Show If we divide the wealth now we shall be freezing our economic i level at a point too low to satisfy us Before we talk of dividing it we ought to getjDusy and increase it This to be sure is nothing more than elementary common sense and yet it is a point that needs to be made over and over PUBLISHING COMPANY A L GLASMANN EDITOR AND MANAGER Frank Francis and Will W Bowman Associate femora I ! AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER i Published Every Evening and Sunday Morning Without a Muzzle or a Club - o£ The Associated Press United Press NEA MembersService and A B C The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for of all news dispatches credited to it or not' republication 'otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news i i i -- SUBSCRIPTION PRICES 75c a Month By Mall— Must Be Paid in By Carrier! — Advance 65c- - a Month $700 a Year in Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming — All Other States $100 a Month i CALL 1252 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS 1 The A Platform Standard-Examiner- 's Modern City and County Building A New City High School Government lor Ogden A Council-ManagControl bf a Pure Water Supply to Accommodate er 150- - ' ' OD AY 000 Persons i Vigorous Campaign of City arid County Road Improvemerits '' Scenic Road to Mount Ogden and Road Prom Ogden f Canyon to Weber Canyon Anotbers North and South Arterial Highway An' Improved Highway to Great Salt Lake A Central Place On A Transcontinental Air Route f illATREDS FROM ACROSS THE OCEAN EW YORK CITY reflects the surging animosities of the races of the world In that city are two million Jews who are filled with resentment over the treatment their- people have received in Germany and 'when the occasion arises they are not slow to express their condemnation of the Hit- N Dispatches from the Italian commanded -- -- I XO SHARE IT rTHE bullet that let the life out of Huey Lionel nromisincr t c also ifdeflated the most l(or menacing you prefer) of the political movements based on the simple discontent bf the man whose pockets are empty Since people of this kind have been iof late and their discontent has Ibeen great Senator Long was able to ride ja long way and looked jlike riding farther But although he is gone and the move-imehe' led is in a state of profound con fusion the urge to share the wealth—to cut slices off the cake on the rich man's table and pass them around to those who have no cake5 — still exists and needs to be reckoned IA i : nu-jmero- us Italian troops advance into Ethi"guided by planes overhead" that drop bombs wherever they see a flash of white cotton cloth indi- ' " ting better Secretary Perkins predicts in the recently released report of the Brookings institution which finished !a three-yea- r study of the way wealth and distribution of income are related to economic progress or the lack of it If the masses are to be enriched this report says it must be done through in- between labor and the spirit of captains of industry to the greater welfare of the country The secretary of labor let it be known on Tueseday that she is jubilant over the co-operati- on has-jus- t outlook with all lines improving and even the durable goods industries forging to the " creased production and lowered prices rather than through a division of the wealth already existing The productive capacity of America today continues the report is not in excess of our requirements for consumption On the contrary it is behind them front - f Confidence has been and people are beginning to spend freely which adds to the upward trend of things By this time next year the depression should be but a memory! -- of the JTRESS THE BIBLE 400 YEARS Kansas City Star On Friday there was observed an anniversary of great importance: fThe tour hundredth year since the printing of" the first Bible In the English language The anniversary has been especially noted by church-goer- s but its interest extends beyond the walls ui cnaptji uxiu cainearai r or wnen Mnes uoveraaie in secrecy oi aim miuc uuutcu una 'nisi jjnmeu version 01 ine rJiDle rin the English language he set loose forces which were to be of profound Influence in the world of literature in the world of freedom in the world of civilization The Germans had already had the use of the Bible in their language rising to Luther's great translation In 1534 "William Tynaale on the continent had published English translations of the Bible a labor for which he was to be and portionsot 1536 to be executed Coferdale youthful scholar andjailed in preacher wanted his English countrymen to have the comfort and joy of the Bible in their own language in their own homes So he usedmuch of Tyndale's work made additiona! transla-tJtm- s -- 1 i from Luther's New Testament and' other German texts and Latin Vulgate No