Show THE OGDEN STAN tional government "will see to it that in air In a power this country shall no longer be posijtion of inferiority to any country within shores" Action on string distance of ourdeferred however unthe hew program was til after th inconclusive meeting of the atrajament Conference at Geneva on May 29 an tht Barthou visit to London on 'July sr PUBLISHING COMPANY GLASMANN EDITOR AND MANAGED mnfc rrancl and fX J OreffwU AmocUM Editore AN lyPEFENDENT NEWSPAPER Published rvery Evening wad Sunday Vtorntai without A L-- 1 Ufabm Th o 'x"-- ' Muzzlt ot a Club Associtl Frew Onltd SerTic ud A B Q Pwu 8 I : ' Tat Awocuted Prea u exclusively credited to &It onTBtm dispatches republication ot allInDews otHerwlw thla ppf and also tn local ow crefllf d CAUL 252 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS vj The Platform Standard-Examiner- 's ' IS©- - Penona 000 Vigorous Campaign ot City and County Road Improyamanta from Ogd Seen lo Road to Mount Ogdefi Canyon to Weber CanyonAaothar North and South Arterial Highway as improved Highway to Great Salt Lake A Central Plac On a Tranacontlnental Air Rout uM-JUm- UI COUNTY AND CITY OGDEN is discovering NORTH that an town or city must carry its own burdens Recently the town of North Ogden wanted a survey made of its proposed water system and turned to the county surveyor for aid The county commissioners have notified North Ogden! that the incorporated town must do its own surveying 4 North Ogden can now more clearly understand that Ogderi has borne its full share of the obligation of government This "city though a very big pc!t of the county receives but little- back from its county taxes- This is not a complaint but a mere statement of fact for' the benefit of the county people who sometimes think they are not: dealt with in a fair manner " - - SCARCITY OF WATER in parts the s rons will a!dd approximately 460 fighting to planes increasing the first line forces 1300 and tjie total strength to 1860 Even with this addition Great Britain will be inferior to jFrance which has about 3000 military airplanes of which 1650 are first Hnbl This figure will be increased by the authorizatio 1 of 980000000 francs for new construction during the coming year voted at the last session of the French parliament The soviet union with nearly 3000 planes of jll types and Italy with approximately 2000 also remain numerically well superior Ejoth of these countries as as Japan 1 ave already embarked on extensive' air development programs which emphasize t ie importance attached to this new unlimited weapon of warfare In the United States the recommendations of the special committee headed by Newton D B4ker proirise new support for the war department plan to increase the army air of 2300 planes cofps to an active strength From the declarations of official spokesman it is apparent that the British government is less concerned with the superiority of France han with the reported plans fo German rearmament in the air In one Pajris the British program is hailed as h rap-p- r more evider ce of the xihment which has taken tangible form in the military conversations between the twjo general staffs and the active British espousal of the eastern Locarno pacts ci iginally sponsored by France and the soviet : necessity by of ' building troughs in the northwest area of Box Elder county for the purpose of catching and conserving the flow of water from springs where cattle gather There are regions in the west where unjion water is not to be had for man or beast INCREASIN o taxes STATE of Utah serves notice that it owing to the severity of the drouth T kE must and will increase the tax rate this TOMATOES GREEN yejir TOMATOES are going out of this jrhat increase if possible should have GREEN been avoided at this time by the carload few of a the last That is The day is coming when a percentage of development years and it has proved a source of much the gasoline tax will be diverted from road revenue for the tomato growers purposes to jhelp pay the ordinary burdens Either that or the differ-e- n It permits of early and late shipments of governme of the product of the vines which find a units of government will learn how to market over awide territory extending as finance themselves without increasing taxes far south as Texas and east of Chicago One bad feature of these tax increases " is jthat the oad falls most heavily on the AIR ARMAMENTS Httle homes which are not revenue pro DISTURB BRITISH ducers and therefore least capable of stand a statement delivered in the house of ing the strain commons on July 19 Stanley Baldwin acting prime minister announced that the WOMEN LEADERS British government would proceed at once THAT women stand high in the affairs of with a new armament program calling for A f Via nalnn in nn mrT ViTTii£rTit to OUT d construction of41 air squadrons to