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Show UTAH STATESMAN , Educational Editorial Comment Liberty - PEEVED? ir Utah gtatrsman In the statutes duly made and provided there is a section which gives to all attorneys the right to designate the newspaper in which their legal notices shall be published. This statute further provides that the county officers having to A Democratic state newspaper, published every Saturday at Salt Lake City, Utah, devoted to progressive ideas and to promotion of do with the placing of such notices shall publish them in the paper i (Endorsed by the Democratic State Central Committee) designated by the attorney in the matter. The sheriff of Salt Lake county doesn't appear to recognise this statute at least when it comes to heeding the wishes of attorneys who designate The Utah Statesman to publish their notices of sheriff the progress and prosperity of the state and party. Office Boom 111 Atlas Block, Salt Lake City, Utah i , sales. FREDERICK L. BAOBT, Editor 0. S. GODDARD, Business Manager Attorneys who have sent their notices of this sort to the sheriff with instructions to publish them in The Statesman have been surEntered as Second Class Matter, July 18, 1928, at the Postofflce at Salt Lake prised to find them in some other paper. City, Utah, under the act of March 1, 1879. One attorney went to the office and demanded that the notice be given to The Statesman. He was told, he reports, that "it couldn't Contributions who seem to have felt that the parents arc Incapable of giving anything which will really be of benefit to the school, or If tbe parents are unusually active they may have been considered aa obstructionists. in many cases the whole responsibility, of tbe meetings have rested on the teachers, adding a hardihlp to their already heavy burden. The , parent could, however, without etepping Into the duties of the teacher In the least .make great headwith the school way by and showing the teachers that the viewpoint of the parent le necessary In the training of the children. It la an organisation in which any, parent, no matter what her training, might act, and at the same. time she would In a sense be going to school herself. A program for n years work, arranged by the nstlena! council, seems so that we print.lt here. The attitude of the parent toward the schools has very definite results In the It may be development of citlsrna. the saving salt In the chlld'a educaworth-whil- done." We just wonder if the sheriff is peeved because of what The tion. Statesman has had to say about law. enforcement in Salt Lake coun- The be ADVERTISING RATES Per Column Inch $1.00 ty and certain angles of the professional bonding business. LEGAL NOTICES Notice of Assessment, 5 times. Delinquent Notices, per column inch. Probate Notices, 2 times. Notice to Creditors, 4 times. Summons, 5 times $5.00 .50 3.00 4.00 5.00 VOTERS DEPARTMENT WOMAN Sponsored by. the Salt Lake Womens Democratic Club Phone Wasatch 852 Edited by Mrs. D. 'VINDICATED X. Draper - Justice out, the must handle the family finances and budget She has to understand something of chemistry these days, or her family sickens for luck of vitamins. She must also be n practical cook, a seamstress, know the value end wearing qualities of textiles, furniture, utensils, and floor coverings. She must understand first aid and be a practical nunc. e e e e , . An Agricultural School for Girla. 4. The government of Brittany has established an agricultural school for the farm girla of France, In whleh tbe girls ere taught gardening, dairying, the cure of poultry and pigs and the cure of a dormitory and a dining room. e, Where is the Club for the Family? There an dube for father, mother, slater and brother, but when la thq So asks William dub for the PROGRAM OUT LINED FOR ONE Mathew H family?wuo writes In tbe elderly, YEAR Dearborn Independent of the menace ' KNOW YOUR SCHOOL of the coming generation to America., Mr. Holderty la a leader In the work September: - Know the Teachers of the Christian ftmlly crusade, holdmeeting. ing that the greatest error In modern life Is the development of the IndividQuestion box: What can the association do to help the ual ns a unit of aodety, rather than of teachers! the family. The menace faced In the October: homing generation he points out, Know the School Curriculum might be enough to destroy America. Speakers: A teacher, new methods In teaching, A parent, how the child's study hab- Earnings of its can be aided by the home. Natior.nl Congress of Parents and Teachers parent-teach- er Women in For centuries "Justice" has been portrayed to the world as being blind.