press in would print his Bible fromjihe and It Js not certainly known whereEngland was done On Ocprinting tober 4 1535 however the work was completed -much to say that this Bible proved the literary Jtihardly-too possibilities of contemporary English i From the day it appeared English grew as a literary language and the stage was set for the glorious Elizabethan period which7 was to culminate in William Shakespeare After the turn of the centu'rytin 1604 King James called a conf erenec of churchmen together and authority- was given for a new Bible in English Seven vears later th a vino- James! version appeared Since then it has been the standard Its influence on the language on thought on the spread of Christianity is known to all That remarkable book contains much of and Coverdale Tyndaie t One- - of the tenets dear to loving people one of the rocks of their independence is liberty freedom of the press That issue was iim fought out on behalf of printings of the Bible In other tharr the Latin language and for that issue Tyndaie died i! Regardless of one's views of the divine of the Bible no ones can doubt its dominance among all inspiration books There are more Eihles printed and sold than any other book by far The Bible is the most read among some people the most neglected among ethers! Ithas been translated into almost language and dialect ancl carried to and read to nearly all every peoples in all conti- ItsI Old! Testament with its stories of an ancient people presents the complete picture of man at his best and his worst? Those chapters revear the love and the hate the' greed and the passion thejealousy and despair the bad and the good of man The New Testament outlines the mo$t altruistic been givenitothe world All this in the presented with a simplicity and purity power and strength of anguage which have influenced the best of our writers and think- 4 - ? KiniavSJnvIs tf' 'Yes sir this same gang has been meeting 'every week for fifteen years v When a European makes love the lady he makes love to knows he means it When an American makes love she never knows whether he means it : or whether it's- - a gag— Luise Rainer European film actress Dissatisfaction with the new deal is due to the growing thought that there isn't a definite program and that it has been a take a chance affair without coordination— Senator Nye -- hit-and-m- iss There have been made on young lives marks- - that are going to last until these young people have become old as a result of their experiences in this depression— Newton D Baker -- If we truly mean to have a dethen we must not hanmocracy " dicap those who are poor —Dr Frederick B Robinson president City college New York The kind of relief you need Is bread and water— Premier Bennett of Canada addressing hostile Communists in audience - : I sun-bur- nt ' -- The Inside of Washington Packing Moguls May Have Been Kidding Government About Profits Meat Will Rise 'In Price Then Drop Before Election Cabinet Members Hard to Find One Manages to Break Through Non-Politici- an By RODNEY DUTCIIER Estate commerce committee to help on important transportation legislation WASHINGTON Oct 9— ReconSenator Donahey and several Ohio naissance along the pork chop front congressmen josned with Eastman reveals an indication that certain in backing FreaT for FTC packers have been kidding the gov (Copyright 19351 NEA Service Inc) ernment as to the amount of their palace gates profits Also though roast pork bacon Before the emperor gave the wise and eggs and ham sandwiches will advice to his warriors the throng cost more this winter than they da of savage tribesmen had appeared now prices probably will start dropbefore the north tower of his palace ping next summer and be materially where he stood in perfect calm and lower by election time dignity Whipping out their knives The AAA's first public hearing they shouted: on a proposed adjustment program "Death to the Italians We shall concerned the corn-hoBy 0V Roberts Barton situation finish them once and for all We Thanks to drouth therell thank you for your decree God give be about mostly 47 pounds of hog products you long life" available per person in the market- LACK OF APPRECIATION DRIVES CHILD TO RUN AWAY FROM ing year beginning Nov 1 instead n The war starts of V HOME 83 the normal of consumption various little wars In New York pounds Italians and colored citizens argued With no adjustment program They called her "Bligy" at home fought a policeman had his hand there should be about 62 pounds short for belligerent arid this is uroxen Dy a colored man with a in the marketing year beginning why blow from the staff of an Take' last Saturday for instance next meaning lower prices flag The policeman who did notJ which'fall Marjorie's to should begin jnother got up with a earlappear otan uie war mougnt that un ier-: