| Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE jpjejklt £ake tribune ' ISSUED ' rVKRT MORNINO BT THE BALT LAKE TRIBUNE FUBU8HIHO Salt Lake City Utah Tuesday Morning October 15 1935 “Murder Most Foul and Strange” rrtRAGEDIES are enacted in strange stage settings No place seems too rembte or peaceful to escape such horrors In all the west there is no more tranquil homelike atmosphere than that enjoyed by the kindly residents of Bountiful Utah A hamlet such as Goldsmith described “with lovely bowers of in- nocence and ease” or as Thomson traced ‘‘a village embosomed soft in trees” Here murder ran amuck on Sunday eve-ln- g with a bottle in one hand and a pistol in the other A demon beat to a pulp a defenseless woman poured bullets into her bruised and bleeding body as it writhed in the convulsions of a painful death assassinated an inoffensive man and wife who were accidental and horrified witnesses of the atrocious deed fled from the shambles with the blood of his vic- tims on hands and clothing and wound up his homicidal orgy by shooting two men casually encountered on the highway It requires an effort of imagination to conceive of such wanton brutality such a bestial lust for blood as this rabid creatureof "human intelligence and hydrophobic ferocity displayed in the vicinity of Bountiful on Sunday evening There — Is HO explanation that a rational mind can accept Either the murderer is a man with the brainof a beast or a beast in the form of a man Mad wolves that prowl through lanes and fields 4 I to kill for the sake of killing are dispatched without hesita- tion or regret ed a Once here-was persons- " I sometimes changed to “werwolves” and glutted unnatural ap- petites with cannibal feasts The fiend who kills without the r urge of an abnormal— craving is even worse than the monster ' I of the middle ages I Drunken frenzy is no excuse Insanity is not a valid de-- f fense Men who are sane enough to drive cars to carry pistol3 to shoot accurately to escape from the scene of slaughter to I L try to remove evidence of guilt are sane calculating and every bit as dangerous deserving of annihilation as rabid wolves muzzles that whole comwith bloodshot eyes and munities turn out to slay With characteristic efficiency the Salt Lake City police picked up a likely suspect promptly Whether he is guilty or nof remains to be determined If his capture is an error he wiU undoubtedly be liberated If he is guilty the law 'should be allowed to take its course Inadequate and tedious though it Is made to appear Occasionally by some lawyers who care more for making records than for seeing justice done by Mr Fire Prevention Instructions mil rd him Hauptmann’s ‘Sentence Upheld BRUNO u RICHARD HAUPTMANN the convicted kidnaper slayer of the Lindbergh baby who was arrested on the 19th of September 1934 will again be taken before the trial judge to hear the sentence of death pronounced While jurors are always reluctant to recommend the severest penalty and judges are willing to give a condemned prisoner the benefit of every doubt and of every stratagem permitted in the practice of law the crime of kidnaping especially where the victim Is an inoffensive innocent jhild andjnurder has been added to the infamy of abduction is a form of fiendish brutality which the American people are determined to stamp out as ruthlessly and as thoroughly asfrontiersmen were wont to suppress horse stealing In the early days of the old west The average citizen like the jurors who hear the testimony and thd judge who pronounces sentence looks upon kidnaping as a serious matter and a menace to every home where cupidity or spite may snatch a victim from the cradle or playground The sympathy Which murderers sometimes awaken and the morbid admiration occasionally bestowed on highway robbers are not for the kidnaper He stands alone in a hostile world where even felons revile and accomplices betray him ' ' ‘ - A to bo Our Readers Forum Rules Editor Tribune: While it probably a very delicate situation it Is doubtful if this disturbance in Europe will amount to much especially if the United States keeps out of it Europe has always been a country of unrest ant Italy is only following the example of England and France who when they needed more room and a larger trade area forcibly took possession of poorly protected territory OP The BEUIGERENT NATIONS 50 and will jo at Their own risk S2S§aTg?“ — 'to — a tm Senator from O ANDPIT tfkm 1m sla arf New York Day by Day -- -- -By O O McINTYRE NEW YORK Qct 14— The although his heart was set est privately owned individual on flying General Pershing told acreage east of the Mississippi lies him the best thing Rickenbacker curiously enough between New could do was to get his general to York and Philadelphia It is the and from places as quickly as pos' famous Batsto estate of the Joseph sible So one sunny morning Eddie Llpplncotts members of the old zoomed the general up to the front Quaker book publishing house In lines at a elip the City of Brotherly Love And the general immediately trans While belonging to the younger ferred him to flying Be content If you can pay the rent On a rambling shack for two What good is a palace If you've tabes dorsalis of Llpplncotts they still Or a blood pressure built for generation cling to “thee” and "thou" The estwo! tate comprises 148000 acres in New —Larry Geraghty William Penn Jersey 50 miles from Philadelphia Points An Idea of its magnitude is gained by the fact three rivers run through Looking back at my life since I It arrived at the