- Symbolically, the inference has been that those who administer the business of the stately woman carrying the scales and sword, are required to be blind to the identity of culprits or alleged culprits Our Slogan : ' Every Read er & Contributor l Next Meeting cf Democratic Club Will h? at Civic Center holders who objected saying that It would necessitate the changing or the g methods of In the conn ty ortlces. The mayor also gave some of the outstanding rcromplishments of. his such as the redeeming The Salt Lake Womans Democratic administration, of bonds outstanding to the amount of Ocon next Its bold will club meeting fl.470,000 while previous to this time Civic In tober 18th at 12:30 oclock the entire history of the city, only Hotel. Center instead or tbe Newh-'uB847,000 In bonds had been redeemed. This meeting will begin with a lunch- All bonds issue since that time have eon at which It Is hoped to have as a been sertol bonds which have been reClarke. Mrs. deemed as have matured. Salt speaker Mrs. T. Basil writer of In- - Lake City, they and Is a Clarke speaker according to the mayor, has doth who thougn ternatlonal note, very small bonded indebtedness as the south, spent many yearn peiore . coqipared with other cities of the the war In Belgium. Since that time aniB cia(s. He regretted tie feet she has given much of her time to the yjtt tll Tgtr accomplishments of the officers are really ao little known, furthering of Democratic campaigns.' city winand emphasized the feet that a great and expects to spend the coming he done by spending some ter In Weehlngton for that purpose. or this good might The committee In charge money In acquainting the peoplfi at follows: luncheon le . ; home with the unusual advantages tWi clty. He lUted that fered Mrs. George Maycork. BurMrs. R. Ken Thomaa. Mra. T. T. many of the loose statements made by uninformed people should be thorough ton. Mrs. Byron Nebeker. All women who are Interested may ly checked, end particularly with remake reservations before Wednesday gard to the amount of money spent comm'ttee or by the city. In 1920 he said the dtv noon with any of 9252.000.975, while in 1927 with with the president of the club. Mrs. res- spent the Increased sise of the city end all Ernest Holmes. The price of one j the new Improvements, the ervation wlU be fifty cents. Mrs. turers were (206 000.000. Following Mrs. Clarke's cltv i phe mayor stated that women as a James H. Wolfe, candidate for and group could do much toward the commissioner, will epeak briefly of business i mouldlnir of sentiment, which after all ia the moving factor in the betterment ! of a city, and that any officer, no mat ter how efficient and honest he may bp Is handicapped by opposition of public sentiment. book-keepin- brought before them on various charges. The general acceptation has not been, heretofore, that Justice is. mentally blind as well as physically so. But in the light of very recent events, some of our less patient citizens may be pardoned if Jt they concluded that in this particular section of Utah, Justice is not only physically and mentally blind, but "dead from the ears up as welL This in spite of the fact that those charged with its administration hereabouts, are always to the fore and yelling loudest, upon occasion, that "the law must be vindicated." Witness some of the ti expressions from the local bench during the recent agitation, and tren consider the case of Truman Ferry. On July 15 this year, Truman Ferry, his brother, William, and one McIIenry Imellwitz, sped north on the Ogden highway in a drunken stdpor after an all night jambouree. Crash In the twinkCalvert (Viler had left ling of an eye the soul of innocent his body, while that of his father hung by a thread for several days. What, one instant, had been a happy smiling boy with a lifetime ahead of him, the next instant became a bloody sacrifice to the great god Hooch, in the person of a full grown man whose utility as a citizen has, reputedly, never risen far above the zero mark. The boy whom Truman Ferry killed is just as dead ns the man whom Sacco and Vanzetti were convicted of killing. In the one case there is no question of the identity of the killer, while in the other, seven years'of litigation attest the fact that the identity of the killers was at least open to question. In spite of this question of idenMayor Neslen Addresses tity, Sacco and Vanzetti paid with their lives and justly so .if they League of Women were guilty. Truman Ferry, for an admitted killing no less wanton in its way is given six months in jail by the same jurist who, com- Voters ti menting on the question, concluded that "THE LAW In an address before the Salt Lake MUST BE VINDICATED." T.eague of Women Voters held at Civic Center on Ortober 6th. Mayor C. Car True, that by reason of the circumstances, there is a legal differ- ence Neslen answered some very pracence between these two killings, just as certainly as there is a social tical questions asked him by the mem difference between the killers. In the one case the