Show THE OGDEN STAN D ARD-E- 0 "it shall be used 'instead to: cover Swiss claims PUBLISHING C0MPANY £knk GLASMANN D EDITOR AND MANAGER J Greenwell Associate Eqtow AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Morning Wltnou Published Every Evening andor Sunday a Club Muzzle Press United Prea NEA Members 01 The Associated A B C Service and to the use tor The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled it or not dispatches credited tolocal republication of all Innews nea this paper and also the otherwise credited CALL 252 FOR "ALL DEPARTMENTS There is a possibility that competing foreign countries may demand formal quotas of Germany's purchases Here Germany's own hands are not free for while her payment resources are limited she already has numerous agreements obliging her to 'accept fixed quantities of goods from particular countries - By George Clark GDEN i Modern City and County Building new City High School Control ol a Pure Water Supply to Accommodate 150- 000 persons Vigorous C"ipaisn otfcity and County Road improve' ments n Road from and Mount Scenic Road to Ogden to Weber Canyon Ai6uaer North and South Arterltl Hlghwayr An Improved Highway to Great Salt LaXe A'yCentral Place On a Transcontinental Air Route A A Ogden-Canyo- on The Tigers Turn Did Not Sins: If British Labor Wins Planes and Submarines The second game of the baseball series was won by the Detroit "Tigers" with Schoolboy" Rowe pitchi ing "Wild Bill" Hallahan of the St Louis "Cardinals" was beaten by the close score of three to two jn a long game of twelve innings f Had the thing been planned It could not have j been better plan- If I had a butler I'd call him Giles My choice for the last of the aristocrats is Frank Crowninshield Ray Bolger and Fred Astaire double starred would be my Idea for a dance play Anything whose name I don't know is "hoot nanny" Nothing so boring as being dragged through a new home Anyone playing a harmonica or accordion excites my envy I would rather have written Maugham's "Of Human Bondage" than any hovel of my iime Next to that "Maurice i ment ' jackers ' and gangsters DESTROYING sixty-four- th f : der what terms The supervision boards are' expected to make liberal grants of exchange certificates guaranteeing the payment of imports when the foreign exporter concedes favorable terms in particular by granting delays in payment Hence the system will' tend to spare the reichbank'si reserves by increas ing I the proportion of exchange cer tificates for deferred payment to the seller and reducing the proportion of certificates immediate payment Dr guaranteeing g Schacht is encouraging of regular credits for foreign raw materials These however must not at any time burden the reichbank's reserves The principle is that the German manufacturer who takes foreign credit for materials must the same "materials in finished from and the foreign buyer-o- f finished wares instead of paying fully the German therefor must first direct- Jy repay the German's debt to the foreign credit giver Compensation trade also is be ing fostered for which purpose there are several associations and' syndicates in Hamburg Bremen and elsewhere While no serious difficulty has arisen in the internal administration of the new system controversies are expected with foreign countries in consequence of the reich's power to direct import purchases whither it wills With this problem several European governments are engaged and everywhere the suspicion is harbored of political favorit- ism or reduction of purchases from countries with which1 the German trade balance the-takin- re-exp- ort is heavily active The new provisional agreement with Great Britain insures against such unfavorable discrimination but in Switzerland it is alleged that Dr Schacht's system violates the n r The clearing agreements Swiss press publishes an inspired threat that - no cash shall be paid to Germany but that Swiss-Germa- "tra-la-la-- T Total 260775 Both entrance and exit rail travel favored the western entrance this year while last year the northern entrance led in rail en trances and the eastern and western en trances led in rail exits The rail entrance reports show 6786 visitors entering through the west entrance which consists of 4657 arriving in West Yellowstone via the Union Pacific railroad sang dustry la" or even whispered it "tra-la-l- al ! Imagine that French lady's amazement In Paris every French! man would have sungx"tra-la-la-l- a with all his might even had the Bourse just smashed and