| Show THE OGDEN PUBLISHING COMPANY " a AND MANAGER I QLASMANNXX EDITOR Frcl md J qreeoweU Wciaf Editor AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER VubUitotd Ever eveelnt and Sunday Morning Wltlunrt Club Muzzit cy Pre Colt Member et Th Assorted! Pre fiervtot and A a a t f!? Pres U A-o- claua I i Tha SSStedtlM DEPARTMENTS CALL 252 FOR Modern City and Count! Building A new City EiU BcnooL 150- Puxt Water 8ypjly to Accommodate Control of ot Clt and Count Boad ImproT- UucXalin LenRoad T to Mount Ogflea and Soad from Ogden Weber Canyon to Canyon Artrtal Hlgnwar Anqtner Norta and Soutb dreat Salt Lake to Elg&way An limproved Air Bout Tranacontlnental Oa a A Central Plac i TROUBLES 'ArtDEN has started on its three days of V celebrating t Everyone is joining in the spirit of the occasion and until the jollification end3 onexTuesday night the entire community is pectled to throw dull tare to" the winds WHERE THE JIEATi IS INTENSE T TC)AH cannot claim to have suffered from V heat if to suffer is to be afflicted as are the people in the middle states where tne temperature is a4 high as 108 degrees and water is almost beyond obtaining for culinary purposes People are dying and the country is be ing devastated by the scorching heat folHere in Ogden witji refreshing rains lowed by cool nights the conditions are comparatively delightful Although crops arej riot what they should b the farmers of this state have escaped the extremes of drouth as experienced in Kansas Ohiof Indiapa and other states within the area covered by a heat wave unparalleled in intensity ? LABOR BOARD NEV n ilroad has created the THE Pennsylvania system board of adjustment for labor controversies to be established under the amendment to t he railway labor law enacted at the last congress Tne new board wil adjudicate any troubles arising between the company and the "Big Four" unions The board has no connection with the former company unions o:! that railroad " The company unions must become national organizations to earn recognition by the jnational board of adjustment' provided for (under the new law which is made up of equal representation by management and j self-governme- ' ' i i I at exact justice William McCracken 7 liver papers subpoenaed by a senate committee investigating air mail contracts The majority of the District of Columbia court of appeals ruled in effect that the senate had no right to punish MacCracken for "a past and completed action" The court agreed that both the senate and house have the constitutional power to punish anyone obstructing processes but said that this power ceased if the offense is not a continuing one Under this interpretation a witness who refused to yield the papers wanted by a senate committee might be punished by it unless he destroyed them or otherwise put it beyond his power tp carry out the senate summonsAssociate Justices Groner and Hitz who dissented saw little merit in the opinion of - TYRANTS IN OTHER LANDS TN IIS weekly comrient on the affairs of the world A G Gardiner England's greatest liberal editor says the' German has sickened the world He sees the destructive effect of t le tyrannies which are beini: applied Two rr ain currents of thought arise from the event in Germany Dictatorship has made a :lean sweep of representative government from the Rhine to the Sea of Japan and its fruits are" before us They are ' murder the brutal persecution of all who are suspected of disaffection the suppression of all free dom of the press of speech and of thought government- by a tyraint through a praetorr col-li- ps absurd" f ODAY By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright 1934 King Features Syndicate Inc) JACK LONDON'S PROPHECY HOW STRIKES ARE BROKEN DIAMOND IN HER TOOTH Fifteen years ago Jack London young magazine writer who thought he was a revolutionist wrote "The Dream of Debs" describing: an imaginary general strike which oc curred in San Francisco He showed the "wealthy fighting over meat telegraphers refusing to carry any messages except those "re latlng to peace terms' in connection with the strike told how the working class remained happy well fed and quiet at home while "millionaires and paupers fought side by side for food and fought with one another after they got it" able ' There are various ways of dealing with strikes when those in power wish to end them In France Briand head of the government himself a radical and Socialist did not approve the strike on French railways The majority of the strikers were still within the age of military service Briarid called them all out "to the colors' and put them on trains not as strikers but as soldiers They were told to run those trains well or be shot for military in subordination They ran the trains The Chicago Pullman strike of started In May spread to Inter state commerce affecting nearly all the railroads running out of 1894 MacCracken not only defied