headache The night before she had necessary Meanwhile the AAA Is required eaten a piece of chocolate cake Mr Valentine New York's wise when going to bed procommissioner of police kseps 100 by law to operate in two-ye"Mother if you eat thai you'll policemen in reserve ready for more grams and fears If something isn't be sick as sure as you live" Bligy corn to keep down dope production had warned her "And tomorrow a be there'll In Rome Americans have been subsequent hog pro- you have to take Roger to the advised to talk English' cautiously duction in excess of normal con- dentist's" If as "English" means "Englishman" sumption But her mother merely said "I'm and Englishmen are not popular in SIX MILLION BOBS UP hungry I wish you would stop borItaly Packers profits often the sub- rowing trouble my dear" The American consul in Rome was So Bligy took Roger to the denof kicks from housewives on obliged to show his credentials to ject tist and he bit And screamed and were represented as avoid trouble when he talked Eng- meat strike 1934 said he was to tell on her $29550000 for by packers them- when he gotgoing lish with friends in a restaurant! home because she at selves the hearings France dislikes the war and smacked called him a litwhich is all the gov- tle cowardhim and did That figure connected tell with emeverybody with It At ernment ever had Roger to go on—being bellishments and his mother Toulon French crowds yell "down whose with Mussolini and war" as fifty unabel to examine packers' books headache wes better said "You —was the total reported to the Bu- haven't a young Italian start homeward grain cf sympathy in your by reau of Animal Industry under re- whole body rail to help fight Ethiopia It is Bligy Someday some"war" rather than MursolinI that quirements of the packers and stock- thing will hurt you and youH howl loud enough" young French demonstrators dislike yards act AAA an late the afternoon in But Eden British minister UNFOUNDED COMPLAINTS Anthony had insults shouted at him when he official stated that the figure had learned tiien that her mothBligy The er arrived at the Paris railroad sta- been revised to $36053331 asked the Weekses over to had tion Thursday Young men of only explanation given for this sud- dinner She knew what that meant France and other nations close to den change was that the profit China and glasses to be washed and the big war know from uncles fath- figure for one company (608 com- silver to polish Without a word ers older brothers what war means panies reported) tiad been revised she got at them' went out and cut and they want hone of it PROFITS GO SOARING flowers and then was ready for Little things start big things Dr errands The Exchange was out of means new that The packfigure Potter formerly professor of politi- ers so she got macaroons last year made their highest cal science in the University of Wiswish "I had' called me" comyou 192& the and that consin one of an international com- total profits since mother "because I'd have plained was 184 sales of dollar per mittee of four that tried to settle profit had else beside blanc a quarrel between Italy and Ethi- cents— highest percentage in 10 mangesomething 'You muknt make all my Evidence indicated big pack decisions for me" opia in 1934 says that Italy has good years been doing very well while ers had or While she was gone Gerty moongrounds complaint against Ethismall suffering ed around In her many packers were a and that soldier's room "Mama" opia casual shot (Note to housewives : More In whined Gerty when Bligy arrived at a bird probably started the presformation on packers' profits will 'T think she's u hiding something ent trouble be Five hundred native brought out by the Federal Trade Her bureau drawers all are locked Italian troops and 1500 Ethiopian troops commission Investigation of food in- It's that Jack Porter I bet hesends watch to see her notes She's stuck on Jack Porwatching each other "front their dustries Meanwhile corn-ho- g AAA the whether In program ter" :r some cases positions only two "If you weren't such a little yards apart" were waiting on both lives up to Secretary Wallace's sides for provocation prowl cat I wouldn't have to lock promised consumption needs) A soldier on the Italian side bored things up" said her big sister "Go and wash your 'face Mother NO PICTURE FOR "SUBS" by waiting fired a shot at a bird make her clean up She's never flying overhead and immediately Photographers assigned to take clean She is worse than Roger" shooting began on both sides pictures of the first meeting of the - of your friends must be "SomeMuninew National distinguished The Wisconsin professor says Italy tions board 'composed of five cab- coming I know the signs" sighed will have a long war against Ethi- inet members were told they couldn't mother "You never have