the Eiffel tower fallen down f Y We take our sorrows seriously here as Lucienne Boyer will tell her friends when she gets back t Paris France you can hear her say shoulders shrugging "Pense? done plus d'un milliard de dollars la en personne et personne ne vouiait chanter avec I moi" tra-la-la-- la i The ultra-prospero- among us out-Britis- brothers will have some real cause for worrying if organized la f bor wins the next general elecl-tioj The British labor party promises if it comes to power to go straighf through with its Socialist prograiri taking over industries transporta? tion (railroads) banking under government pwnership and control eliminating private ownership If that British program should go through our best minds mighl consider themsehes lucky even under NRA and the "new era" Thejf might even be glad to sing 'tra4 grateful for comparative safety ( i ISSUE OF COMING ELECTION A SURVEY of political conditions in the United States designated to determine the outstanding issue of the coming con gressional election has just been completed by Walter Davenport veteran reporter Dav enport toured the country to get the ma terial for his report Federal relief is the outstanding issue he declares In fact in d terms of balloting he can see no other issue on the political horizon In an articles called "Votes for Victuals" Davenport says in part in Collier's: 'An overwhelming majority of the voters are going to cast their ballots for continued and increased federal appropriations "In Minnesota Wisconsin Missouri Colorado Nevada Idaho and California some of the candidates for local office are themselves on relief and are making political capital of the dreary fact 'Meet 'me in "the bread line' shouts one 'That's where I live' And another: 'A vote for me is a vote for hard-boile- I la-la-l- a" Sir Roger Keyes British admiral pf the fleet bidding us farewell emphasizing "the value of airplanes in attacks on capital sMps" adde4 "I firmy believe that the battleship is just as vulnerable to submarinf dangers as to attack from the air1 A heavy dose pf modern explosJ ives would knock a battleship unde? the water or blow it up out of the water Therefore Uncle Sam should have plenty of airplanes and plenty of submarines It is not necessary to tell you that he has not enough of either to amount to anything In case war should come General William Mitchell thinks Japan plans war against the United States which gives Japan credit for little intelligence and suggests that America ought to have fifty dirigibles on the Pacific because fifty dirigibles could "destroy Japan" If there were any probability of Japan attacking the United States this country ought to have fifty dirigibles and more also considerable other equipment now lacking Uncle Sam should have dirigibles anyhow to be used as suggested by America's Captain Rickenbacker greatest fighting airman He wants bigger relief "In Illinois which is considered by Wash ington to be one of the most efficient state organizations the state relief personnel has grown to the7 absurd figure of 9000 At least 3000 of these job holders have jammed themselves onto the payroll for no better reason than that they have sufficient polit dirigibles toi be used as a peaceful mercantile air line between the ical influence" United States and Japan "to build SOW D RESS A good thing about airplanes is that you can use them to build friendship while friendship lasts and Immediately use them to build JL something else if necessary This might apply also to submar ines that in peace could be used to explore 4he bottoms of oceans and LABOR UNIONS AND MEDIATION BOARDS lakes profitably gold mines and Daily News) For the next 1000 years there will oU deposits are under water the textile strikeChicago is settled on the lines of the report made be no revolutions in — to President Roosevelt by the Germany mediation board he appointed there Adolf Hitler The national council of the wo- men of Great Britain votes in favor substantial material The true dTOntpJ ithS-frSfJS?68'of progress lies in of "legal sterilization of mental desupport the increased costs the spiritualhope mdIf an s Int ! eJ° institution will find itself holding the bert Hoover imponderables— Her- fectives" more nations and states More and bag move to the prevent surgically Iabo'ate of boards and regimentation proposed ' rn"?f if unions machlPery criminals of and the weak possibility After talked I with Roosevelt I very largely superfluous The workers will no found that not so