the senate to Eugene Debs in charge of the begin with but during the investigation strike with great energy In proceeded to have the papers that were terstateacted transportation of food stuffs sought after destroyed According to the in several western states was hind and United States marshals majority of the court MacCracken saved ered were pushed aside by the strikers himself by wilful acts Law of that kind is Grover Cleveland then president United States troops to Chicago npthing less than technical subterfuge re- sent Although governor Altgeld had not sorted to to save a prominent man caught requested federal assistance Debs announced "the first shot in a tricky attempt to defeat the ends of fired at the strikers will precipitate justice revolution and civil war" j The United States government indicted Debs Several including strikIt took eight years to compile the latest ers sympathizers cold-bloodand bystanders Webster's dictionary but it won't take a were shot and killed by United States of railThousands troops before out of it date year gets road cars were burned by strikers Cleveland in a proclamation warned To some according to the news it turned that law enforcement had f broken down and all lending aid or enout to be an unsafe and insane Fourth couragement to strikers after three o'clock on the afternoon of July 10th would be ' dealt with as public THE enemies On July loth Debs was arrested On the 11th the strike broke The same Grover Cleveland you will remember settled a difficult with England concerning Venezuela With ED BISHOP In short order It would: be inter 4 INDISCREET EDITING to know what he would do if esting As the length of time cut flowers he were here now in connection with letters from the late Earl of Oxford and a ws- - amson nas lust been published in hold their freshness depends largely the British debt 1 n London"II LlSe the first Inctoimont upon how they are cut it seems ap"""''" mcjr ttlC KXlgCiV UCiiUiJaJl lit The wise tells his erary and philosophical But the writers sharp pen as before propriate to relay the fact that a clerks: rthe merchant customer 1i lwvs a cornow tool puuuc available uie is ten for in letter aatea years t""'"1 he spoke pityingly James right" of Prime Minister MacDonald— "Poor Ram-sa- y special agoV J newleader Dooling rect cutting The tool makes a —who had taken on a burden "far too 4xuiiutuiy uau tens those under heavy for him" There clean cut at the nlm proper the entire human machinery of slicing angle comments on bliter Lloyd George with "1C fjgesii "if pubUc opinion Permanent whom he never for-?- Z' without crushing the stems ?9xf ird 5 bIachJas w against city asdld to be a man upon whose there must be hheId1 Grey anything ii!°iytnC0U r Lyi As such sentiments and attitudes were If you know of some novel idea changes because nuhiif rminimf no Indiscretion in allow-i- "f always rght" SfJ fSSTfi Hs P£rhaps actually being worked help spread prlnt- - But the case seems differ-w!Ur?- 4f the eHl° fJ?A5 eirKylni? news by Bending full details to is Mr Dooling as leader of Tammany conversations Very younff onlv4t!T(mw House with Colonel Lodpxlord's friend of President Wilson is quoted as Ed Bishop care of this onnews- has always information any w over ou thought a leatfer should having spoken of his 'perverse and tactless arrogance" which paper Further here uroKer and Murphy were will be given idea published 50- - Some SrnrVfte league of nations Even to 0inillf -- addressed f7ef self Tammany men feel a anyone enclosing ?52 to Colonel House that that Mr Dooling is "too highly Wilscb's paralytic stroke was due to his "violent envelope educated" hatred" of stamped At Fordham college he (Los Angeles Times Syndicate) evelfs "paralytic stroke" studied Greek and Latin as wen as — hlnhatL — nSfn SETTEE TUj VISITED HOSPITAL law he "1Cathed morning? pSSST nlgh?SOn Mr j conspicuously brolrpn It seems amazing that such a passage nub-Hsh- ed JOHNSON CITY Tenn— (UP)— nose IsDooling's a souvenir ot a football game cSSnd Ho2£ Ithe An English setter greeted Dr W without first obtaining the consent be st11 more amazed The truth seems A Jones a veterinarian at his of- played In his college days Other Snf wo"id to Tammany men have had editors and publishers in England think that fice here recently The "vet" important noses broken less justifiable went about Americans We are supposed brushed past it and fnJi so fond h? blurfedand °?about Insiders are interested gossip remarks that we do not his business of the day The dog in Tammany the fact that Mr object when they are reported by British writers A famous in-- hung around all day and when Dooling's vic means greater power and clorv Mathew tory next Arnold followed The Dr left Jones his after letterf published for Mr Eddie Ahearn The fathers morning it was back at the office of so as to careful sjgns give no offense to the living but door again Intrigued Dr Jones of both Mr Dooling and Mr Ahearn editing were leaders before them " pcxjuna ana mmgs American were examined it and found the dog and Tammany sons are - not- political the indiscriminately printed coniauied inat mistakes badly in need of an operation amateursoiLcn gave pain to his hostsiney in this country many was notorious which was promptly performed ed TPs ( PINIONS of the JTRESS Idea Hunter vr - 1 V£ Si : riPt11' l3om f?iVh$re rfthfF01? S T morning breakfast "I am- as unhappy' as a pickpocket in a nudist colony!" sighed the daughter of the family as she reached for' her glass of orange " juice "How often do I have to tell you that ! do not care for your slang?" demanded Father "Too often darling! Too often! 