any time opia and must fight in "Ethiopian do that The reason was that al- for us" fashion" but perhaps not Secretaries Hull and Roper The British have not fought "na- though of state and commerce were there tive fashion" recently They send Secretary Morgenthau — being in planes to drop bombs on natives Europe —had delegated Undersecrenear the Kyber pass into Northern the Treasury Coolidge SecIndia but first dropping pamphlets tary ofDera had delegated General in native languages advising na- retary who had delegated Gen MacArthur tives to be good and go home After and Secretary Simonds George that if natives will not be good Swanson had sent Admiral William the English drop small bombs The natives usually went home when Stahdley small bombs came down if not big EDGES IN bombs came and that settled it When Robert E Frear a RepubMussolini has begun ' dropping from Cincinnati was appointpamphlets from airplanes signed by lican to ed the Federal Trade commishis local ruler telling how happy a sion lot was donevfor the morale Ethiopians will be after Mussolini of career men In the government conquers them Bombs follow pamphlets the Eng- who still serve In large numbers lish idea having worked well despite the political battles which rage above and about them The career men were shown that a could break through Dog May Be the ranks At the" same time it Those terribly mean corns between the indicated that the administra- "toes that seem to defy all treatment If Wife Can Dance was tion meant to make an active force —they're as easily removable as any of the FTC other with FREEZDNE! A few Frear came here about 10 years of FREEZONE instantly put thedrops ARKANSAS CITY Kan Oct 9: corn — (UP)— As a matter of legal con- ago from Cincinnati law practice to Pain is deadened at once and sleep tract George Stanley a lawyer may to join the ICC's valuation staff soon the corn becomes so loose that keep a bird dog In his house and He helped Ferdinand Pecora invesyou can actually lift it out with his wife may attend all the dances tigate railroad financing served as fingers Hard corns or soft corns your all at the country club this winter an expert with Transportation Co- yield to FREEZOKE AU druggists sell Such were the terms of an agree- ordinator Joe Eastman and was ment between them legally borrowed this year by Chairman Burt Wheeler of the senate Inter- Standard-Examin- j Washington Correspondent er j ChIiIdren g Italian-Ethiopia- j j ar I 1 " lady-finge- -- s Tweeds Are Worn For Sport de PARIS — (UP) LFor sports wear are shown three-piec- e ensembles in soft shades of f tweed mixtures trimmed with a contrasting color An example Is a suit in a gray woolen mixture flecked in white This fingertip coat is cut on swagger lilies &nd is extremely full with big revers lined in a green and gray -' iv The coat flares out over a plaid-- i inside the high neck of the blouse Kept non-politici- an - co-autho- red -- - " Charles G Norris celebrates the travail of turning out a serious novel with a romp to Europe and a visit with his long-tim- e crony Gilbert White the American - oainter- and brother of Stewart Edward White He is now en route There are few men in mfddle years with the natural exuberance and enthusiasms of Norris Perhaps nearest is White "and to accompany them on an exploration of the boulevards is among life's unf orgetables At least for this chronicler - The movie heroine of the sidewalks of New York Is Patsy Kelly She was once one of them— a tomboy of the tenements with sweatered swagger strident voice and eye And her success has- - been entirely due to remaining Herself Every block of Tenth avenue has its Patsy Kelly Still baiting cops bango-fun- ViYjJ YS &-- v f S3:? ny I tering corner toughs and holding her own In argument City stuff: She disentangled from a glossy imported car in front of Sherry's in the manner of a butter- fly leaving the cocoon then Indulged a selfconsciious spread- - of ill 3 rs J end to CORNS between toes FKEEZOWE No need to put yourself to tmy trouble when youVe something to ship Merely call Railjway Express For no matter whether'it is a small package or any number of large ones' to the nearest town or across the country Railway Express will call at your door and give you a receipt for the shipment Your shipment will be whisked away by swift passenger train and safely delivered to destination An- otheir receipt from consignee proves safe No need to bother your head delivery about costs either Railway Express rates are surprisingly low Prompt pick-u- p aad delivery service in all important cities acd towns For service or information : riierely call pr telephone' 3i5— 24th Street ' Phone 382 I Office: Union Depot BIdr Depot I Phone 58 Branch Office: Interorban Terminal Bid 101 Ogden Utah " NON-POLITICI- Soft-Sha- straight skirt of gray and the blouse