many of my ideas minded leaving children to inherit longer need them and they will not pay dues indefinitely to were new as I had thought— Upton their characteristics can d0 that for them- Labor leaders may find nothing The work that sterilization would that they are merely working themselves out of Jobs and out of the Sinclair now has been done in the past do ' theeYd ' pIctur by brlnSing niore government appointees into As an organization we are neither by the gallows and laws that pun ' Samuel Gompers w&s always wary of traps of that kind The for nor against President Roosevelt ished with death ' even petty theft eliminating the criminal sane or railroad unions once walked into one when found themselves — American Liberty League weak minded without mercy under- - the domination of a ' governmental they tribunal the railroad board-se- t Zaharoff contributed tojthe world up under the transportation act of 1920 - They repudiCHILDREN IN TEN YEARS ated the whole thing when they found out the only real function nothing but the technique massed FORT DODGE la — (UP) — El left to a union under that regime was to hire lawyers and statis- murder— Senator Homer Tof Bone of even children in ten years is the ticians to make pleas to politicians The politicians happened to be Washlntgon and Mrs Anton record o f Mr rather high grade men with a keen sensitiveness to the public — — —: of Vincent Dencklau la near here but labor was convinced that they leaned to the railroads' not have do consecutive any They of MUNITION MEN ENESHES view point to twins of detract from the European labor wherever the fascist or "corporative state" has MOBERLY Mo— (UP)— Ameri- pairs of the aspect record but prolific en 10 boss has found its own organizations have ca's Number One Public Enemies they do have three sets of twins! ?uSe eitner been dissolvedindustry or reduced to mere shadows The new are not the - John Dillingers but All the children are living and sevproposed for the textile Industry is so strikingly similar tosetup the IASClSt System thaLnn Amprlan wnrtpr nuprf ho HootHiH munition v makers said Dr W B en of them are going to school T Ks accepts it his freedom and also his power to organize for collec- - Selah Kansas City in an address 44000 thunder Approximately tive bargaining will yield in great before the Methodist Episcopal re- - storms occur throughout the world degree to political administra-j tion I ' liaious conference here dally according to estimates of the i " thray Sif (i sfur ev 'The usher was right dear There's only one seat here" -- - 1 in-ter- est i - " The Inside of Washington f i Belt of Trees Idea Still Very Much Alive Experts Admit 'Difficulties But See Sudcess Chinese Hero Xs Given Rousing Welcome j f la friendship" O PINIONS jftcvicf inc tite i this-yea- r E wea moi-d'amo- ur "tra-la-la-l- a" FOREIGN-TRAD- Q ' j chief clerk of gone to Washington D C to attend the annual convention of railway mall chief clerks Mrs Kathryn Barrett Pardee will give a dramatic recital in the First Ward ameusement hall this The executive committee of the Ogden fall fashion show announces that there will be no deficit after all collections of funds have been O made The canning season for ' Weber county Is drawing to a close All factories will be shut down within rthe next few days " -- Orchardists report that the apple crop Is moving slowly due to low prices and slight demand for the 7 fruit Peter S Shupe ' 57 pioneer of Ogden Valley died yesterday at his home in Huntsville He was born in Ogden a o Voting machines are to be used in the November election and will I know a traveler always seasick be distributed to polling places next until he lost his sense of smell The Monday first poet I ever met was Berton The September Braley and the first movie director from the Allan Dwan Zita Johann makes a city board of healthreport was favorable customer of me at any movie Elsie with only a few contagious diseases Janis wrote about the best short mentioned story of Montmartre ever written I can't convince Major Bowes and Mr and Mrs J A Wear have Deac Aylesworth that movie stage gone to California on an extended v ' presentations are entirely too long visiting trip But I keep on trying Harry Hales county clerk i has I've wanted to own Mark Twain's Issued licenses to marry to Bert C private residence on lower 5th ave- Bachelor of San Jose California nue Favorite marches: Gershwin's and Charlotte M Harvey of "Hono"Strike up the Band" and "I Love lulu and to John R Davis of Demp-se- y