| Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE SDXO IVXRY MORNTNQ LAX BTTHX SALT — — THIBUNX PUBLISHINOI CO in Salt Lake City Utah Monday Morning December 30 1933 ? : 4 WOMAN her literary career after the age of 45 years She contends that women improve with age while men deteriorate although she admits that "the flirtatious age for women is 30 while that of men is 60" Evidently such tendencies are not considered indicative of improvement ’ One observation in “for Life" her latest book seems to merit serious consideration It is the positive declaration' that “a woman’s best years follow her fiftieth birthday anniversary" This may bg£true but what woman passes that milestone on life’s journey? Most ot them take a permanent stand long before traveling quite so far Those who pass that boundary line between youth and middle age and acknowledge It are surprisingly few Yet she maintains that men grow vainer with passing years while women pay less attention to personal appearance An old couplet reminds us that “a man is always as old as he feels while a woman’s as old as she looks" Also it has been said that a "man is not old until he quits looking” This probably means "looking old" No one should fear to cross the border Une of age To grow ' old gracefully and graciously to vaffit through the last valley with a simile and a kindly word to fellow pilgrims to face the sunset with serenity and feel that the western sky reflects happiness good will and hope is to round out a long life with its greatest usefulness "So live that when thy summons comes to join the innumerable caravan that moves to the pale realms of shade" your mind may be purged of vain regrets and useless longings your heart dreed from envy and hatredyour tongue rinsed of comand your hands found clean and unplaints and employed in petty spitework Life should be better after 60 than before better after 60 better °after 70 The most laudable task performed is to increase the sunshine of smiles in a vale of tears A cardinal duty of people in this materialistic age is to cheer and comfort others The highest aim of civilization should be to make the world a better place in which to live' Only when the sun Is sinking toward the western horizon and lengthening shadows are falling ' eastward when sordid yearnings are suppressed may one find time and inclination to do those things which justify one’s brief appearance on earth Life may lose some of its zest and many of its outward charms after 60 but if it shed selfishness and avoid querulous- ness its most useful stage has been reached 1 ( ng ( ng KKBS8BS5SBSSSE9BS9 Young Milne as a Public Enemy fTHE exposure of young Caleb Milne IV' an aristocrat and heir to a large fortune who disappeared for two ‘weeks pretending to be kidnaped while he demanded a large ransom from his wealthy grandfather arouses more contempt than it brings relief No one but a pampered degenerate would resort to such low trickery at any time particularly when strenuous efforts are being put forth by local and federal agents of justice to fid the country of wretches who torture parents and make war on : ' children This craven culprit deserves the severest sentence that an inexorable court can pronounce Without the plea of poverty the threadbare excuse bf Ignorance or the mooted extenuation of heredity this scion of gentility educated talented ambitious with a background of protection and a future of promise descended to the lowest depths of sordid delinquency and hsme ’ ' a public enemy in a class by himself s ' mockof relatives affections the misplaced Preying upon sounda df awakened the public sympathies ing ing the fire alarms of a whole nation deflecting the energies of law enforcement agencies away from other crintes and criminals abusing the vigilance and efficiency essential to the safety and happiness of homes this juvenile malefactor obsessed with insufferable egotism and desire for notoriety has Inflicted incalculable injuries upon the public the courts the iaw'enforce- -' ment officials the fathers and mothers of the little children of " ‘ ' this nation He has cried "wolf" when there was no beast in sight but himself 60 that when an actual kidnaping takes place and a real wolf begins gnawing at a mother’s heart there may be ho prompt response from those who suspect the alarm to be an- “ ' other hoax This young reprobate does not need a lesson— he has been educated He needs punishment and deserves the severest penalty the statutes permit and a judge can inflict Society ought to be permanently protected from the next manifestation of his perverted genius n - t ‘ great-heart- ed 4 - ” ( Novel Aerial Warfare Waging AN citizen may find it necessary to fight fur perAS sonal armed or the security of his home so may nations arm safety for their protection from threatened dangers The manufacture "of explosive uid the construction of bombing planes do not in-- 1 dicate belligerency any jnore than they show preparedness for ' any kind of emergencies A large fleet of modern fighting