age of discretion I The parcels of land were gotten I am Inclined to feel discouraged Its vast whole years have done my best to make sitting together Into member of the or lying in the sun or shade as the ago by a to generate hydroWharton clan as warranted respectemperature Detable as the active sports But 1 electric power for Philadelphia It is practically the spite immensity forced am through native honesty revenue enough to admit failure coming from the cranberry crops to Apparently most of my friends pay are determined that the only way Thetaxes ancient manor is unchanged to spend leisure time Is to labor with tower on top where a feudal Take Leon and Arthur Sweet W J Wharton could eye the surrounding Sam Halloran F C Richmond through his telescope Even Kennedy Vern Tracy Orval Adams golngsoh the hand forge that made ammuniGus Backman and Colonel Sweeney tion during the Revolutionary war and for example foozling Sllclhg oil I’ve trailed them up hill and down remains Retiring guests carry dale at the Country club trying to lamps Cooking is done by wood get a tan like Rudy Orlob's and lbddle Rickenbacker In early days my score under 130 And all I have of the war was General Pershing’s to show for It Is a case of sun poifar-seei- soning fallen arches and curvature of the spine or golfer’s stoop Now when 1 go out there I sit in an easy chair under the canopy at the first tee while they drive off and then a couple of hours later amble over to the eighteenth green where under the shade of a tree or a huge umbrella I placidly await their return Sometimes Claud Frdted or Chet Pratt will keep me company At the Fort Douglas course I do the same thing only with still less exertion There I don't have to move can see the devotees of the great and return god Exercise leave from the same spot kp ut of the war but failed because insisted on our trade rights and the best of his ability to keep us! he freedom of thu seas regardless of wishes of tho" nations at war the public and to few newspapermen the When England blockaded Gerown outside his staff Yet probabmany’s yiort she retaliated wth ly no editor is held up to students of on vessels schools of journalism as the news her submarine attacks and the ports English supplying dfgenius of his time ao pridefully as result was that American he He built up his staff in the role American citizens of an easy boss Once hired by him were sunk and killed Long before we entered the a man was rarely dismissed And World war propaganda designed to never for boozing prejudice the people in favor of or the other had been floodAnother white-mane- d war horse one side paof the magazine shops is the editor ing the nation Preparedness were marching in all the rades S 75 emeritus John Phillips At war War he is considered on of the agile leading cities demanding news entering the United States editorial minds and his advice is was carefully censored and selected sought by leading editors when they allies Americans lending strike manuscript snags He reds by the to England and Francs depractically every short story and money to protect serial published and knows the manded armed support their “investment in war” We did almost weaknesses and of strength not want war but the continual every man in the writing game He interference in trade and the waris as vigorous for his years as the v making propaganda finally brought average man at 50 us into the “war to end war” Two aid lion Unitsd States soldiers went-t—Postcard from Yuma- - Arfzon France and more thart one hunjust stepped out of a plane here with dred thousand died there Their the only girl and got off a little mot was to make the world safe which I thought if I do say rather sacrifice — safe from warl for good But she topped it by remark- Havedemocracy we forgotten? ing: The old sense of Yuma h “BERNICE GIBBS ANDERSON baby’?" Corinne (Copyright 1935 McNaught A D T: See rules 3 and 4 i Syndicate) or taking an oath of allegiance to the government of the United States is a great privilege rather than a humiliation But of course Pm not a Boston professor or a religious fanatic Erte the artist who draws those bizarre covers for Harper’s Bizarre —shoot I mean Bazaar is con sidered the youngest looking man for his years on either side of the Atlantic Although he has been drawing for the Bazaar 18 years he looks today a youth of not more than 25 His color contrasts are expressed even in his workshop He has one studlojof gpfftl And vivid red where he works in a house robe of BIG AWARDS for Largest and Smallest DeerNDElIc Heads Here’s your chance to win enough CASH to PAY EXPENSES hunting trip! Twelve big prizes— enough to give EVERYBODY chance! of your DEER 1st Prize $75 Cash ELK $75 Cash black lac Among Newj York’s pronounced movie fans Is the octogenarian editor of Scribner’s Mr Bridges who attends three movies a week Topping him Is the youthful editor Herbert Mayes who :es a picture every evening James Montgomery Flagg is among the late audiences dropping in around 11 and Ewipg the photographer is a Galloway midnight visitor being one of the enthusiasts who often works until that hour at his office Maks up rout mind N OW to win ons of these priaei ! You can do ir— even if you tel only a SMALL head! Contest u open to every one Cull NOTHING io cntci Writ! TODAY for tompltlt dttaih! juit lend your name and address and we will send you s folder (hat givei yon fall information IN ADpiTION to direction! for proper care of your trophies Ibi fitld Send your oame io NOW ! lOJ BROADWAY JONAS BROS DENVER COLO