be the presence in Ogden of Miss before the end of 1038 He made no Maje A Schnurr assistant to the U S com- effort to conceal the fact that this decision missioner or recjamauon who is iics lu had been Influenced by the international inspect the Ogden river project crisis produced by Germany's rearmament iliss Schniirr" has been with the govern the" continued failure of the ment for 10 years and is recognized as a program and disarmament conference to rach an agree- most capable representative of the reclama ment While the British program if de- tion bureau scribed as tentative and subject to revision in the light of future developments it marks DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE a definite "turning point in British policy THERE seems to be no end to the destruc-- x which may profoundly affect the internative forces' playing upon the American tional situation people Drouth has reduced to a desert con j An increase in the British air force has dition much of the agricultural' region of been foreshadowed for several months Fol- the middle states where hundreds of deaths lowing the unsuccessful disarmament mis- frcjm heat have occurred and now fires are sion of Anthony Eden to Berlin and other raging on the Pacific coast threatening to ' European capitals in January the British destroy grain' fields and forest areas If the country can sustain these repeated government warned that it would b compelled to look to its own defenses if a dis- blojvvs and go on rebuilding its fortunes armament agreement could not be obtained them there is reason to believe nothing can Again on March' 9 Mr Baldwin informed stop the coming of a period of real pros parliament that in such an event the na perity j j : - it : i f ! com-pltts- ' o P IN IONS ID TC3 of the Jl' R ES jj Idea Hunter With ED BISHOP RECALLING ODAY By George Clark 1 Syndicate ft I By AUTXTUIl BRISBANE (Copyright IS34 ning Featcres lac) A STRIKE THAT EVERYBODY LOST (Cincinnati Enauirer) There was a brief mention the other day in thi Enquirers -Fifty-Ye- ar Ago column stating that striking stovemakexs had gone back to work at the old wages That strike was the most disastrous in Cincinnati's history It was a strike that Everybody lost Before 1832 Cincinnati was the largest center of stove manufacture hi the country thousands of men were employed in the Industry We were leaders not only in volume but in styles Cincinnati stoves had a monopoly of the trade west of the jAlleghenies Then the men struck There was no accommodation on either side no giving or taking— it was war to the knife JAs we look back on that striked after the lapse of years it seemg ultimately foolish It lasted for many months and when it was over Cincinnati's stove trade had dwindled to insignificant proportions Most of the men had left the city to find work elsewhere Detroit Evansville Chicago and St Louis had taken advantage of the to steal our foretrouble here to extend their stove foundries-anmost designers The result was that as a stove manufacturing city instead of being the leader we sank into comparative tnsignif -j cance Could the men and the employers have foreseen- the tragic economic results which were to follow this strike thesy would if they had had ordinary common sense have composed their' differences at once But in that strike no one seems to have had common sense As months went on the bitterness between the two grew worse and the great and ultimate loser was the ity of Cincinnati which lost forever one of its largest and most profitable I industries unrecorded It This is a chapter in our history which is Isalmost is'tnn nainful a subtect to mention but it an outstanding rea son why men who strike without justification should consider lest as now Eceiaa puisii-u- e uic enjr swau iuw wlxici miyunau m I d - At H 4 leaders is that contractors are hiring less skilled workers paying them out of government "money only eighty to ninety cents an hour when they should be hiring skilled men and paying from $145 to $185 an hour Mr Johnson for the union workers says "We will discuss the advisability of a general strike in New York City and New Jersey" are hastening their maneuvers keeping the army which means every ame hod led Swiss in readiness But 500000 brave Swiss fighters could do little- in modern war against airplanes The high mountains and narrow passes offer no obstacle to airmen There would be no modern "durch dlese hohe gasse muss er-- kommen The Swiss annual well-arm- ed - Britain unofficially says "It is not our war We did not shoot Doll fuss and do not propose to be drag ged in" Wise British they remem ber the other war Let us hope this country will hot be dragged in persuaded that even if we did not shoot Dollfuss we are in some strange way responsible for his shooting or at least that we should prove our national cowardice If wec stayed