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Show THE CITIZEN 8 Illlllllt OBSERVATION PLANE I a - E iiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiuiuuiuiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuimfl Talk Of Shelving Mr. Moyle In Democratic circles the voice of protest against the nomination of Mr. Moyle for the senate is growing audible and articulate. Some say boldly that they would rather have Senator Olson, 'the bounding Bolshevik ol the Rockies, than Mr. Moyle of the many mistakes. Close friends of Mr. Moyle amnit sadly that he committed a titanic blunder in his opening speech of the campaign when he permitted jealousy, spite and the Indurated prejudice of years to get the better of him and goad him into the use of fiery language that almost consumed him on the spot. He almost declared himself out of the running then and there d and the politicians of the Democratic party began to fear that the boomerang would . go clattering destructively through the whole camclear-heade- paign. Then. too. the events at San Francisco took more of the lustre out of the Moyle candidacy. Had McAdoo been nominated the name of Moyle, as his Utah lieutenant, would have been potent from the Great Salt Lake to the Grand Canyon, but in the hour of failure the name of Moyle looks as bedraggled as that of McAdoo himself. .When the state convention was held to select delegates to the San Francisco conclave Moyle was 100 per cent the logical candidate, but dow the politicians are beginning to regard him as logical material for the scrap-heaThey admit, however, that if it is not Moyle they do not know who can make a showing in the senatorial p. - campaign. e Arch-slay- er Who Had In the Chicago case there was not the shadow of an excuse. Wanderer tried to invent one when he said that he killed his wife so that he might go back to the free and easy life of the army and he uttered some inane sentimentalities about the wanderlust that possessed him. But the truth was that he murdered his wife to get the $1,500 she had saved. He persuaded a bum to participate in the robbery and then shot his confederate to death lest he tell on him. It was a crime that revealed a depravity of soul beyond the conception of ordinary men. Such brutality, such utter inhumanity, such a dearth of moral sense and of the slightest throb of sympathy for others, is something the average man cannot sense. It leaves his faculties numbed and confused. been And yet this homicidal destroyer did not drink, nor smoke. Had he not committed a great crime he might have gone on for years apparently a paragon of virtue, the envy of good men who chanced to be slaves to alcohol mur- or drugs or some folly that harmed No Bad Habits Carl Wanderer who killed his in cold blood could not bear to the newspapers lie about him. of the journals stated that he had drinking heavily just before the der. trouble of thinking. But what if he was telling the truth? Criminologists know that some of the most famous criminals did not i Not intoxicants. of ago long partake a Salt Lake man who had maintained a respectable reputation for years and whose habits were excellent turned out to be a desperate bandit who had been robbing gold miners of their bullion at the point of a gun for years. Pat Crowe, who kidnapped the Cudahy boy, did not drink any kind of alcoholic beverage up to the time of his most notable crime. Later be became a sot and an evangelist. Of course, it may be pleaded that such cases prove the rule, but they are not exceptional. The other day a Utah boy lay in wait for his father and shot him to death because his parent had been in the habit of making fun of him. It does not appear that the lad was morally degraded. wife have One Thats a lie, he told the reporters. I never had a drink in my life. I never used tobacco and Ruth was the only sweetheart I ever had. Make that plain. I wasnt under the influence of liquor. A simple explanation of this mental and moral obliquity is that Wanderer himself was prevaricating. It is an explanation which quickly gets us out of difficulties because it saves the themselves only Granting that Wanderer was all that he claimed to be, he had every reason to be in love with life. If he had health and no bad habits he should have been the happiest of men. Not one man in a hundred is so blessed by heaven. For such men the battle of life should be a holiday adventure, but like Carl Wanderer they sometimes throw away heavens best gifts as if they were not worth having. OLD SATSUMA By William L. Schwartz Bent form of creamy, clay, with smile benign, Bright with the sheen of crystal glaze, and robed As Sinims Sage: whose brow and ears, long-lobe- d, Whence the Bring fortune! grace divine Of tracery enameled on your gown That holds mens eyes; that makes them say, and frown: Piece of old Satsuma? From patient hands that washed chosen earths; the ReiFs Special A pure, wholesome cereal beverage Delicious in flavor M & Ki tit In fact, it tastes better than we know of."- any near-beTry a case. Delivered ice I cold to your home er From mellow months of moistly cool repose; Then blent and tempered by six thousand blows; From modellers knife; from glaze; from fires rebirths; The crackled faience to the painter came 111 'd TYNG WAREHOUSES J- Salt Lakel Phone Was. 5521. Vif-- Who traced the lines that brought his master fame. . . . &V in Prince of Old Satsuma! nil Ive bent oer many an ideographic page, CAMPING -- TOURINC But cannot find, to give the men their due, Who made my little Fukurokuju: The nameless potters of a feudal age. Forgotten, now , their secrets; gone, their art! Though I know this, :i Ive found You ihould be equipped with die r ire doe to Nature in lumiy, eeie end coinfer in them the heart . . . Heart of Old Satsuma! Asia. ODE TO YALE STATION. I hear the shout of battle, see the fray I tread a course through the intricate maze. Then past the struggling crowd 1 force my way. My coat is tom; no curse, but God x praise. I got a letter! THIS OUTFIT COMPRISES Xj ABED Li I A CHAIR Dont Follow Strange Gods Industry, Economy, Thrift these are roads on which you can travel to the Promised Land of Prosperity and Success. Keep In the road. Dont heed the siren call that leads to Extravagance, Idleness and Luck. 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