE BY TIIEIR TYRANNY— SHALL CHILDLESS COUPLE ADOPT BABY?— j LOYAL SWEETHEART hal cochran— PfCTimssKiN family life Parties and excursions special they celebiations and rituals have Columbus 14 billion ounces of Our Lady family of Precious Blood in their place in the mental hygiene of silver have been produced The Brooklyn one of the men on the childhood seat said “Here’s a church Christmas for instance should be greater part of it today is doubt- back and pray quick” Pray the child a really splendid event for less in the possession of these Bugeio and Dentice jumped Den rich in preparations which he Orientals Authorities estimate tice escaped with a bullet in his jaw takes an intimate part in His birthday is his own special that there are' today lour billion I It should never be passed ounces of silver in India The police say Bugeio was “active In the feast without gay and fitting observance Chinese and other Orientals grape racket’ The trips and jaunts when famtimes together give doubtless have three billion more Joe Aiello executed by gangland ilies have good for the joyous companThe silver represents wealth po- - I last week with machine gun fireai opportunity ionship which the child of the busy coming from three groups of in modern home is all too likely to power j cealed murderers could not purchasingis worth 60 jieia cents of his funeral He lies in complain day to day experience the Orient Mt Car- miss in his course If it the spirit of such is of It cost coffin a mel in that cemetery an ounce that purchasing power $11800 we talk about “an- planned good times that makes all And amount to $4200000000 which Is cient days of barbarism” the difference and it is father and mother who are responsible for supalmost equal to the value of half the warmth and spontaneity fearless Alicia Miss Patterson the monetary gold In the world’s young girl whose father Joseph Me-di- ll plying which makes children treasure and treasure vaults If this silver is Patterson had a machine gun remember them long years later as war thought symbolic of the tone of their youth command ounce 35 cents an its value i she would inliketheto big worth do something on dorsed by the people there is $2450000000 andythe loss in gj own account and broke the wo record flying from Washing power of these man’s should be serious thought given the purchasing ton to New York in 40 minutes She twice is the to the elements of uncertainty people $1750000000 deserves credit but there is one value of the gold in the posses- world's record for women compared which adhere l to the sion of the British government with which all others are r H - 1 ce EN Ago from Out Ifiea in the Idaho FOUR battleships Vermont and Mississippi left the Philadelphia navy yards today to join 12 other ships in a cruise of European waters Halloween horse play resulted in the death of two children In- New York A third child was saved in a ot fall by a big rag doll which Quiet on the Western Front” “Sins she was carrying while blindfolded of the Fathers” “Journey’s End’ as a part of a Halloween game and other noted talkies The union labor hall on Twenty-fostreet was not large France is seeking to develop urth the large touring by airplane through a gov- enough to accommodate crowd in attendance - at the Hal- ernment committee - 60-fo- DOROTHY DIX I’ver ushed to the window to shake ’ my fist at the sky I’d even be nastier than that but you never can MISS DIX — Here is a question which my husband and I can’t tell what those big rough steel work- DEAR that is whether we should adopt a baby or not as we ers might do to a simpleton in spats will never and have any children of our own I am by myself so much am very lonesome and feel that I shall go mad if I cannot have Don Dickerman hasn’t addec and a child to care for I believe I could rear a child and love it as little gaiety to the last 48 hours either if MRS C E H he cares to Lnow Three messages if it were my own What is your advice? to phone him at three different I ANSWER: numbers resulted in getting a Chinese laundry a crutch factory in If you have that longing for a child by all means Astoria and a needle work guild in one and I feel very surefthat it will bring a great adopt tahei Bronx It may be just ban happiness to you and make your home bright and cheerful ter but I’m up in my fall banter Don’t be afraid you won’t love it My observation is that tog persons are crazier over adopted children than they are over their own perhaps because no one adopts a child ex- Floyd Gibbons says if he stays in New York too long he talks to himcept those in whom the maternal and paternal passion is street self along the I’m further developed to the highest degree along than that I make gestures (Copyright 1930 McNaught Syndi- -i Certainly no human being can do a nobler act or one that is cate Inc) more in its consequences for good than"to take a poor ! I far-reachi- ng loween party last night given by the Ogden Caledonian society' Hie ‘police department was kept busy last night asnwering complaints offenders mostly against Halloweenwere taken to poyoungsters who lice station given a good lecturing and released In some localities of the city reports of property destruction were made Mr and Mrs Isaac Bullock formerly of Provo but now of Lone-tre- e announce the engagement of their daughter Effie to J Raymond Hinchcliff of Ogden The marriage will take place this month Mr and Mrs Fred N Hess are Frank guests of Mr and Mrs Driggs Mr Hess is auditor for the Union Pacific company with headquarters at Omaha Albert B Foulger will give an Ilat the lustrated lecture on Africa high school auditorium Coal dealers' this morning announced the price of coal has been advanced 50 cents a ton on lump ana 25 cents a ton on nut coal Under the new prices lump is selling at $525 a ton and nut at $5 A large herd of sheep belonging to Joseph S Feery passed through Ogden today on the way to the winter ranges in eastern Nevada James Hunt 60 died at his home in Plain City after an illness of a year or more He had been a resident or Plain City 28 years 1 t More than a third of all Argentine exports pass through Buenos Aires The adherence of skin to the deeper tissues causes dimples The membership of the New York I Stock Exchange is limited to 11000 Wyo little nameless homeless loveless child and give it a place in the world and the love and tenderness of a father and mother that fate has denied it It means the changing of a vhole life It means the giving of a child a background it could not otherwise have the blessing of being raised in a home instead of an institution the sweetness of having personal affection instead of the loneliness of the opening of the doors of having no human ties and it means opportunity to one to whom they were shut ' Don't let people scare you off from adopting a child by warning you that it may turn out badly or it may not be grateful to you That Is a chance that you would have to take even with your own children There are black sheep even in the best families as well as white lambs And any- -l way it is a fifty-fift- y proposition because there is just as much a chance that your adopted child may turn out to be a joy and a credit' to you and the comfort of your old 1 j J '' ’ age So get your baby Mrs C E II and be happy It is a great and unselfish work to which you set your hand when you adopt a child ' DOROTHY DIX ! f my own business DEAR MISS dix—I am a youngonman and have to are am road bad the and I being a failure and things bgmkrupt I have been going with a lovely little girl for quite a while and love her dearly but there is so little prospect of my being able to marry her any time soon that I have urged her not to wait for me any longer I have told her about how well she could marry and the cute home she might have if slje would forget me but she IS stubborn and will not give me up I am praying that you will be able to open her eyes to the mistake she is making by sticking to me Her happiness is all I care about GEORGE L ANSWER: W’ell George I side with the girl and think she knows a good thing when she sees it I think a man as tender and devoted and unselfish as you are is worth waiting for and that a woman would be happier in a shack with him than ein the cutest little home with some man who had a fat pocketbook but a lean heart J Forget about trying to make your sweetheart give you up You have financial worries enough without superimposing upon them sentimental worries Concentrate on your business problem and the knowledge that ycfii have a faithful little girl waiting for you to make good will put so much pep into you that you will pull out DOROTHY DIX ' Of the hole (Copyright by Public Ledger) 4f k |