Show i' - I - - 4 q ''' r - li Ni3 lel 1— r 15 ili Lake -- Loafed every gfliblutt 4- Established April 15 1871 morning Salt by N - Writer-Tell- --1 a9C190 - Daily and Sunday one year lint° and Sunday one month 900 The above rates appirin Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming' al month —Elsewhereirr the—United States:— Datir and—BundrerwneAssociatta4eil Preto is exclusive? entitled to the The Tribune hi a member of the Associated Press also in and or to It this paper not otherwise credited use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited the local news published herein trilemueLf 1 Ile Lake City Pine View Prolect Reflects Enlightenment ' Dedication Ogden valley other link in Utah - Monday Morning --August -- — --- - the of the bureau of in under en- prise It is ideally suited to development of recreational opportunities and promises to enhance the natural beauties of Ogden canyon The enterprise constructed at a cost of $4000000 is designed to take care of the culinary water needs of Ogden for years to come as well as to conserve and promote the agricultural opportunities of Weber and Boxelder counties The dedicatory services wereTholemn and Impressive Governor Henry H Blood who turned the first shovel of dirt to start operations four years ago invoked the aid of Providence to conserve and protect the proj- ect to the purposes for which it was built He and other speakers paid glowing tribute to the vision courage and determination of those who envisioned the project and carried it through the trying stages pre- liminary to construction ftW R Wallace chairman Of the Utah Wattis Water Storage commission apd E were lauded as the pioneering spirits of tife enterprise Ora Bundy president of the Ogden River Water Users' association and the directing spirit of the celebration and members of the association wqesraised for the part they have taken in bringing the project to fruition While the spirit of the celebration was one of jubilance P H Mulcahy reminded those present that it represented the mere beginning of what it was designed to accomplish He urged business and industry in Weber and Boxelder counties to cooperate to take Tull advantage of the new opportunity for expansion and development He reminded them that a tremendous debt had been kssumed by the farmers and that they were entitled to the full benefits of Others on the program wider opportunity representing agencies accredited with having made large contributions to the success of the project were G M Gadsby president and general manager of the Utah Power fiSc Light company C J Stallings of the Weber county farm bureau and C N Woods assistant regional forester Utah people in general should share the pride and satisfaction of the residents of Weber and Boxelder counties in the completion of this project The Pine View lake is representative of enlightened understandIn the ing and constructive ambition realization that water conservation is the most important factor in state growth is a n a ' —new pi tftectionOTMIIITAItY-a—trate-Cabe bigger than its water supply and this project is typical of that understanding Weber and Boxelder counties are to be con- gratulated on the completion of this work because it represents a resolution of forward-looking people to go onward and up-wand this is the motivating force of progress and prosperity ar Vigilance and Publicity Valuable in Crime Control sometimes criticized for of crime news Men of the "Milquetoast" type fear it injures a community's reputation and women of similar meticulosity dislike perusing such items of course accounts of criminal activities are unpleasant reading but as long as laws and moral codes are violated there will be the are crime news No community ever maintained an en viable reputation by keeping quiet when Municipalities wrongs are perpetrated that cover their figurative heads with the sands of secrecy cannot keep the rest of the world from observing actual conditions or is exposure of crime antisdcial An eminent sociologist Dr Lowell J Carr of the University of Michigan has reached the conclusion that one of the most effective agencies in the apprehension of law breakers is the publication of crime news "The newspapers of America" says Professor Carr "have been the greatest single force in arousing the public consciousness to the menace of crime We are never going to win our fight on cancer by shutting our eyes to its prevalence and we- are never going to win our fight on crime by suppressing crime news" That Salt Lake City usually a peaceful community has been invaded by fugitive felons from other sections reinforced or encouraged by undeserving recipients of prison paroles Is painfully apparent They seem to be en Several holdups kidjoying a field day napings car stealings and murderous assaults on citizens have been reported during the past month the culmination of —which