A diversion that is the author’s meat may prove the book publisher’s poison That is the running of a full Coslength novel in a magazine mopolitan is doing it starting off with a Kathleen Norris mystery as Is also the Red Book Several others ' are reported planning to follow CANDIDATES FOR NOMINATION FOR THE OFFICES OF a MAYOR AND OF COMMISSIONERS Newspaperdom's shyest editorial executive ia becoming in retirement FOUR-YEATERM one of the most publicized members At the Primary Election to Be Held October 22 1935 of his craft He Is Carr Van And a so long the news chleftan of the New (Place s cross In the square preceding the names ot the persons yon favor York Times Born in Georgetown as candidates for ths respective positions) Ohio and moving in the usual miFOR MAYOR gratory graduations ot the roamer he eventually landed on the Times where he remained 30'years as managing editor He was not known to Official Primary Ballot --- 1 R Money to Loan - ii" Creel Indictment From Woman conflagrations Chief Walter S Knight of the local fire department supervised the distribution of 20000 pamphlets containing suggestions as to the prevention of fires in homes and the presents tion of motion pictures shown at schools and civic association meetings illustrating causes of fires and measures essential to quench them Statistics were presented and should be preserved' reciting the following astounding faqts: There are three fires every minute in the United States Every year 1500000 fires are started over the nation The national fire loss the last five years was $5000000000 ‘ ' costing 50000 lives 24 hours property-los-t Every bjrfireTosts $48000 'The seriousness of this condition is emphasized by the number of lives lost in preventable fires every year Of those who die by fire 1 5 per cent perish 1ft homes of these being I'm Traveling on The ships Ladieand gentlemen of the Republican party! The man I am about to suggest as a possible candidate for the presidency is a man for whom already several states have gone over A man who is rapidly becoming first in the hearts of men women and 'hildren throughout the length and breadth of the Strong land A man who in every sense Comes of the term is a “natural” Ladies If wouldn’t their I ways change and gentlemen I give you Major An equally strong Indictment Gosh they enjoy them It is only that I Bowes! comes from Mrs Eugene Meyer (Afterthought: who in an address before the bespeak the same respectability for maybe he’s a Democrat!) National Recreation association sitting as a means of enjoying at Chicago after charging that leisure as thsy claim for sweating the ultimate purpose of the N Y A on the links And I believe that conducted in moderation it is just Is federal control over education saya this: “Not only would I like as healthful Somewhere I read to make the point that education something about the great economy Is not properly an activity of the of nature Nothing is wasted Then federal government I should like why waste time in physical exerto make another which concerns tion? One can reduce his equator you almost as much— namely more readily by taking in less than that to the extent the federal gov- he uses up ernment concerns Itself with THE course of instruction given residents of Salt Lake City IN experienced firemen many object lessons were cited to prove the need of care and intelligence in the prevention of ' lnmwwwii'1 George Grasping these facts ths general feeling about the N Y A has been that It Is just another phase of the more abundant life which will be costly but otherwise negligible— In brief However there are typical some who believe that this scheme is not only wasteful but dangerous that In it 11 potentialities for a far more insidious governmental propaganda machine than has existed before that it is really the start of federal control of education that ambitious brain trusters behind the N Y A regard It a preliminary to a great federal department of 'education which will dominate the states and influence both teacher and pupil Recently from various sources evidences of an appreciation of thli have been given From Alabama comes the report of & speech made there not long ago by the gifted Aubrey as N Y A administrator In which hs urged ratification of the child labor amendment a species of administration propaganda particularly abhorrent to believers in the rights of the states and certainly not a proper function of the N Y A From Professor George Drayton Strayer Columbia comes a warning of the effects-o- f centralization ‘of education and ha asks these pointed questions: “Do those responsible for the N Y A desire to Influence or control the Ideas and Ideals of ths youth of the country? Will the N Y A seek to censor the books used In teaching? Is it possible that this undertaking the C C C camps the educational program of the A A A and the work of other groups of federal agents are all part of an attempt to control the thinking of the American people?” Me-C- arl -- American citizens ARE WARNED AGAINST Hopkins’ Abundant Life’ - Fire prevention week Is always a period of useful education for old and young This year it has been especially well con- ducted not only in Salt Lake City but throughout the country The people of Utah are to be complimented for the interest taken and congratulated for having such an able corps of Instructors " IMPLEMENTS OF WAR WILL BE ENFORCED ex- Aspect of ‘More m children- Mr AND AMMUNITION ARMS spending spender of great talent whd as Mr Hopkins’ assistant has earned the title of ‘‘Million