out and our Shylock character if we refused to finance the fighting fools We can never feel entirely safe for some "great Am erican" might be Invited with his wife to sleep in Buckingham palace and we know what that costs About two and a half billions a night last time - China announces the arrival of at one birth seven boys eight babies and one ' girl born on a fishing Junk in the delta of Pearl river The father is Sam Ting a poor fisherman the - mother Mrs Ting receives little notice In China the arrival of one Chinese male chud is most Important and Chinese newspapers hail Father Sam Ting as a benefactor of his country male infants all at Think of seven once what ' & pity one girl should have spoiled a perfect picture by "muscling in" as we say in America " - China takes the "eight at a time well" story seriously but western obstericians wiu not do that Eight babies born at once on a fishing Junk in poverty and filth with no doctor and no knowledge of aseptic methods would have little chance As for poor neglected Mrs Sam Ting some one should send her a kind word and a new dress or two Whether our North American quintuplets the little Dionnes are eclipsed or no you will be glad to hear that they were thriving on their two months' birthday last week The Canadian authority In On tario says haughtily that United States greed shall not prevail and the little live shall not go to Chi Nature study They were dining al fresco arouhd a natural lake in Westchester and the evening obbll-eat- o of tree frogs - was especially Messmore Kendallde deafening clared he could stui tne cnoru$ ana walking to the pond edge suddenly flung his iarms in supplicatipn Instantly haunting' silence Several times he ' repeated the magic The explanation: Tree frogs are the most Any timid of all woodland life distraction silences them The Inside of Washington Labor Board Aims at Policy Assuring Peace in Industry and Nipping of Trouble in the Bud Powers Well De- - ' ' fined 4the NRA compliance board for Blue By RODNEY DUTCHER StandardrExaminer Washington Eagle removal and to the department of justice for prosecution unCorrespondent J WASHINGTON July 30— The der NIRA If its findings aren't lived up to new national labor relations board starts with two strikes on it — and the board may have its own legal no pun intended But the NLRB staff bring prosecution through the hopes for industrial peace through nearest U S district attorney a "definite policy upon which both Apparently the NLRB doesn't labor and industry can depend plan to mediate a but to toss to The old national labor board hhe: courts any challenge of the dead and unlamented started with by an indusry similar aim It broke down because President Roosevelt and General AUTO PLAN FAILURE Johnson interfered with jit ChairAny uniform labor policy must man Wagner was kept busy in the scrap automobile strike settlesenate there was no vicef chairman ment the Roosevelt gave up his or secretary members had other sincere belief thatfinally achieved he had things to do" and t the administraa of social "triumph engineering" tion's lackadaisical attitude toward in that one Realizing that it has labor problems earned contempt for of labor by its faillegions enraged NLB from both sides1 Collapse of ure to let winners of election masucNLB's prestige handicaps its all workers he for jorities bargain cessor himself wrote the law creating With plenty of mistakes by which NLRB almost -tor prof it three able full-tim- e memOne NLRB is to avoid "settlebig bers man the new board But their ments" which only pile up more limitations under a compromise trouble for the future Since courts emergency law which satisfied no- are so slow public opinion is perbody when passed were shown when haps its strongest weapon in the they couldn't even intervene in the enforcement of Ta San Francisco strike y' handsome Chairman Garrison Secretary of Labor Frances Per- tanned high-browkins is likely to dominate the show Harvard Law School graduate is That's up to the board members dean of of Wisconsin University chosen by her for Roosevelt' ap- Law school a grandson of Abolipointment tionist William Lloyd Garrison and The objections are that NLRB as Investigator md expert in a mere branch of the labor depart- Hoover's Sharp-eye- d bankruptcy ment' couldn't achieve the prestige young Edwinpractices S Smith has been it needs that Miss Perkins doesn't state commissioner of labor and like drastic or pronounced action NRA Jabor ' chief in ' and that her presence in labor dis- Massachusetts compliance as be to putes might objectionable The oldest member is Prof capital as General Johnson's is to A Mills who is 61 and teachesHarry ecolabor nomics at University of Chicago a thickse bald man long known as a TO NIP TROUBLE IN BUD successful labor arbitrator It is also true that Chairman (Copyright 1934 NEA