1 withdraw the offending simile I was only trying to make you (understand that I am as low as a well digger's shoe soles" : 5' "I fail to see any Improvement Father was bitter "Oh a well digger is a vast im provement on a nudist" assured Lucy '"Nudism is the logical finish of a world-widtendency to take off clothes We are wearing play suits In the day time and exposing one extremity' and evening dresses In the evening and exposing the "other extremity Between the two ' there is little left "Charming vas are play and swim suits evening clothes' and what take off we there seems to be looming ahead like a large detour sign the logical finish for all this taking off and that is nudism" "It would not surprise me if the crazy young people of today took It up if we are to Judge from some of the other things they have gone" in for!" Father's voice carried thor ough disapproval Not a Chinaman's chance!" re plied his daughter "Some wise- cracker has said that liars are di vided into three classes plain darned and statistical The very latest statistics on the population of the many nudist colonies - around the country shows the average "age or the inmates to be above fifty "Therein lies the pernlclousness of nudism If it could be limited to - -- feJ Si - ' l£lEvJhe(td£I(i dyJlnn' ill-natu- red The Inside of Washington - Long Festering Animosity Lies Behind San Franciscos Strike Employers Weakened First But Too Late Mediators Say Hardest Lines to Deal With Held Subsidies By RODNEY DUTCHER The whole administration labor pol- icy which once seemed strong but broke down many months ago and has wiggled and wobbled ever since was involved The possibility of being forced to use federal troops in a labor dispute came to officials already badly worried by the dangerous potentialities of clashes between militia and mobs It is pointed out that aside from the fact no one knows what a large angry mob will do national guard operations against strikers in large cities are likely to do more harm than good In- smaller communities stern measures may avert trouble But after militia was used in San Francisco a waterfront strike became a general strike In Minneapolis where militiamen were called out an agreement has broken down and is more serious than ever In Toledo despite troops strikers were strong enough to win a satisfactory agreement Unless results such as Toledo's are achieved these situations seem to demand more troops and more bloodshed Washington Correspondent July 21— There's WASHINGTON who worked long and conscientiously to settle the Pacific coast longshoremen's strike He came here a while ago to report an agreement — arriving' almost simultaneously with telegrams from San Francisco showing the agreement had broken down He is a good man just the same and now has another important government job As the general strike was declared he commented: "You can't mediate a revolution!" WHY THE BITTERNESS He didn't- want his name used but he gave me some background that may interest you too He named the three chief causes of the existing situation as: 1 A long history of suppression of labor unions by employers resulting In bitterness and complete distrust of employers 2 The calling of troops against the longshoremen which created such resentment as to make mediation impossible le 3 Insurgence of large CREAM FOR COMMUNISTS groups which howled down conconservaYou'll hear more and more about ciliatory proposeals from tive A F of L officials and med- Communists in the next few months And some of it will be true A iators Both employers and employes strong federal drive against Com were determined to make a closed munist labor agitators is more than shop-ope- n shop finish fight" Issue a possibility Communists are likely to be found Employers weakened first ' but too i late wherever labor unrest simmers Mediators found the hardest Their mission Is to make angry steamship companies to deal with workers more militant to get them were those which drew the most acustomed to fighting employers money from the government in and authorities—and to victory if ocean mall subsidies — the Dollar possible They don't preach the world revolution to masses of A P and Matson