is the attempted murder of police officers on the trail of malefactors night before last It is no surprise to most people of this section- - to learn from detectives pursuing the gunmen who shot Fred Lee of the local division of criminal investigation that the desperadoest are two fugitive from-th- e Utah state—prisortnne at liberty on i)arole These men were traced toIdaho where an abandoned car was 'recognized as the property of a Salt Lake attorney :who bad been kidnaped and robbed law-abldi- - Newspapers publication court-respecti- ng 1937 - 1937 ek It would be difficult to calculate the the Boy Scout jamboree recently concludzi in Washington and the international 'jamboree now in of(progress in Holland The spiritual—to say nothing of the material—value of such enterprises in the lives of the thousands of boys who participated wourd be hard to define still harder to measure The chance to travel under such wholesome auspices to explore interesting places and most important of all to discover that thousands of other boys in all parts of the world possess similar hopes and aspirations are major discoveries for the average boy But the unique virtue of such gatherings lies chiefly on the social side No movement ' in our time gives such promise as scouting does from the standpoint of international good will and world peace The full effect of this force will not be felt of course for another generation or so because the move- ment is still comparatively young Offi- cial figures recently released show that scout leaders have enlisted an additional 340000 boys during the past two years thus bringing the grand total of registered scouts in 51 countries to 2812060 This undoubt-- 1 edly is the largest brotherhood of boys that the world has ever seen In a meintorable message broadcast from London to the Boy Scout jamboree in Wash- reit- ington recently Lord Baden-Poweerated the simple but profound purposes of the movement "The main object of nian Boree'S aid the founder "is to bring scouts together from different countries to meet and get to know each other and to make friends with each other" Up to now he said the different countries have been liv- ing together as strangers without any close knowletigè of or friendship for each other hence the disastrous rivalry and destructive competition By practicing the scout law which says "A scout is a friend to alland a brother to every other scout no matter what class creed or country the other belongs to" boys may learn to see the other fel- low's point of view as well as their own In his final admonition to the boys in Washington the venerable leader said "Put your country first rather than your own particular wishes try to promote unity rather than partisans in order to make your country strong But don't let your patriot- ism be so narrowlhat you count your own country as the only pebble on the beach By doing this you will not only be opening up better commerce better trade better political relationships withyour fel- low men of other countries'' but also you —will-bbringing abotit that' feeling of gooa will among men which is the true founds- tion for peace in the world" - DA1 4 111 Se value of 4 be-so- I -- 1 I '1 - Ti 44:fy "Oh- e t ' - 4 - i 4- i's 'i'vf17A-A- - if ' e : t 1 - : 182k ' It s :: I i! ' - l I oe' --- x N 0 JI f- t ' A-el o ' ' ‘:001' - e': NI ie:7' g ' ' i -- ' '''' I e &'r't o' f4 1''' er aser' e' ' '' ' et:r-- -- ' eetp - t t op' "'11e'' :t k - 000'' r 'ô S'Airl -- ' '- ' or - ''''' r': :ef-'-'''- - -- e- 6 -- - "' - r - I ° ' ' '' - 07' sf - j ''' 1 :' :'-:- ''41014(44-'- - ' 'Z' '' '" a' a - er9 04p ie 4e ii ''''''' As a lad in Brighton England he sang a comic sang in a music hall The audience threw things and he departed for New "0 rhki r landing here with $10 He spent I the next few months spar: ring for a meal ticket until the little ball hit he right pocket in Chicago He'toureit with Mansfield after his Niblo's Gardens' engagement He was advance man nearly everything else in thp theater before his return to England Before becoming a producer in 1914 he handled Hackenschmidt the wrestler Houdin' and Hagenbeck's zoo and pro- moted roller skating in France and Germany Skill taste and shrewd business Judgment have characterized his He has made rrosdui trips across the Atlantic in touch with his old keeping friends on this side His life story Is told in his two books ''I Had Almost Forgotten" and "Secrets of a Showman" But he never really told the secrets They say he knows moro-the deep inside of the show world than any living of man — 'Professor W S Culbertson of Georgetown University tells the Maine institute of world affairs that "professions of good neighborliness" are all right but we need a firmer assertion of 6ur rights Merely negative peace talk he thinks won't accomplish anything Mixing around in the world and gettinga quid pro quo he thinks will do more