Service Inc) —— Lloyd Garrison has had no experience in labor disputes and that none of the members is nationally known Nevertheless the board can Jump or avoid most of these hurdles and I believe it intends to try It hopes to nip incipient labor troubles in the bud Chairman Garrison promises "a harmonious body of precedents deBaby talk is not to be scorned as veloped in settlement of labor dis- a husband winner but it must be putes" That's important It indi- stopped after marriage— Dr Mehran cates a national labor policy which K Thompson of Michigan State will head in one instead of several Normal College" odirections—as is now the case with a hodgepodge of labor boards bearNo amount ' of political or ecoing assorted mandates nomic maneuvering Can offset or a Section of NIRA guarantee"successfully the natural reing collective bargaining but com combat sults a great invention or enof promised interpreted and rein gineering development— Dr Karl T issue is nauseam the terpreted ad at the root of most serious strikes Compton president of Massachusetts Garrison explains that "We're pri- Institute of Technology to pass marily a sort of quasl-cou- rt on alleged violations of Section I am not a very old woman— 79 you know— Mrs James Roosevelt mother of the president D POWERS The board has these powers: A continuance of the existing Economic nationalism can mean only determining whether a majority of both national and world suicide — employes wants to be represented Dr Nicholas Murray Butler presiby a labor - union or a -company dent of Columbia University union To subpoena employers books and First and foremost in the hearj of payrolls To find employers guilty of vio every man and woman Is the desire lating a or interfering with elec- for a new a better and a cheaper tions and to report the findings to home — Harvey Wiley Corbett fam7-- sec-Lti- on single-handed- ed : 1 all doing - h i 1 - One of Harlem's spritual advisers is a coal black and very bald little negro known as Father Divine He professes to be clothed fed and cared for purely through faith and his followers aver he "materializes" money by merely reaching into his pocket At any rate he maintains a somewhat elaborate establishment on West 115th street In a capacious red brick building where there is open house for his flock — a table seatinsr about 60 well stocked with food to feed the constantly shift ing stream of hungry washbowl for shampoos It is furnished with five feet of hose and can be attached to any faucet If you know of some novel idea actually being worked help spread the news by sending full details to Ed Bishop care of this newspaper Further information on any idea published here will be given to anyone enclosing a self -- addressed stamped envelope (Los Angles Times Syndicate) ' --m — TUSEE-QUAItTE- B — v CLUB BETHESDA C- V- CTJP) — Joseph W Heatherington 84 cf npnafr O was president of the Three-Quarte- n Century club when rs 87 gathered for th pv- enth consecutive year to swap yarns ana nve again in the past Dr H C Kemple 90 Bellaire dentist and Civil var veteran was the oldest member present re-elec- ted oia-ume- Joseph Scowcroft Sons" com- pany and president of the Weber club returned from an eastern trip He reports unsettled yesterday business conditions lri the eastern section of the country - e enlisted men of ComE First United States infantry pany passed through Ogden yesterday from Vancouver' Washington to Provo where they will give instructions to the state militia in an an- nual state encampmert there Sixty-fiv- 7-- First Lieutenant Hamer Coulter son of Dr and Mrs C E Coulter Is visiting ms parents in Ogden a few days He fis the mathematical instructor in the West Point Military academy-- v::'' t wmiam Nichols Updegraff of Ogden has received Information from Washington D C that he has been appointed to the Annapolis Naval academy 'He received the appoint- ment on: the recommendation of Congressman Jacob Johnson Kenneth Browning son of Mr and Mrs John Brooming has Just completed a tip on sa motdrcycle from New York to Ogden was a pleasant ride i He said it Ten million dollars in gold coin has been shipped from the 'Philain delphia mint to the sub-treasu- New York ry " - Because of war conditions express companies of Ogden have notified the banks that they will not selM ' exchange on any European citie at this time j DrT B Beatty secretary of the state board of health has advised M the Ogdn Weber club thatj sanitary conditions in Ogden are ("deplor-- "' able" V Surveys are being made by the Union Pacific company for spur tracks to the cereal food plant on Pacific avenue near Twenty-nint- h street the survey to be completed J in a few days Desperado Captured Without a Battle " - - " ? mmmm mi) mi mi 11 a" WELL-DEFINE- ( i ti V Just select the tires 05 battery you need and tell us how you can pay mow iTfTRrnQ1 TO