lines WHEN FORCE IS TRIED of L workers— yet They have swung away from recent habits of isolated Although Roosevelt was deep-se- a fishing as the strike broke many ineffective I demonstrations to the of his aides here were scared' stiff old policy of boring from within No one here i gives Communists credit for the San Francisco Min At Paulsboro N J a good-lookior Toledo upheavals But neapolis young woman not Identified withi jtheyi Federal mediators keep helped red hair and a diamond set in one the only way to employers tfmng tooth was found dying in the street outside V Reds" from influenc after a brutal beating She died keeplabor troubles is to be more con tag without speaking with their regular work dilatory Such an incident in our crime days ers i is common enough but the "diaOf course the term "Red" Is often mond set In one tooth" interests re- used indiscriminately against sin porters and detectives and will give cere labor leaders and honest labor the case publicity causes The Communists who like Fitzsimmons genuine prizefighter to be considered more important had various diamonds set In his than they are think that's swell teeth rejoiced jn them and pulled (Copyright 1934 NEA Service Inc) his mouth far to one side to show you those in the large back teeth Standard-Examin- er - - - the--situatio- n rank-and-fi- -- ng i meant efforts of men go wrong Some one paid a German band to go to the entrance of the Tomes prison In New York and play "The Prisoner's song" loudly for an hour "to cheer the prisoners" The band played just enough music to go with the words: JTf I had the wings of an angel O'er these cruel prison walls I er and deny It 4You have been In the shower room with all these gentlemen Yoti kssow how they would look m a nudist colony" I want to impress on ( you the necessity for your doing v some missionary work among" those sixl friends of yours because you can never tell what moment one of tlKfm may decide to Cast everything asijde apd Join the nudists ' Father I beseech you 'to - use yotr Imagination You - know the wites of these six gentlemen I ask yoil to consider the humiliation of thj daisies the bull frogs the wild honeysuckle the birdses and the beses in the treeses " if the land- - - with twelve such people skipping and earnbolinor throuah the hoskv dells and sylvan retreatsjWhy Father it is—" Are you under "the Impression inter- that you are spoofing me?" ' Father rupted angrily iHow can you suspect me of such - -- - a lining?" - jWhy shouldn't I?" never have before""' 'tou ' m n i i v - jiNever nave wnaif "Never have suspected me when jfuu J1UW vaac wviviici - " 1 a - i opi-KJic- vi and Mrs Thome for example Between them they' Weigh— ' v "pr don't care to have : you criticize my friends!" Father's neck was getting a- bit purple "Then use your best endeavor to keep them out of nudist colonies" replied Lccy "People'jn nudlEt are bound to get themselves ' - col-oni- jes talked about" ' i 1934 (dopyrlght McNaught Syndi cate Inc) Services Planned For loung vyomen sLamp people under thirty whose bodies are still good to look upon it ttevotional services will 'be conwouldn't be so bad but nudists are ducted a£ the federal ' camp estaball old f oiks with sagging tummies lished In North' Fork canyon for and turtle necks with wattles on yoi&ng women this evening at them o'clock These services are "When the nymphs and- gods open to the public and a "general scampered hither and yon over the invitation is extended to attend "the address wW be given by John crags and waterfalls of Mount EdiwaVd Carver of First Presbyter-la- r Olympus and inspired poets-t- o ' six-thi- rty - rhythm painters to masterpieces and musicians "to strum the lyre they were not scampering old folks church old men philosophised and elderly women sat around the public fountains" and? discussed the best way to broil peacock tong-ues'brochette j" "But not so with 'the elderly people of today They are joining jnudist colonies Father "and cavort ing It is a matter of deep concern to all the young people They are afraid their own parents wui be "caught in the awful vortex and be jjcarried down' to nudism i: "It is a matter in which each right thinking elderly person should take a deep personal interest There is an Individual responsibility for each one of us I am glad you are enlisted on the side of right "Now take the six men who play ed poker at the country club last night There was—" - "Who said I played poker at the country club last night?" demand ed Father indignantly "Well we will suppose you did play poker at the club last night If you had played you would have Hutton played with Alderman Judge Lambert Doctor Howard Asa Kincaid Tom Hadley's dad and In those days - PIONEER DAY CELEBRATION en j Jim X i m4 Visitors Welcome and c: i v I off J on all SUMMER SHOES DRESSES BOYS' AND MEN'S SUITS TAYLOR-"- " Colonel Thome "All of these gentlemen play golf at the