for peace than Just talking about It " lr I O O Mcint Yre NEW YORK Aug 15—In the manner of Arnold Bennett's' journal: One never thinks of native gawallan reading an Ainerican column But some time ago there appeared in these notes published in Honolulu a paragraph of praise for the playwright Clare Booth Luce She postcards: "Riding tandem on a surf board at the rate of 40 miles an hour across a monster wave this morning I heard my dark Hawaiian beach 'boy riding behind me on the board shout into my ear: Hey you see what McIntyre say about you in the newspaper this morning?'" itIntil the other day I rather pitied the sta- tioners who had to load up their shops with seemed such Christmas and greetihg cards a petty trade But a 'small dealer in West Thirty-secon- d street tells me he sells about A half dozen $65000 worth every season clients buy $1500 worth apiece to send cue tomers question in ethics bobbed up at breakfast If you could kill a hated enemy 10000 miles away without being caught would you do it? In the quick urge of a high rage many perhaps would but most of us would not Murder is chiefly the flare of lightning impulse Those-wh- o read Sunday papers in led— and there is an army—may be interested in the formula of Joe Bryan III A servant slits the paper into single pages and he can read and toss them to one side page by page without their assuming grotesque shapes A newspaper unfolded is like a woman who has lost her virtue Almost every copy reader has acquired the knack of flinging a folded newspaper across the rporn for a waste basket 4 $ 4 e a 0 4 The-moo- bullseye ' - -j ' o '''' ' - r It ' '' -- c- oee°4'!- - " - o ' g I '''''' o - ' oi - 7 - - o oo goo ?-”00-- 1 !0we ‘Ot- -- oo )774 t1ii ' oeoz -- 4r'-7''' -- ' aoo t-- it 0' - ' - i e ' es 0( re-y- 4 otfi or- - - 1 '-- - 0 4 - 'iii s t- - foae z o 47e'erotioo- - - - 6 - - f'' pJ' ' 1 ' 'i ' V '' i A k4)411N) '' A"" - illy 0- ' - t: kkk 4 sT ' -'' Za'I'N 1)!t ' f: 011114sk itif iee i ' ' L:-- - oi1411 1 1 ''' li '1vI' t I'- 1 Vi e - ' 0 e es A V tot i ' 1 R ''4' -- 1 ' i lii f1 I ' Ni44oel 4' I 4 "t Id ' k ' 1 - -4 41e! ilt i' i ' Nt7 60p1 - 40 NKtb: lkL F" NV - 1 4 p:1Itli AO: ft JS S N "a - '''''''''le - ta k 44 1 ' - 111 "4t- - 647- ‘Nt - ' NNNAITA IP - By tr ' ' 41 19' 11 I Sweet Consistency Something frightening about the evanescence of public acclaim At the Madison avenue news reel a few years ago M and I were shocked by the boos and jeers when Hcibver was flashed We set down the date It was a day in October four years ago The other night in the same theater Hoover was again shown and the house exploded in wild applause with shrill overtones of whistling and yells Not a boo The subject of witches has always fascid nated We had two stooped ladies in our town with piercing- eyes who suggested riding away on brooms One lived over an Ice house reached by a ladder and smoked a clay pipe I used to watch her silhouetted against the kerosene lamp-li- t window at night with goose pimple imakinings An interesting city to me is Salem Mass on account of its witch lore I have spent hours exploring Gallows hill How enlightened the world! Once a universal belief in witches In 50 years 100000 witches were consigned to flames in Germany One authority estimates the total killed in Europe at nine million But superstition still needs booting In Harlem a fortune is spent yearly among voodoo fakers For such nostrums as "Getting a Job Powders" ''Keeping Your Husband Powders" ag-d- "Renting Your Room Powders" Not Too Fast People I have oliked for the long pull have been polite but not too friendly first meeting Friendships should ripen Will Rogers used to say the thoroughbred dog invariably sniffs a stranger and backs away Last night I met a man who five minutes later was holding to my coat lapel and before the evening wag over was promising to slide me in on "something special" in way of investment I know a writer sympathetic with the blind and wanting to write a story about them who bandaged his eyes for a week to get the sensation At the end of the week he r 4' I hook-nose- THE PUBLIC FORUM semaphore painted lanes or traf- fic officer and a pedestrianNvalks In dLsobedience to the regulation to me he is then a "jaywalker" But when no provision Ls made for his the speed limit is 35 miles per hour the section he must cross lies between two semaphores located several blocks apart and motorists take advantage of thelegaispeedlitnit—with--- in this section in order to make connections with lights what chance has an unprotected pedestrian? This is not the first tragedy - writer at I saw plainly that it was class inasmuch as it only legislation covered journeymen and appren- tice plumbers I don't consider it a good law because it doesn't cover the entire state Sanitation should be enforced in every city and hamlet In the state of Utah Plumbing in the small towns is more unsaniJury