planes has been authorized by the war department This announcement was received with misgivings by many pacifists throughout the United States People began to wonder if our plans and professions of neutrality were to be disregarded An air squadron may be useful in many ways besides the invasion of other lands It can be employed in combating crime rescuing victims of disaster feeding marooned creatures and repelling attacks by Mother Nature who flies into an ungovernable rage now and then Army planes with complements of explosive bombs are now engaged in a battle with one of the most destructive and defiant volcanoes in the world Mauna Loa has been pouring lava over the island of Hawaii ”200 miles frob Honolulu and a fleet has been sent to save the city of Hilo from extermination A stream of molten rock 200 feet wide is flowing Iteadily down the slope to the seaport and an effort is being made to divert the course of its deadly force which is consuming every living thing it encounters and is only five miles distant from the only water ' “ supply for 75000 people V If the plan proves successful it will haye justified all outlay for the fleet and for fill the ammunition it may require 1 ’ 4 - 1 Special Dispatch to The Salt Lake Tribune (Copyright 1935) D C Dec 29 underitand the putting forward of Senator Borah for the Republican presidential nomina—To tion in Wiscon- tha primary election laws of these states For some 30 dom- inant political element in most Marie Sullivan of the western states has been the progressive Republicans They were represented in the senate by a group of progressive Republican senators varying in number from 10 to 14 The attachment of these senators to tha Republican party was more or less nominal but until 1933 t Hey did not formally identify themselves with the DemocratsIn 1932 however four of tha progressive Republican senators supported Mr Roosevelt as tha Democratic presidential nominee The four were Senators Norris of Nebraska La Folletta of Wisconsin Johnson of California and While Cutting of New Mexico these were the only onei who affirmatively supported Mr Roose-Ve- it most of the other progressive Republican senators took an attitude either of allenca or of tacit encouragement of their followers to vote for Mr Roosevelt Senator Borah remained silent throughout the campaign This attitude of tha progressive Laid to Leaders1 Come back now to the regular Republican leaders Who art backing Senator Borah for ths presidential nomination They are doing this in part for their own They want to get themselves sleeted as delegates to the Republican national convention The best way to get them-- el vea elected le to ‘announce themselves for Senator Borah whether In good faith or for rea-on- a of strategy i By announcing themaelvea for Senator Borah they hope to attract into the Republican primaries many of the progressive Republican voters who in 1932 went into the Democratic ' party Since It Is well known that tho Democrats will renominats Mr Roosevelt there will bs no reason for anybody taking any Interest In the Democratlo primaries Consequently many Democrats in addition to former progressive Republicans may be expected to go to the Republican primaries to vote for Mr Borah for the Republican presidential nomination By this ths regular Republican leaders supporting Mr Borah will bs the better enabled to get themselves elected as delegates to the Republican national convention It Is not Implied that there is anything devious In this strategy Many of the western Republican leaders really would like to see Mr Borah become the nominee They want him u the nominee because they think Mr Bprah would come nearer carrying some of their states than any other Republican And ths Republican leaders want to carry their states for the obvious purpose of helping them selves locally - Question Posed For At this which Senator Borah and his backers will be obliged to meet He may be the to carry tome western atatei but la he the best to carry the whole nation T Hia nomination might suit the local purpose! of western Republican leaders but would it bs ths best possible nomination to head-o- il bring about a clear-cu- t fight agalnt the new deal? Here la a senator who for 30 years hai been continuously identified with the progressive Republicans In the senate "Progressive Republican” Is the clearly ac curate designation of Mr Borah's political affiliation This affilia- best-nomin- nt "The problems of peace” uid Professor Shotwell "have been taken over by practical atatesmen who have developed a new technique" Neutrality Group Professor Shotwell has kept steadily on bis old line Currently he heads a committee drafting a revised neutrality act now being considered by the national peace It would enlarge the conference scope of the act amplifying the power of the president In 1932 Professor Shotwell was for an economic boycott against Japan when It began Its aggression in He defends the League China of Nations and the world court and thinks we should join Professor