is of material which lined heavy plaid hundredth anniversary of the printing of the the coat revers iPe°"r blouse is trimonLnglishi is much more than a memorable date for med with breast The gible is worn pocket Christians and a topic for sermons It is a date of significance to with a - crimson i scarfandwhich is alL English-speakin- g svho would do well to include in their knotted about the throat and tucked peoples ' hero worship the name of Miles Coverdale ' Bat '$191$ NtASmwci Wf Ygur get-' that from now on there will be a growing is: provided O PINIONS -- - ' : i JUBILANT OVER BUSINESS IX7ITH signs that business steadily is with' Ope of the sanest ways of reckoning with it cating the presence of natives make Italy's advance easy Ethiopia's emperor in black satin cloak leaning from his north tower gave wise advice to frantically howling and dancing tribesmen "who flourished their knives before the palace" This is quoted from a special cable to the New York Times: "I am happy to see you before me with knives swords and rifles Soldiers I give you this advice be cun ning be savage face the enemy one by one two by two in fields and mountains Do not wear white cloths Do not mass as flow hide and striked suddenly Fight the Nomad war Steal up snipe and murder singly Scatter and advance to victory" Thereupon the whole wild assembly clapped sharply thrice shouted "glory to the empsror" and plunged away through the narrow ! j ht opia I called up one of the madder cartoonists today to tell him a friend from a town where I used to live a fellow named "Red' Bannister1 was in the city and wanted more than anyone else to meet him "Bring him over" he said "He sounds for the children to slide grand Bearing such titles as "Peasants" down" and always stressing the triumph of (Copyright 1935 McNaught Sjnd) the lowly and the defeat of the capitalist the releases are patently propaganda and there Is no theatre in town where - the audiences are so animated so deafening with applause and scornful with hisses Now and then there will be voices speaking out in the language of the Or there may be an ocsteppes casional argument over the playing By DR MORRIS F1SHBEIN of a scene There axe women with shawls and men with waist whisThere was a time when no one kers like the flickering characters would think of mentioning a 'rupon the screen ture or hernia in polite society let Also regal looking ladies and men alone in a scientific disindulging wearing Ascot ties and monocles cussion of its care" But nowadays The fashionables lured by a desire are being educated about all to see what has happened to "their people the different conditions that may poor country" After the show many disturb their anatomies ' drift to the curb smoking long and Much discussion has centered heavy native cigarets and engaging in the volatile discussions so typi- Around - whether a hernia orrup-tU- f e should be treated by surgery cally Muscovite or by the new injection method vary according to the exMany believe that the nearest ap- Opinions perience of those who are' doing proach to the type of humor made the work the number of people befamous by Will Rogers is that of Bassett Blakely of Houston Texas ing treated occupations of those are operated on and many! othHe' Is a ranchman and who er I factors long a friend of Rogers OutwardOne a writer on health subject has ly roughly spoken cowman employing the idiom of the range but constituted himself champion cf the like Rogers hides a cultural back- ro callad injection method of treatground and often In horse and cat- ing ruptures basing his arguments tle swaps uses a mark In lieu of sig- aparently on the successful results nature He lives In one of the finest reportea- - by a few men who spe homes of his native city and his cialize in this technic daughters are products of select finA rupture Is merely the protruishing schools "North of 36" was sion of the contents of the abdofilmed on his ranch men through a weak place lit the wall This makes a lump at the Small time troupers of the river point where the organs force their showboats who drift to the Chelsea way toward the surface f One of the weak Ipots Is lri the boarding houses for the winter have been saddened by the passing of midline between the muscles "Miss Callie" She was the widow that pass from the endlarge of the chest of the proprietor of French's Float- downward Another common ing Sensation one of the first and for a rupture is In the groin atplace the grandest of the mud flat theatres bottom of the abdominal cavity Her picturesque career and the show Still another common place Is in boat she dominated axe supposed the sex organs to have threaded Edna Ferber's A surgeon operates on these con"Show Boat" ditions first by pushing bac£ the organs which extrude then finding Damon Runyan did not attend the the