a Parade" On the promenade of Idaho and Effie M Deston of the Europa I saw a drunk walk the Bannock Idaho rail from one post to another-ia plunging sea Almost every "that" At the election November 8 votin writing can be eliminated James ers of Davis and Weber counties Oliver Curwood once told me And will be given ' the to he's right Ladies never looked so decide! whether the opportunity north "part of Davis county shall be annexed to regal as in the new ' ening gowns No people seem so Weber county foreign as Turks Very ew would care to be mayor of New York ° e Luci-enn- j Pre-seaso- " f w' lows: UOREIGN trade will disappear if the Ger : Rail visitors 14085 L man plan of regulating foreign commerce Automobile visitors 205325 is" generally adopted 235 Motorcycle visitors Dr Hjalmar Schacht's import plan allows Visitors cn horseback and on foot 4074 the German government to determine who n visitors unclassified 37056 shall be permitted to import goods and un V fasting in the snow at St Moritz Popeye the Sailor is a ringer for Claud Shafer's "Old ManGrump" a middle west comic of 20 years ago Two worldiest looking men in New York— Ben All Haggin and Sailing Baruch My first close up of Irvin Cobb was in the old Waldorf's Peacock Alley and I followed him like a dog a covered wagon to 59th street - The attempt to collectthe $1000 does not seem to be justified by all the circumstances Throughout the nation the law was rec- oghized as more or less a dead affair after the repeal of prohibition and was ignored Even the enforcing officers gave no notice to indicate they would insist on the law being obeyed This tax if enforced will have the tendency of driving the liquor traffic back again in the keeping of the bootleggers hi- - W S Bangasser the raU mail service in Ogden has Young People's local branch of Gest" No European country sug- the W C T U has ehKted Thomas ' gests security like Holland Or is F Preshaw president any meal so stimulating as break- I s ' NEW YORK — Purely personal piffle: I quit coffee because I tired of the taste always cough after ice cream and cant spell— just a second —occasion without looking It up Feminine names I like: Beth Hope Faith No one can revive an old horror crime like Edmund Pearson Tra-la-la-- la ur THAT $1000 TAX from Boise that not one WORD comesalcoholic in beverages in" Idaho has paid- - the $1000 federal tax applied to the handling of illicit liquor in dry states The law requiring the tax was passed in 1926 and was ordered enforced in dry states several days ago yby the treasury depart- 20 Years Ago From our Files Infyre 1 : Platform Standard-Examiner- 's ODAY By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright 1934 King Features Syndicate Inc) SATURDAY EVENING OCTOBER 6 1934 SIDE GLANCES NEW RECORD FOR YELLOWSTONE annual travel record surpassing A NEW tne year of 1929 has been seup in Yellowstone park This year's travel figures show an increase of 78 visitors over the 260697 persons who entered ned the park int929 which was the previous First Detroit lost on its own peak year This year shows an increase grounds then won wild delight The of 98837 visitors or 61 per cent over last next game will be played in Qt Louis more dewith wilder and 161938 reached For When the travel year Rowe Eldoraof "Schoolboy" light eleven years previous to 1930 there was an do Arkansas twh has pitched victories this season increase in travel foeach consecutive year twenty-fonow has twenty-fiv- e and is a fine Beginning with that year the travel drop- lad six feet four inches tall The "Cardinals" great pitcher ped off In 1933 there vras a slight increase "Dizzy" Dean comes Oklahoof 27 per cent over 1932 and this year ma Rugged countries from produce rugshows the greatest annualncrease in num- ged men ber of visitors in the history of the park On Wednesday a fine dinner arid A severe equinoctial storm during the last dance opened the marvellous "Rair-boRoom" on the flcxjr week of the travel year had a noticeable in- of the Rockefeller Centre highest fluence toward decreasing the finaKtravel fig- building Substantial citizens were there glad that the whole cost bl ures the dinner went' to charity but they f The total travel this year was 26075 vis- were not really gay A little dear French lady itors 14085 of whom entered by rail ascom-pare- d Boyer all in blue on her firt with 161938 visitors last year 6787 appearance sang as only a little French girl could sing it a song of whom entered by rail V beginning f I The travel this year compares in totals VParlez Redites chases tendres" numbers with 1929 when 260697 visitors y "Speak tomoimedes of love entered the park but during that year only XTell me again tender things" ' ! 