Of history at Columbia he is the dean of tola profession He is the director of the division of economics and history of the Carnegie endowment for international peace and editor of t® ' vast historical researches into the causes of the World war carried on under the Last October he beendowment came president of the League of Nations association active rather slight in stature fastidiously dressed living amid his books in his chaste colonial mansion at Sudbury Mass and writing books— lots of them — in which the theme of great and sanctified art as a solvent of sin and failure recurs like a classic The British governmental promotif In a stained glass window posal for the abolition of the anIntellectually he falls into the Anne’s feudal “Queen cient pattern of G K Chesterton which brings cheers Bounty” Cathedral Architect Is anfrom the left benches He Is tho architect of the Canounced by an unyielding tory— thedral of St John the Divine in Sir Thomas Inskip Britain’s atNew York Abhorrent to him is torney general the- - suggestion of mass producCoal Royalties cathea of in the building tion state The purchase of coal royworkLove" of dral and pride alties as Sir Thomas explains it manship were wrought into Charwill end the ancient “land tithes” tres and Milan and Notre Dame of taken from the farmer-owneSo it should be here he believes coal lands in the feudal proeven If the work were paced to vision for the support of clergy the slow march of decades or even centuries We are in too much of and nobility It has Itbeen a feud of centuries and odd seems that A hurry He reminds us the the end Is promised not by a St John’s on being spent labor but by a tory government is about the cost of a carry no explanation If we loved gothic TheSir cables Thomas a lawyer educated art and more of us joined in at Cambridge has been In polibuilding beautiful cathedrals we tics since 1906 He was knighted wouldn’t need the battleships— seeking an exthat Is Dr Cram's earnest and In 1922 Persons planation of his stealing the sovigorous lay preaching cialists’ stuff would address him Of ancient New England stock at Knockmaam Portpatrick born in Hampton N H and Corn Hill Farm Wigtownshire graduated from Princeton and Foreham Hants England He’s Williams he began the practice a justice of the peace at Wigtownshire-chaof architecture in Boston nearly racteristic of England 50 years ago later forming the He where important men take a hand of Cram & Ferguson firm In home town affairs Day-by-D- ay started out by making attractive drawings of a new church and --By O 0 McINTYRE sending the sketches to prominent Off NEW YORK Dec 29— Diary:the hikes over to join his offspring laymen labeling them "Design Then he backed New Church" for Bruce Bairnsfather came with an and Indulges that domestic gesture A clubhouse dating from the year Louis Sobol calls "pushing the up his drawings and made the 159 has been found in the Euphrates new churches come through He autographed copy of “Old Bill Looks became one of the greatest church by Yale men It is hoped they tipat Europe" newfy printed Then pram” toed through the lounge Personal nomination for the ace architects In America breakfasting with Verne Portfer used to criticise American He fiction in American mystery The nazls have Issued further demlghtjly dispirited over the passing plotter architecture pretty sharply but crees of Ivan SL John And ran upon --S S Vah Dine against the church-goin-g has been more lenient in later rough element Arrests for flagrant Bids Dudley and his daughter He Scandinavia only years says a out Helen Green used to turn piety are expected momentarily Doris now a current stage beauty p series of articles for the Is giving us noteworthy competiSo puttering until Frank Hardy bang-uand in allied architecture tion (Copyright 1935 North American from California hove In with news Sunday edition of theoldAllMorning Night arts Newspaper Alliance) of Jay price Later with my wife Telegraph called “The would be interesting If space to a gallery to see aseventeenth cen- Drug Store” and Interpolated with It antics of the fascinating array of were available to review the tury deik but too costly for our at Madam de Shine’s theatri- peace Argument of 1929 between purse and stopped to see Aubrey types The essays Senator Borah and Professor and Peggy Hoyt Eads And down cal boarding house swiftness of the James T Shotwell the racy DR 0LII1 KluG It had to do the avenue in a flurry of snow to the life of latest that day Broadway with the question of what would Kathleen and Charles Norris’ tea in in bright banter and the lowest happen if in violation of the KelBetty and Mary Rogers and Optometrist a Theda Blake to dinner leaving early double dealing I came upon sheaf logg pact a strong nation should In an old chest the other of them to visit Jans Cowl And wc driving wage war against and seize the to Greenwich to remain over night day Manners talk and characters territory of a weak nation SenHas moved his office With little have changed slight