club on Saturday afternoon THE PIONEERS 'were patrons of each other and their patronage and' patriotism was their protect! on against heat and drouth Indians wild animals bests cricketsor grass- " ' hoppers the sagebrush disappeared ditch and meadow fed the cow hill and valley presently became the land of "milk and honey'" It's Cream OWeber now as then the joy of drinking milk and eating cream and but- ter pasteurized for health and safety As Fresh orangeade rich milk chocolate quenches burn ing thirst Cottage cheese and buttermilk the food for hot days - M Weber Central Dairy Association Phone 2161 2551 Ogden Avenue - ' 1 : — — Well would fly I'd go back to the arms Of my to darling and there Fd be will-in- g die" Then came a furious noise shaking of steel doors howling and yelling from the seven hundred pri soners and a keeper to say: "get away from here before they push the front of the building on top of you" It seems that real prisoners do not like the "Prisoner's song" as much as sentimental ladles like it if Fresh From Refinery to Your Gas Tank in Less Than Three Days V r 1 " The president "browned by the fropical sun and rugged" was hav ing his last day's fishing yesterday off tiny Clipperton island In the Pacific His next stop will be Hawaii on his fifteen thousand mile vacation cruise He will need all the "rugEredness he can acquire to handle conditions when he returns : — Vf - - '' you all take'a shower eat din- net at the club and then play pok- goljf- -- secretary of commerce for aeronautics was tried and given a jail term byw the senate in February after his refusal to de- monious and i I do After nineteen holes of ou e" i Pffl11?160 fam-aajy- ' : Jr former assistant - 6 EFFECT OF ALL THESE STRIKES? Good morning!" greet the ily as Lucy came in to Sunday - PECULIAR COURT DECISION A MOST peculiar decision has been ren- ff dered by the court of appeals of the District of Columbia It is so peculiar that tne average layman is inclined to view it as an absurdity and wonder if law really aims " i Cy ROE FELKERSON ssP vahat po will you thimk ULTINtACCE ' reakfast unday IV lormng —— nt labor In the event that System boards of ad justment such as the one formed on the the three other justices Pennsylvania do not act to compose differ "To say at one moment that the power ences between labor and management the exists to punish for failure to deliver panhtinnnl will nssnmf t!hf taskpers" they said "and then to say that it is This is a new move in the labor world lost if the competency of the witness reand its effect will be watched with interest sults in destruction 'rather than in delibat at time when therei is so much unrest in erate withholding seems to be both inharla bor circles ' - ' - i ( LOOKING FORWARD— A Timely Question j Platform Standard-Examiner- 's SUNDAY MORNING JULY 22 1931 R : i in ian guard a plague of spies who make every man talk in whispers for fear of the con eventration camp or the timber forest the punishment of all criticism the saturation of the country with propaganda in the in terests o& whatever dictator has all the ve hides of communication in his control and the repudiation of religion or the invention of some hew pagan doctrine designed to buttress up the tyranny f Americans should feel most thankful that they are not living in a country as ill governed as Germany Is under Hitler What has been occurring in Germany Gardiner says has shocked the 'public mind of Europe as no other event even in these disturbed times has done It has thrown a fierce and sinister light upon the breakdown of democratic government and the meaning of dictatorship The case of Italy conveyed the same lesson but not on any--t :And ling- approaching' the "same scale t lough the horrors of Russia transcend all tjiat has happened in Germany they have ' not made 'anything like the same impresRussia has sion on the mind of Europe never been quite on the political map of Europe and her civilization has not belonged to the European system She has passed without any interval of fpom one despotism to another and her agonies are remote and seem to belong to another plane of existence But Germany with her traditions of culture learning and political intelligence had come to be regarded as the central nave of European civilization and her collapse into chaos and barbarism is the most shattering blow which that civilization has sustained since the war STANDARD-EXAMINE- In 1905 the newly-formAero club of New York could raise only siow to purchase the patents of the Wright brothers because the business men of that-daygaid aviation ' was 'merely a fad ed - 72 This Gasoline Meets All City State land Govern- ment Specifications for First Grade Gasoline )' 2 Cents Cheaper Than the Same Prevailing Grae iS of Gasoline in Ogden V A r?r? 0 til ) Wholesalers and Retailers 184 24th Street Also 20th St and! 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