killers were a bers. As to his attitude on a woman's run couple of poor "Dagos," while in the other the role was played by nlng for the position or city commls Women Mayor Neslen said: the dapper scion of a family of wealth and influence. But was the aloncr, as such should not he elected es memlegal difference in these two cases such, that it is anything like com- bers. hut there Is s place In the c!tv for women and n woman haa parable to the difference between a death sentence and a judgment council as much right In the city commiss'oi of six months in jail? as s man. other conditions being the Was Justice blind, and is the Law Vindicated in the Ferry rqsef ume. The mayor decried the present hsbl Or did someone raise the blindfold from the eyes of Justice suffic- if crying for tax reduction in general the people receive morr said for he iently to permit the lady to glimpse the social status, and perhaps the returns for the Item of taxes than fo wealth and influence, of the relations of the culprit at the Barf any other expenditure which Is made the aver from the statement of District Attorney E. A. Bogeis, According toInhisSaltstatement Judging Lake contribute? age family that Ferry's appearance before Judge Ritchie last Monday was a about 844.00 or the taxes he pays toFor this complete surprise to him, and that he had not been informed that ward the upkeep of the city. (44.00 a year this family receives: Ferry would appear Monday instead of Wednesday, there is room 1. Fire protection. Police protection. for suspicion that the law was not exactly permitted in this case, to Protection of health. steer its own course toward vindication. Playgrounds and supervised play A free library. Six months in jail is the usual sentence for stealing a loaf of Lighting system. bread or a sack of flour to feed ones hungry children, or a sack of Garbage collection. coal to keep one's family from freezing to death when one is out Street building end repairs. Free concerts and entertainof a jqb. It is the sentence for possession of liquor, some of which, ments. i The amusement budget for three incidentally, was found in the death car driven by Ferry. months for the average family would By what process of reason or logic, or by what precept of Justice done cost more than 44 00. the usual sentence for a pickpocket should have been handed out to Mayor Neslen advocated the payment of taxes in Installments Instead a can only be explained on the theory that of obviating the necessity of Justice has so far recovered her eyesight as to warrant her entry into the yearly, citys borrowing yearly large at high interest rates with politics with a seat on the Republican bandwagon. Either that, or the amounts which to run the city until the ta blind lady is being crucified oq the cross of wealth and influence. money Is received. He stated that thr e Sacco-Vanzet- 1 - Sacco-Vanzet- drunken-driver-kille- r, -- 0. J. ID t A School for Parents and Teachers. At a meetlrg of the Salt Lake Coun :11 cf Parents and teachers held s Civic Center on October 4th, announce ment was made of n school for parent md teachers to be held In connection .vith. the coming Utah Educatlonr convention. This school will be coi ucted by Mrs. Hugh Bradford, thir president of the National Con Tress of Parents and Teachers, wh was also present at the recent meet 'ng Mrs. Bradford is n very charm ng. well Informed woman with a per lonallty which Is particularly suitable or the very diplomatic work of handing the Ideas of both parents and etchers. Her presence here should e given more publicity among par nts for a real treat will be in store or any who attend the sessions of the choot. At the meeting last Tuesday Mrs Bradford very ably explained the pur posos of the national state and local organizations and emphasised the nec wslty or s definite project for each rears work. She gave the following pro ests for a good parent-teache- r gram. 1. It must be Interesting, but should lira be Instructive. 2. It must have n real message of wrent-teache- r service to the commu nlty. i 3. It must move the roup to do something of rvalue. orThe name of the ganisation haa recently been changed o the National Congress of Parent parent-teiche- -- Parent-Teache- and Teachers, which la considered more fitting. There la no reason why the organ zstlon should not be n very live one greatest opposition which he had me n some sections, consldertblqjsck o! to this plan had been from n few office nterest has been shown by teachers -. OH MO, DEAR! VUED0B QiAO Tt HAVE NOV), BUT YOU pour VAMTtt BE A PARAWTE t, a 5 ! U. S. are Below Average Wages paid to Men. November: . Know the School Sports "yrvTTgjg.mr vt? Speakers: values Boys physical director, moral In athletics. , Girls physical director, wbut pbysl cal training .does for the girls. December: Know the Social Activities of Your School. Speakers: Parents and teachers. . Leisure hours. In commenting on n report of the National Industrial conference, the Womens Bureau of the U. 8. Department of Labor stated that from a survey of twenty-sidifferent types .of Industries, where men. workers were divided Into skilled and unskilled x groups but women Workers are placed a single group, the weekly Responsibility of par- lq Chaperoning: earnings for skilled males was (31.48, teachers. and ents and those for unskilled males were January: . 