ator Borah chlled the economic with Lucy Virginia Long and berun articles the today might came so absorbed In General de editing boycott a “false pretense a fraud to 41 Y2 South Main St with the and a lie” Professor Shotwell Caulalncourt’s memoirs of Napoleon and synchronize perfectly current tempo and maintained In Russia I was still reading at daythat 'disagreed Salt Lake City Utah break The cafeterias have become crepes through the Versailles pact and League of Nations peace Suzette conscious Heretofore this the Phene Was 370 New York has taken to Shlh L famous dessert has been reserved would be maintained even by the use of economic If pressure Haiung the Chinese playwright and for such patrons of the colony as e his wife Hslung is hers Lucius Beebe and Frank Crownin-shiel- d necessary to direct his own play for Morris The blue flame of the Gest a play running 18 months in crepes being fashioned at a table London The playwright’s wife side was Indicative of wealth and a Dymla or “Black Plum Blossom” plutocratlo palate An order ranged is a poet of some distinction The from 90 cents to 3140 Several husband speaks English fluently now give them a window disbutjils wife understands only a fayv play in the manner of Childs butter But she trips after him cakes and serve them to cuatomeri phrases demurely Chinese fashion to din- for as little as 20 cents an order ners luncheons and teas stirring New York out of customary yawn Retributive item: Noel Coward to to murmurs "How cute!” recently forwarded to Alfred Lunt a headline (rom a London tabloid Jack Dempsey In a becoming fa- reading: "Bursting Hydrant Neartherly role has become a familiar ly Drowns 35000 Dog” noonday sight along the Central park mail He lives on the west Ona of Peter Arno’s doughty clubside of tho park and on account of men was evidently paying Off a bet his late restaurant Bours the baby on Madison avenue yesterday He is out with a nurse for a sunning swirled out of an office building when he arises So after his shower sprucely attired save for a brilliant Ascot tie resurrected from heaven knows where and wore It unSeems to me the snow lies whiter ashamedly A classic in bold deNew Year's eve That the solemn trees stand sign It was embroidered In flaming colors with a beer bottle chamitralghter And the frosty moon seta later pagne glass beer mug and the salutation “Cheerio!” And the hush is stiller greater New Year’s eve Bagatelles: Louisiana has a bigSeems to me sad things are fewer ger fur trapping output yearly than New Year’s eve Walter Duranty lists SAms to me glad things are truer Canada Floyd Gibbons as No 1 war reporter New Year’s eve John D Jr occasionally takes Seems to me the bells ring clearer From the steeples loud nearer— breakfast on the run at an avenue Claudette Colbert Is Seems to ms ths whole world’s Childs the shrewdest Investor among the dearer screen girls The duke of York New Year’s eve can make eounds Ilk a puppy with Insure a Merry Christmas —Adapted aft Injured tall without moving his Walker and Ups Billy for Yourself and Jimmy NOTES ON THE CUFF Seeman are friends Again DEPARTMENT Your Family’ “What are you seeing?” I asked A statuesque Dolores lady with a a friend as we looked down from Russian wolfhound poised on the You can Jiavs plenty of his office window Plaza steps at tea hour looked money for Christmas presents “Men women and smoke” about annoyed and whistled shrilly taxes or any other purposa if you join one of our “And what are the men and wo- through her teeth From somewhere Christmas Clubs now You'll never miss tha men doing?” a mincing fop toddled toward her money you save each week When this money comes back to said he And a taxi driver yelled: “Atta “Hurrying" you "Where?" I asked in a lump sum Fldol" shopping will be a pleasure instead of “Heaven only knows" a burden (Copyright 1935 McNaught Ones when Floyd Leaver waa In Syndicate) There is a club for ovary purse— save 25c to $2000 a London he got lost In a fog Then week Moke next Christmas a debt-fre-e he heard tha sound of footsteps on holiday the cobblestones “Hey there” he called anxiously in the direction of the sound “Where am I headed?” The footsteps cam nearer “Into the river” aald a voice “I’ve just super-dreadnau- Republican senators together of course with the issues of the campaign led to a wholesale m- Self-Intere- st Today rs Voters Switched To Democrats igrations progressive Republican voters into the Democratic party Mr Roosevelt jcarrled all the western states some of them states which practically never had gone Democratic before - The west became Democratic territory It Is this condition which now faces the Republican leaders of the western states It Is this condition which causes ths western Republican leaders to put Senator Borah forward aa a candidate for ths Republican presidential nomination Many of these western leadere are regular Republicans of the orthodox type They are Republicans who remained in the party in 1932 Some of them may or may not wish Mr Borah ac- tually to become