than in the large ones They think all you have to do is to place a few pipes together for drainage and it is sufficient I have been in several bathrooms where the odor is pretty bad and have traced it to the ventilation one time -- that has happened in this South Temple street section Such negligence of traffic regu--latior- r —Dee" I have and how! And I'll bet that C R Pearsall who writes that widely read advertising col umn in The Tribune Su'riclays has too Here's what the clip ping said: 'When you write a department like this every month you get - e-- p I firmly believe the master plumber Will agree with rpe they should be held fully responsible for all work done by them because if he finds the journeymen are not competent- - he can-d- is charge them Henry G Sessions Elsinore Little Willie: Mom you said the baby had your eyes and daddy's nose didn't you? Mom: Yes darling Willie: Well you'd better keep yer eye on 'int He's got grandpop's teeth now tion - "and we were afraid to send any messages out over the radio for fear the bandits might have bad a short wave set in their car"—Chief of Police Harry L Finch FOR 'SALE: Several slightly radio sets Bought used two-wa- y by mistake Apply Public Safett building—Adv In the mail: Dear Senator: In the "Bridge Club Meets" either you or your crack at the WPA wife take projects and say that work is the best outlet for any kind of energy You're telling us? I mean the unemployed Did you read what Senator Barkley said about unemployment last week? He said in part: "If the time has arrived when we must choose between two hbras of a dilemma—whether all our'people will work three fourths of the time or of our people are to work all of the time and the other fourth not work at all then I choose the former" It's all right for you- guys who have a job to make cracks about three-fourt- - old-lad- Jolly Evening Ahead "I say dad young Billy Bunker said his father could simply wipe the floor with you" "By Jove I—I hope you didn't let him get away with it my son?" "Rather not I invited hiM to bring his father 'round this evening and Jolly well prove IL"— Sheffield (Eng) Weekly Telegraph hs Huh! Two men ocqupylug the same seat on a bus got into a conver-cation "5o you are a doctor eh" said outletg-give some of us unemployed a "Yes" replied the oilier: chain and well show you som"Well" said the first one "in a ethingneW in the waY of energy our work isalike 'ray' With No Preswindow washer and work on ent Hope of an Outlet panes too"—Cincinnati he had a nervous crackup Someone was tell- ing about (fitting next to an attractive girl who teaches deaf mutes at an oral school From a mezzanine she looked into a hotel lobby and told what people were saying by movement of lips Once a week I shove things aside to do a Sunday piece Something different A fly lost in a butcher shop Or the clock with pan face Today a gigantic idea: The quintuplets with but a single thought Quins spanked as one A pa they do not know And a ma the photographers shun But it's too hot for elaboration Copyright 1937 for The Tribune Ofi the Record Card playing in working hours is out here after in the department of commerce The boys must be on the alert as some commerce has recently turned up A blessed event in an Iowa trailer reveals the law there forbids a child to be born in a vehicle a thing the average Iowaobabe posaibly' does not know Farley holds his poise well but it isn't known- how he would react to a stranger creeping up behind him and exploding an empty bag Birth control among the Chinese is her new aim says Mrs Sanger Meanwhile the armies of Japan will move to make this retroactive WELL I'll Tell You By BOB BURNS I don't suppose there's any question but what there's a little vain streak in all of us That's the reason we all like to be flattered Once in a while but if anybody flatters you and it makes you feel good you'd better let It go at that because if you are skeptical and try to get at the bottom of it you're apt to get a shock Some smart fella said that flattery is a whole lot like soft soapIt's 90 per cent lye It's like the time my Cousin Hod was callinl on his girl one evening and he : p suddenly looked at his watch and be says "I'd give a bPas million dollars ijust to spend one more hour with you but I can't de it—I've got to 1 I go" She was so happy because she thought an hour of her time-wa- s worth a million dollars and she shoulda let I'ma : Engtgrer 1 1 4 ph y- —Pent-upEner- El - - a Kind Heart! The dear old lady (and the incident is reported by an eyewitness) went to the knitting department bf a local store and announced to the woman in charge that she wanted to learn how to knit socks Said the instructress: "Wouldn't you prefer to knit sweaters or dresses or something like that?" y "Qh no" said the dear "I want to knit socks for those Just imagine poor Ethiopians them running Around In their — tleveland