824.49, but for women workers skilled School of Your Know the Needs and unskilled alike the average was What material aid can the parent only (17.37. teacher association give? asaocla r How can the parent-teache- tlon form favorable public opinion for the school? How can home and school February: Know the National Congress, of Par nts and Teachare In Its Relation to Your School. " day. Birthday celebrachild-welfar- e tion. March: Know the Laws Which Govern Your . School. Speakers: Superintendent or prin cipal. Legislative chairman Laws governing organisation and conduct of schools Needed legislation April: Know Whet the School Has Done for Your Child Appreciation meeting Speakers: The principal or n teacher, What the school has endeavored to do The parents How the school hss helped our children" (Remarks mav be written on slips, collected and read aloud, followed by general discussion.) May: Know What Promotion . Speakers: Teachers. Grades and marks. Graduation plans: Msana How parents can assist. Parents and teachers. Graduation costumes. What consti- tutes s suitable dress? Social functions. National leaflet: (References: Echool Education, Chsrl O. Williams; Child Welfare Msgaslne. 1926-27.- ) (Prepared by the National Bureau of Program Srvlce.) Miss Carlson at '.BBS Senator Shipstead Talks on Prosperity. Senator Henrik Shlpatead declares that the farmer and wage-earne- r in In- dustry are not sharing In the Industrial prosperity of the country with the business man. He cites government statistics to prove his contention. He writes: I have shown by tne governments own census reports that farm Incomes have decreased 48 per cent In six years and labor In the mill and factory le producing 84 per cent more of the finished product than it did seven years ago. The total average monthly payroll has decreased more than 80 per cent since 1920 and employment has decreased more than 18 per cent since 1920. Due to new machinery I find Industry is getting n much larger production with less employment of labor and aa n result Income and value of the Industrial corporations have increased 70 per cent In four years as revealed by the statistics of the department of commerce. Consequ-"l- T we have this situation: leas employment smaller monthly total aver'- -' payroll but 84 per cent more production by labor. Farm Income 42 per fore Judge Ritchie In the absence of cent lees than 1920 farmers feeding the Industrial section of the country for less than the cost of production with an increase In Income by the lending corporations of an average of 70 per cent This snows that the farmer and the laborer In Industry are not sharing In the Industrial prosperity of the country. This Information should definitely kill the propaganda that haa been spread charging labor with the cause of the high cost of living. B B The League of Nations Washington. Miss Dorothv Carlson of the East High school. Salt Lake City, will take part with four other school orators In the finals of the International Oratorical Contest. This contest will be held October 14th In Washington. D C. Miss Carlson, who was the only girl among the seven finalists In the U. S. National Contest, won first place and will represent the United States In the coming meet Tbe other contestants are all boys and will represent France. Canada, England and Mexico. The winner will receive beautiful silver loving cup. Now in Session. The League of Nations which Is now meeting at Geneva In eighth annual session, la just now occupied with elec-- , tlon of new members of the council. The League le composed of two bodies, the assembly and the council, the intter peing the smaller. The council, which is the governing body, consist of five permanent and members.' The permanent members are representatives of Great Britain. France, Italy, Japan and Germany. The members are elected annually. Canada haa this year become a nonHousewife Job permanent member of the council, this being the first representative from the Difficult. North American continent Two other new members were added, Cuba and The housewife haa a more dlfficul Finland and the other alx are China, lob than moot business men, declarer Colombia, Chile, Romania, Poland, and Helen Christine Bennett In Liberty Holland. Belgium was 'defeated for In the first place, the writer points Very . |