the Republican nominee Some of them pretty eurely do not o wish Nevertheless it suits their present post- -' tlon to put him forward In the primary elections as a candldata for the presidential nomination To understand why It is necessary to bear In mind a feature of ths primary election laws in many western states Under these laws any voter can vote in tlje primary of either party He la not limited by how he votea “before nor by how he will vote in the ensuing 'general election between the two parties ' 29-r- con-ata- sin and other western states It Is necessary to recall some recent history and also to bt familiar with years the ' Dec NEW YORK heed the contention of tho right and left wings but forget the gothic wing Dr Ralph Adams Cram prominent layman In the new move for Anglican and Catholic unify is a ready and reminder As fervently as any man of tho renaissance the distinguished Boaton architect not only ha created but evangelized and press agented gothic architecture He haa found therein some mystical flowering of the human spirit the highest and final flight of man’ aspiration He la one of aeven high churchmen of tho Episcopal church joining 20 clergymen and two members of religious order in an appeal for a return to Rome At 72 he is vigorously alert and The Borah Boom WASHINGTON thi Spotlight ASTON By LEMUEL T P T3y MARK SULLIVAN has written three books and many short stories beginning well-meani- In mi writer the divorced widow of Bainbridge Colby fault-findi- DECEMBER 30 1833 Well John You Finally Got Him Started Affairs in e Nation ' Woman’s Best Years Before Her MONDAY MORNING ENATOR from ANDPIT Now the New Year reviving old I de- sires muse upon a band of cheerful liars —Selected I’ve made one resolution and that Is not to make any new resolutions I’ve already got euch a large collection of slightly used ones that It would bs a waste of tiCJi Besides “never again” just meanaT until the next time with me Have you ever sat on the edge of the bed in the morning with your elbowe on your knees your head buried In your hands and wondered If there was anything you overlooked the night before that would have made you feel woise? Among the more polite this feeling is spoken of as the realization of some indiscretion in diet but common folks call it the jitters There are lots of things that will give you the jitters but there la only one thing that will make you feel like a person with a future Instead of one with a past and that la the noble resolve to change your manner of living Sometimes you get up in the morning feeling like an Indian teepee looks You know the cause If you are at home the first thing to do is to square yourself As An expert on squaring I advise three methods of procedure First deny everything If that doesn’t seem to get over try a partial acknowledgment of the facts together with a solemn promise that it will never occur again If that falls then be a thoroughbred and take it like a man You probably deserve it but look at the fun you had the night before singing tenor NEW YEAR’S EVE to me the stars brighter New Year's eve Seems shine tlon has been the one most consistent feature of Senator Borah’s record decidedly And here are four conspicuous progresslvt Republican senators four msmbers of Senator Borah's political fraternity out of a total of some 12 who have become new dealer This naturally will raise tha question whether Senator Borah also is to any extent a new dealer whether he Is the best man to make a forthright head-o- n fight against the new deal in the election next November To that question the answer ia Senator Borah’ recard in the senate during the new deal period There will be search to find to what extent ha voted and stood agalnit tha new deal or to what extent hs voted and stood with his formsr progresslvs Republican associates such as Senators Norris Johnon La Folletta and Cutting who supported ths new deal candidate In 1932 and In part supported new deal measures In ths senate Senator Borah’s record on this point like his record generally is divided He voted ’against N R A and was perhaps ths Blue Eagle's most bitter1 critic He voted in favor of triple A and in favor of the triple A amendments but both these were omnibus measures carrying many provisions besides specific farm control However adequate examination of Mr Borah'a record oA the new deal would requtra more spa- than Is her available) ist ’’(New York Herafl-Trlbun- a Syndicate) New York the Record J doll-lik- cafe-terla- “An easy way finance your Christmas S Shopping” JOIN OUR 1936 XMAS CLUB come SAVINGS & TRUST COMPANY out" The only animal that has four legs eats oats has a tail and sees equally well from both ends is blind hors Note to S M Ward Sorry I wasn't in when you called My regrets to Messrs Sylvan D and Vernon D Ward and Miss Leona Romney of Chicago Any Amount for Limited Tims Only American Goal Co lino Snnttl Main Of M?S 235South Member'edrl Member Majn Street Rewrve Rystem Depoult lniurance Corpomton Fedrel NO- W- 949 £& XMATJAYINtCdUB |