weak spot and sewing the tissues together to make a solid walLopening of the play which he In the Injection method the exbut his son in white tie and tails did Runyon is reputed to truding tissues are pushed back: have spent the evening at his favor- then a substance which sets up Inite relaxation coffee drinking at a flammation or irritation is injected nearby tavern His effort received to cause inflammatory reaction in mixed reviews but likely on the the- the tissues and cause them to heal ory anything Runyon writes is Inter- together If a hernia Is strangulated it esting box office receipts Jumped steadily the first week So much so tends to become gangrenous so that tne wen Known Runyon mask broke the complication of strangulation Is into a faint smile At least this was most serious ' not following the custom of most — plays recently open and close in the same week HEALTH TALKS Lloyds convinced that cedure Thus the case can go on almost endlessly to the amazement of all who are not informed on the intricacies of the law nt 1 European war is coming charges seventy-five per cent to insure against it three to one and a high premium to insure English reservists against war service Italians have for British men of war Anprepared American' ship of the Dollar line hearipri few n1c yesterday was warned to keep away irom mat port because of "mines' planted in the neighboring waters One of those mines could send any British to the bottom as proved in the last war ments If the court refuses "a new trial another appeal to the supreme court on the conviction is within' the range of court pro- ' dlL -- by Ciano Mussolini's scoring three direct hits on the Aduwa governor's palace The Italian army now within twelve miles of Aduwa is carrying out Mussolini's promise to wipe out memory of Italian defeat at Aduwa forty years ago TJOW technicalities can block and delay is seen in the Welling case On June 28 Secretary of State Milton H Welling was convicted on a charge of having presented to the state board of examiners a false salary claim for $100 in behalf of Golda Richards wife of a former employe of the j secretary of state's office At the time the attorney general gave an opinion that the secretary would not be compelled to relinquish his office until sentence was pronounced ah appeal was taken to the supreme' court which delayed the sentence j Now with the supreme court holding that the complaint was valid- the case goes back to the district court and the forecast is made that a motion for a new trial will be entered Then will follow extended argu- uni-ifor- ni irmr w supsr-dreadnaug- mJ - chinchilla and dazzling bracelets From her long' jade holder she blew out the stub of a cigaret gave cavalier swirl to her cape and stepped Inside But what got me was the Jap chauffeur with & slight twist of waxed mustache and a pince nez O yes the car door monogram in lavender with white piping was Y R i NEW YORK Oct 9 — A pert little movie house called the Cameo a few steps from Broadway on 42nd street Is the center of exiled Russian life in the metropolis Here films are chiefly those made In the Soviet Republic and picturing the struggle of the workers headquarters in Ethiopia tells of a uura DomDarament oz Aduwa by nine huge Caproni bomblncr olanes son-in-la- IT'S iV Mclntvre Scattered Little Wars A Shot at a Bird COURT DELAYS Yesterday five Nazis wearing the of storm troopers invaded1 the garment district of the big city They displayed their swastika flags and were set upon by lOOOj Jews The police had to be called to live' them from a severe beating New jYork City reflects many of the bitter antagonisms of the old world - :mv W Mines for Dreadnoughts Be Cnnninf Be Savage - lerites By George Clark By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright 1935 King Feature Syndicate Inc) again if we are to understand the real nature of the problem that faces us With our productive plant our natural resources our inventiveness and our skilled energy we could make this :nation of ours incomparably the richest ever dreamed of richest in the sense that the ordinary undistinguished man could have more comforts more luxuries and more safeguards in his daily life than even the kings of the earth had a few generations ago To do this however we cannot stop where we are We do not as of today possess We possess the enough wealth for it means of producing that wiealth— but the wealth itself we have not got What the Brookings report amounts to is simply a plain reminder that the way to make ourselves rich is to set our productive machinery to work at top speed More goods and lower prices —there is an avenue down which we can progress toward that nationally desired goal a more abundant life 1 SIDE GLANCES " 4 - ' ( RailwayExpress NAT I ' iAGENCY INC ONWLD E R A I L - ' A -- ' ' I R S E R V- ICE |