219022 entered by private automobile while You will hardly believe that those 38979 entered by rail The figures show a sweet lines lef the high financial j cold and gloomy decrease of 24984 rail visitors and an in- faces Later the lady in blue sang an crease of 23359 automobile visitors as com- other song its refrain and invited ces messieurs to sing pared with 1929 the chorus with her! one of Not those folcaptains of in i The travel is classified as and finance pre-depressi- The 1 ' AMINER X BY WILLIS THORNTON periertced foresters think it would nave a Deuer cnance sngnuy east-- i : I ward of the original plan's site Correspondent where rainfall is about 20 inches WASHINGTON Oct 6— Do-nget i the idea that the "shelter belt of EXPERTS ARE HOPEFUL trees" idea for the plains region Regarding the rumors that "trees has been abandoned just because won't Sgrpw out there anyway" the you jdoh't hear much about it or best government experts here will because Comptroller General McCarl tell y0u that it's a tough hazardrefused to allow more than $1000000 ous job but that they believe with to be spenLon it right now planting and cultivation of It hasn't been abandoned and proerj the right kinds of trees it can be because the president done it wpn't-bis much interested In it (it's really AboUt the definite results they one of his own pet personal ideas) are hopeful but making no absoRight now the federal service has lute guarantees about changes in the established a headquarters in Lin- climate raising the water table coln JJeb and its field workers are ana eliminating oust storms and assembling aided by western agri- wind erosion cultural colleges to go over the They say frankly that it would be an experiment from which tremendground thoroughly Beyond this investigation noth- ous good might come but that the ing can be done on it this fall for studies of Russian experiments on it will soon be too late for actual such a plan back in 1843 leave the work But ntuch of the data will be definite effects pretty much open ready for - presentation to congress They'll tell you however about this winter and then a special ap- tree plantings of the University of propriation for this particular proj- Montanain country with less rain ect is likely — and to that McCarl fall than the proposed belt where will have no objection ranchers are now able to grow vege McCarl himself a Nebraskan is tables in the lee of tree windbreaks known to favor the plan but despite —and they never could before this ruled out most of the money orPROFIT BY EXPERIENCE iginally alloted for it on the ground that the long time aspect of the jscores oi letters come in every project didn't justify spending to- day on the project mostly wanting day's relief money on it jobs some "writ sarcastical" some offering real suggestions SEED COLLECTION STARTS One thing you can be sure of Forest service men will be out col- when and if the thing is undertaken lecting seed this fall just in case in real earnest —into it will go all they get the green light in the the knowledge and experience gainspring! The trick here is to get ed byj the forest service and western seed from trees that grow in the agricultural colleges in the last 30 ex!?-actual region itself or In almost years " actly similar regions I It's much more likely CHINESE WELCOME trees than if seedlings were import Washington Chinese put on quite ed from other parts of the country a hullabaloo to ' welcome General which have more rainfall Tsai j Ting Kai commander of the are made famous 19th Route Army at Shang arrangements being with nurseries in the region a downtown parade and hai It has been decided to lease or even a "welcome" sign over the door use their existing facilities rather of his downtown hotel Employ than I start independent govern ers who have had labor troubles ment nurseries in most eases may console themselves with the First place the nurserymen" who thought that the government has its have been fighting the prairie tree share- too Nearly all the public battle for many years kicked at buildings rising here have ' suffered ' Second place it's delay from jurisdictional or other being ignored faster Jto use or expand the exist- disputesi Latest Is on the addition ing facilities than to start from to the library of congress union scratch " steamshovel operators walked out Original proponents wanted the refusing? to work on the same job belt pretty well westward in an with ununionized laborers area with rainfall of 15 inches Ex- - (Copyright 1934 NEA Service Inc) Standard-Examin- er Washington ot e j ) 1 Co-operat- ive j - : HEALTH TALKS By DR MORRIS FISHBEIN suddenly from a flat position Sorrow! pain fear the sight of blood or similar conditions affect ing thei emotions severe bleeding the effects of heat or sudden weak ness of the heart may produce faint ' ing Usually the first thing to do a when faints is to lower KEEP FIRST AID HANDY FOR his iiaad person and him flat on the keep FAINTING SPELLS back i Raising the head Is dan gerous because It makes the sup Speedy Emergency Treatment Is ply or oiood to tne Drain more Necessary to Revive Person difficult Fallen Unconscious Due All tight clothing particularly j to Fail are of Blood the collar should be loosened so Supply as to permit the easier flow of blood An abundance of fresh air If you are subject to fainting should I be f supplied —If necessary spells or someone else in the by fanning—because the need for house is you should keep a sup oxygen 'will be great The inervous system may be af ply of aromatic spirits of ammo- f ected by sprinkling cold water on nia or of smelling salts handy the lace and neck The sudden Fur- shock pf the cold has a stimulat for use in such emergency thermore you should be familiar ing effect If the person who has It is with emergency handling c: per- Tainted is exceedingly cold necessary to control the temperason who has fainted of the body by applying warm In most cases the reason for ture j towels fainting is a lack of supply of blood fo the brain This may be Among the best stimulants for due tot a number of different those who fainted Is have causes! itblood In the first place the aromatic spirits of "ammonia This self msy be vdeficient in the Im- may be Inhaled or smelling salts portant red blood cells which may be used to stimulate the unor in iron which is carry oxygen I largely responsible for forming conscious person If the person who has fainted the red coloring matter Such a condition pf anemia may in itself Is abte to swallow one - half a interfere with the proper nutri- teaspoonful of aromatic spirits of tion of the brain and bring about ammonia may be given well diluted in cold water fainting attacks beSometimes Obviously it' Is desirable for a the relationship tween the nervous system and the person j who has fainted and blood supply is such that there is Whose icondition seems to be sea sudden deviation of blood from rious to have a physician's attenthe interior of the body to the sur- tion as soon as possible In seface This also will bring about a rious cases the doctor tan try emergency measures which are of fainting attack great Importance for the recovery The blood supply to the brain of consciousness if not for the savmay be disturbed If you rise ing of life itself : - - £4 long-sleev- c ed - Your cwildren these days stores suggest phoney princes Everybody seems to know several who are get ting undeserved relief Five-and-ten-c- ent The Eva Coo case was a dud In murder stories for me The thinnest man I ever knew was the late Grant Clarke I can't go these Afghan Olive Roberts Barton hounds am a flop at baby talk and © 1033 KEA SERVICE IN& think the most important thing the S P C A can do is to have rodeos and horse jumping races legally SPARE 7CHILDREN SUSPICIOUS-- ! NESS banned No public entertainer ever me like Boone the hypfascinated OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON notist riding blindfold through town By One of the least admirable traits in his gold suit of the human mind is suspicion Not only does such a mind unFew know George Burns of Burns dermine itself and brew a poison and Allen was once in a skat that permeates act and that Gracie Allen al life but it the whole emotion- ing projects unhappiness is as Irish as Dublin The best dress' Oh ye ed boys are wearing single breast- into the lives of others of little faith can what you find ed Tuxedos again The Bronx coun this attitude of doubt that Is ty court house for sheer and exciting in either satisfying or thrilling? And architectural beauty Montagu Love most of us have the talent In a yet chest-iest and Bernard Gimble are the or lesser degree greater two hereabouts I never miss a When comes to it a change of program at the Trans child just because hesuspecting is a child Lux or Embassy Stage midgets de