SUIT YOU S Don't worry along on old or inferior tires— come in today equip quality car and use our popular Budget Pay ' your Plan UO RED TAPE — NO DELAYS No strlo£a to our offer Jut brlnft your license certificate for Identification— -- THAT'S ALU i irtAy - law-abidi- J ' 1 COMPLETE SERVICE GofftKna and oil— BMry chorsing ondl rentol— Etptrt brobt larvict— ipttiallxedl Ivbricatxw— rcpairing'ond rukanisiiig f v' " - ng Phone 795 2661 Washington Ave ft 1 1 UoClXiXljf L f MC l t lfn ' 4tv'l : 1 ' ' 7-- eago's Century of Progress exposition there to be looked upon by crowds more interested in birth control than In quintuplets In spite of our well known love of an extra dollar many Americans will be glad to hear that the little babies will stay at home glad also that Father Dionne has been get ting $100 aweek on his promise to ship the babies to a Chicago ex him tor as soon as possible with a promise of $200 a week and half the net profits In fact the babies do not "belong" in a Century of Progress exposition Progress con sists in special care and education ous architect not in numbers Alexander the Great his queer mother's only child itor intended to do anything like ' with Aristotle for a teacher Is bet- that ter even than seven little Chinese AQGUT DOnROWIIK U Governor Ely of Massachusetts boys and one girVaH In a row Democrat is worried about the new deal "With no criticism of the presex been "Best minds" that have cited about union labor refusing to ident" he fears that NRA' paternal- accept arbitration and abide by it Ism will destroy the welfare of a It is a bad idea to borrow may now admire the Minneapolis people "made happy contented and money unless you have real need of it It is equally as bad employers that refuse to accept a prosperous by the rugged individ decision rendered by President ualism of the past In fact he fears or worse not to properly fiRoosevelt's federal conciliators the the new deal may develop a socialist nance ypurself by borrowing Reverend Father Francis J Haas state if you need to do so and E M Dunnigan encourage borrowing only Question what is socialism Does We Governor Olson of Minnesota has to those who need to do so aswrvrrf mean fhafc did orient it declared martial Jaw under the We that It might be suggest to desire a benevolent improve labor circumstances and sarcastic ally to well do men your wmcn financing with men want to know if the govern- social conditions under a where the home institution drasmore mean the ment will' deport any employers live? Does it to be had are rates lowest of the socialism tic but found to be aliens Victor Bereer of Milwaukee Loans made up to $lO00C0 The governor declaring martial who demanded changes by the poplaw undertakes to tell Minnesota ular vote only Does it mean the Peoples Financo cm! t newspapers what they may print socialist plans of the Jewish philosThe editors indicate that they wiu opher Karl Marx twisted by Russia Tlirifi CoHipany of j continue to use ' their own Judg tntn rer hrand of communism Pub lic schools public parks public li ment about that Ths governor's proclamation says braries were called outrageous sonewspapers must print nothing to cialism before they became estab ' dishonor the nation guard Ko lished What is socialism J for manager the John Scowcroft and Jphh M Browning the famous firearms inventor has returned fronv Belgium where he spent six months Someone tells me a favorite break- directing the manufacture "of arms fast' dish of the famous Oscar 'as bearing his patents well as others versed in cusine is the ' lowly prune Air wrestlers inReportsfrom the city health decluding the two hefty Jims Londos partment are that whooping cough and Browning go for it Also' Helen is spreading in the city Wills and the late Lillian Leitzel V — — -r- — In faot the of the flying rings prune appeals to brawn so the legend has it But jests have made the world shy about ordering prunes In public The prune people have ' ' ' '"' ' need of smart advertising to shake C''v'"' off the aroma and stigma of the TULSA Okla Aug 1— (UP)— And even Jim Clarke' notoMous cheap boarding house Oklahoma that might not turn the trickt" desperado and leader in two Kansas prison breaks' was capturecl here A breakfast I remember vividly early today was on a bowered portico at The He was arrested without a battle Hague 1ri Holland Thirih sliced by members of a Kansas highway oranges in a thoroughly frosted patrol squad and federal agents dish shirred eggs with crisp bits of Clarke and Frank Delmar were bacon black strap pumpernickel the only two members' still at large coffee toast marmalade and a half of the desperate band which broke moon slice of bright yellow cheese from the Kansas prison I think what got me however was last JanuaryLansing 18 with Bob (Big Boy) the dewy fresh rose haphazard Brady slain by a posse two days