a Minute Aubrey" His spending record Mr Creel points out Is all the more remarkable because until a short while ago was under the impression that (15 constituted a “swollen forc tune" from the national 'capital recites the acquisition of 56 cuspidors for the new quarters of the supreme court at a total cost of $1283 an Overage of a little less than $23 each An autocrat of the 14th century is quoted by Dr Thomas Fuller as saying: “So long as X live 1 will spit on my floor" No such person will —be tolerated in the home of our highest tribunal f These vessels utensils or receptacles are not intended to be 'altogether ornamental They have their uses When tourists from the “Tobacco Road" for example call to pay their respects to the tribunal they will undoubtedly appreciate these conveniences once the nqvelty is explained to them They may even indulge in 'a little target practice or expectorate as musicians by playing a spittoon for the ermine-cla- d audience t No one believes this costly equipment was installed for the justices themselves True they are supposed to ruminate but not necessarily by chewing They may even hold poor marks-tnin contempt of Court Their discretionary powers are not ciritscribed The president cannot tell them what to do Even General Hfigh Johnson gave it up ‘ The dnly person who has the slightest chance to interfere with these floor plans is the comptroller of the currency may refuse to permit the disbursing agent to settle the account Besides he may find that an outlay of $23 each lor cuspidors may be unconstitutional one-thi- as on EMBARGO AN “stooge” and admiringly declared item has been added to the long list of lavish exANOTHER A dispatch penditures of an extravagant administration i WAR pensive direcbusitionless ness with a fine mouth-fillin- g name which fits well Into the propaganda picturing Mr Roose- -' velt as the champion of “human rights" and all those who disagree with him as for "property rights” The avowed purpose of the scheme is to provide wrk Mencken A ITALIAN-ETHIOPI- IN THE taxpayers’ money On the surface that is what It seems — a vague ed The High Cost of Cuspidors i tSictestneutrautv their mushier plans education and recreation foV the unemployed youth ot the countryThe trifling sum of $50 000:000 Is allotted for the year and the executive director Is Mr Aubrey Williams described by Mr H L - OBSERVE of v froth-fleck- — ii- WASHINGTON Oct 14 — To nathe most people tional youth administration is a mere label Invented by the workwelfare ers who form ao large a part of the new deal to describe one -- By Is 0CT6 193 forness — Propoganda lor War Youth Movement for the The Forum Woman Warns Against By FRANK R KENT supcrstition-ihab-evil-mind- " - OCTOBER 15 1935 The Costly Lesson We Learned Too Late! The Great Game of Politics CO TUESDAY MOANING ' to activities that extent the structure of our national government must suffer snd be confused if not broken down" "Furthermore" said Mrs Meyer "such federal controls ones established in the educational field are certain to be augmented The recent administration decision to make the C C C camps permanent is only ono ominous portent of what wo map expect It cannot be stated too emphatically that educational freedom will soon bo a myth if education Is allowed to go on tho dole" x i Thus It will bs seen thailhere may be something a greet deal more than mere mush and money In this the latest new deal device for elevating our standards distributing our cash and creating more federal jobs At least some pretty practical people think so (Copyright 1938 Baltimore Sun) Off The Record A defender of the new deal faith accuses a voluble critic of making up statistics as he goea along In other words a big story-teller When I declare that the rest of the family can go on a picnic and get ants in their food and hair while I just stay at home and sit I sun either suspected of being up to some sort of devilment or that I am a victim of a complication of diseases And when I say that I know whit the university eampus looks like without walking around It or that I can admire Mt without desiring to climb to Its top I am presented with the degree of non compos mentis This rushing madly about hither add yon may be all right for those who like It but as for me I prefer my dictionary’s definition of leisure "Free from occupation" NOTES ON THE CUFF DEPARTMENT Arrested glimpse: A little boy about f years of age and bis sister a year or so older stood gazing with longing eyes at a window display of kodaks and cameras Finally his chubby face aglow with excitement the boy entered the store and approaching a clerk said: “Me and my sister have been saving our nickels and pennies until We’ve got almost $3 We want to buy that moving pitcher camera How much is it?” “Ninety dollars” replied the clerk “Gosh!" said the little fellow his chin quivering with disappointment and the light of hop dying in his TERMS THAN EVER You can borrow larger amounts at lower interest with smaller monthly payments which include taxes and insurance -- Tim-panog- os Dallas engineer saya bs has perfected a motor that will run on water Discovering a mala quartet that can Isr anothayjnattec eyes Tm (Copyright 1935 by the North feel enough-t- o American Newspaper Alliance Inc) that giving the salute to our Hag A MORE LIBERAL Under Provisions of The National Housing Act Or Our Other Modern Loan Plans Call for complete information v First Security Trust Co OFFICIAL BALLOT ATTEST: Main Street Opposite the Postoffice Salt Lake City r City Recorder |