we would discover a number of press me No movie star has been if we just stopped to think things as handicapped by bad camera ef First fects as Joan Crawford "Rain" was Is more of all nearly every child honest and more frank almost ruinous but "Chained" was we suppose If he is otherthan superb The only hero parade I'll wise "something in his training has march in is for Mickey Mouse Be gone wrong In such a case it Is cause I'm building a home In Ohio a lot of people think I'm going to seldom his fault but the "fault of those who have over fear and quit columning I couldnt if I wish- a feeling of "guiltput into his life ed— and I don't —without breaking DON'T HARP ON WRONGS an honorable contract Never knew we are likely to put too Second an Indian athlete who wasn't a much ' emphasis on one misdechief meanor If constantly referred to Aren't there audiences any more a child ofWouldn't be human if a feeling guilt far beyond his for quartets such as the Avon Com- deserts did not Once a edy Four etc etc or am I just old child knows that develop is he continually fogey? They are he loses faith in himShirley Temple and it's a pity My suspected self Not only this" but he figfavorite pair of pajamas are white ures in most cases that he may as " silk jacketr and black pantalloohs well have the game as the name with an O O M monogram in red —and to it livesup on the handkerchief pocket that too Then is the custom to it would destroy you I often put myall children as though they self to sleep plotting mysteries that judge were grown- - ups a most unfaii begin at the Raffles hotel in thing to say the least" We forget - that" during the pe- rlod Cole Porter's lyrics top 'em all I too of growth the mind is growing It drives its young owner to can't listen to Frances Williams that at least amaze experiments singing for gazing at her platinum-ha- ir older people an acknowledgement Simile: "As strange as a chauf- of our own WiU the ignorance feur in a straw hat" I once room- world never learn childhood's that ed with an anti-gerfiend who so called "misdemeanors" are selFifteen dom vicious? caught everything going years later when I saw him he was MOST JDANGEROUS COURSE recovering from sleeping sickness The normal child be what he Not many actors can give as conshould not to endure have may vincing a performance asr Otto Kru-gthe constant One of air suspicion My only hanker for tobacco thing Is ' certain To live in such is a pipe after sharp cheese When atmosphere won't make him any I cross the street in front of motor an better traffic I wave them back like a We have all known some child fluttery old man who removed to a new environ(Copyright 1934 McNaught Syndi- ment where he was trusted recate Inc) to trust that became and sponded - over-exploiti- ng : " m er a good citizen There is no more dangerous course in the whole matter of To Keep child training than to fall Into of the habit 4of being suspicious Service Up them To anticipate - what a child might do is not exactly suspicion CLEVELAND (UP) — Diaper Hy We know the characteristics of our giene Unlimited a call and deliver own children But let us use such service for mothers (and babies knowledge to advantage —not to which recently became snagged ou lower his self respect the pins of a receivership action is If we ourselves lived in a con to continue "unlimited" — under di stant atmosphere of suspicion we rection of the court would never be at our best 100 frantic mothers who Those who know they are trust- Nearly subscribed to the service for as ed usually try to earn that confimany as 24 diapers a day were re- dence ' lieved when Common Pleas Judge (Copyright 1934 NEA Service Inc) — George B Harris appointed a re ceiver to operate the business as ESCAPE HOPES JFADED usual MT CARMEL Pa— (UP) — EdAn unsatisfied judgment of $727 20 saw visions of brought against the diaper concern ward Lascoskie when he climbed down Into reliberty by the Eagle Laundry company sulted in the appointment of Clyde a manhole at Northumberland counCrosier driver at the laundry as ty Jail But his hopes dimmed when he idiscovered the manhole led to receiver a six -- inch pipe He was returned Pat to his cell when guards found him — SUNBURY (UP)— Death in the manhole Union has taken the last surviving Civil War veteran here ' He was John A Sipe who shook Lincoln's Germany has perfected a hand at the time of Lee's surren motorcycle for instruction of new riders der at Appomattox courthouse Diaper Firm Mother's -- f-- f dual-contr- ol ' |