across the napkin That would add later ' " a delicacy to hash at Beefsteak his was on Clarke way back today John's on Chatham Square to the Lansing prison After his capture the officers No one has done more for the heavily armed bundled him into a wrestling business than Jack Cur-le- y car and started the drive back to Ninety per cent of sport writ- Kansas ers and most of the public think Clarke was hunted in a doaen setup Yet bank robberies in Oklahoma which it is a thimble-riggin- g Curley with his shock of snow-whi- te hair and bland geniality has gone were' -perpetrated 'after his last right ahead and built it to the point where it draws second to championship' prize fights He fills when squiring them about the hot-ch- a his ringside with movie and stage places seems the only prosperstars and a sprinkle of the social ous survivor Twelve big agencies register Most people leave a wrest- of 10 years ago are no more Most ling bout with sheepish feeling it's have turned to radio pretty much phoney But so dan-In a swanky Madison avenue shop gerous looking are the slams and falls at times they usually go back whither I drifted last evening to hoping to be in at the kill if any prowl a very British clerk Inquired: "Would you care to see our polo deThe theatrical agency business is partment?" r And I cannot recall almost extinct as white piping for feeling so uppity since grandma let vests A penguin looking fellow me back a letter to the tax assessor who the-- : legends go has a prop (Copyright 1934 McNaught Synto dicate ermine wrap he loans Inc) "prospects" 7-- Now you can have a real shower bath without installation cost This portable spray haa a suction cup that attaches the adjustable fpray to a wan anywhere—high up for overneaa snower er lower over the er : Serious talk of war in Europe and a former American represen tative in Austria predicts that it will be the bloodiest war In history it would be a war of bitter class and religious hatred worse than any old ' nies ng have families The' boss "The men get raises because-thedoesn t know what it costs us just to keep our hair m shape S 20 Years Ago From our Johnny-on-the-sp- After San Francisco Mr Johnson should think carefully about a "general strike" rather seeking some milder way of getting rid of the laboring common men at 80 to 90 cents an hour in favor of better men at $145 to $185 an hour Union labor says the contractors underbid other contractors on the tunnel Job by $900000 because they were planning to hire cheap men at 80 to 90 cents an hour How foolish you will agree to underbid when taxpayers foot the bills fashioned war :of kings fighting about land or women or any mod ern war of commercial kings fight ing for "business - lOllfgyre7 ring-mast- V GDEN n urn NEW YORK Aug 1— Jules Glai enzer is the town's most indefatigable gadabout now that Jimmy Walker has retired to the simplicities of Surrey Attached to an established jewelry house it seems to be his Job to go places meet people' "and indulge ferrety questioning Slight of stature and affecting a neatness he is shining band-bo- x bound to pop in wherever things are doing: 'At the first night the opening of a new cafe polo tennis or race meet It was Douglas Fairbanks Sr noting his ubiquity who observed: "He must come out of' v the woodwork" Glaenzer who is easily 50 and looks no more than ' SO has been taking life on the gallop in New York Palm Beach and the Rivera for years Not a female star arrives from Hollywood or a celebrity from a cheerio Europe without receiving ot from this In telephone listings he is designated as a f p At his parties which are frequent he is always stimulating and accelerating guests with the flourish of a Adding now and then a fewtouches that are authentically Caesarish sort who He is the hand-washia has plan always Another General Strike? War Talk in Europe Will They Hand U The War? Octoplets in China they What is mori they will hold up work on all the "heavy construction work" under way which would mean a sum of about six hundred millions taken from the wages and material purchases The trouble according to labor 4K JSC 1934mmmm i' i - s f£ wWBe 1 unmmminuwimMmmmmm "" :JM)mi SIDE GLANCES Anglo-Frenc- scarcity of water THE EXTREME state is disclosed the WEDNESDAY EVENING AUGUST K Measured by the standards of Mr Baldwin's Marcji declaration the official program is relatively moderate The total The home news tells of governtrying to help depression and strength' of) the British air force today is ment idleness by financing with tens of 840 are millions lent to New York another approximately 1400 planes of which tunnel 41 under the Hudson river and of squadfirst line The new program workers saying will strike : afodcrn City and County Building A n City High school Control of a Pur Wster Supply to AcconunodaU A t 10': I DARD-EXAMINE- (V - H )iiU ( n ' |