bare feet" Plain Dealer Such Usually the worst thing about an after dinner speech is the introductoastmaster's 4 1' college alive sure-enoug- ' contagious diseases that oftentimes cause death I don't believe an apprentice should be made to pay a fee to learn a trade no more than a student going to high schools or Joe Welshons says he thinks jaywalkers should be arrested every time the police catch them thetabit of considering your it —By Ham park mother superintended the packing The boys were as calm and collected as though such a trip were an everyday affair The women fussed around giving them minute instructions about taking care of their health and I got so excited that I didn't notice that my best socks handkerchiefs and my pet bottle of hair salve had disappeared D: D Stockman sent me a clipping from a dental magazine with a note saying: "Ham: Thought maybe you have some common ground with this writer self a litterateur although of course you are not But you are nonetheless a victim of the same h emotions which beset real writers "You watch' with shining eyes when you happen upon someone reading your stuff but when you've tried hard to be funny it bends you low as Old Black Joe if the hound reading it fella even to chuckle a little at the proper intervals And it practically kills you when someone to whom you have given the priceless privilege of reading an advance proof hands it back after scanning a few paragraphs and asks 'Say by the way what do you think of the Cubs' chances thia season?' side the house I am a great believer in vents Every fixture should be properly ventilated with vents no smaller than the Waste line All waste lines should have cleanouts easy to get at I think It is a credit to the master plumber to know that he has installed a job of plumbing that the owner can take care of without calling someone in Master plumbers phould pass examination more so than the He should be the journeymen A good man held responsible plumber is better than' a good doctor because by installing good plumbing he can prevent lots of "jaywalking" since there is no designated pedestrian lane on either side of G street or at Sixth East street Mrs Thelma Hill Dowse An idea like a ghost according to the common notion of ghosts must be spoken to a little before it will explain itself— Dickens Our Readers Seep Weakness in Litab's New Plumbing Stafute Editor Tribune: I saw in the Forum August 5 a letter in reference to the plumbing laws in the state of Utah I have been a master plumber since 1908 but am not in business now on account of poor health but when I read house bill No 5 as passed Letters appealing in this column do not express the views of The Tribune They are the opinions of contributors with which The Tribune may or may not agree The following rules govern contributions: 1 Letters limited to 300 words Preference given to short comm2 unications Write legibly and clearly on one side of the paper only 3 Religious and racial discussions barred Partisan comment can be printed only with true name of 4 Personal aspersions pro writers 5 hibited Poetical contribution not wanted 6 Letters may be barred for obvious misstatement of fact or for statements which lire not Ini accord with fair play good taste I The Forum is not an advertising Medium 8 Writers Must sign true namee and addresses in Ink Letters unless partisan will be carried over assumed name if writer so requests In all cases however true name and address must be attached to communicaOm 9 The Forum cannot consider more than ene letter-frothe same Senator From Sandpit Into By Forum Rules Tragedy Jaywalking Editor Tribune: Dear Sir: I have just read your editorial While I appreciate the responsibility that rests upon pedestrians to insure their safety yet the victims of last Wednesday night on South Temple street between G street and Sixth East street could hardly be called jaywalkers When traffic haseseen regulated by those in authority either by sii-fet- n 4 Reviews Recent Traffic iron-boun- 4 i11 1 Wit's Triumph There are those who insist that jaunty hi morous fellows cut no ice in the field of statAmanship which la according to this theory the peculiar property of the solemn gentlemen who epeak learnedly of pros and cons This may be so but if it is an exception must be Was Kansas Cowboy noted in the case of A P: Herbert orie of the Professor Culbertson former editors of Punch and writer of Borne of the ambassador to Rumania and Chile most delightful light verse which our generhas been a professor only three ation has produced- - He has been in theAouse years lie was a Ransas cowboy of commons now for several years) and As is "Too because it's stylish to routed to the American diplomatic the author of one of the most conspicuously service through Yale In a critical deprecate yourtown writing even needed legal reforms which England has exnitrate discussion in: Chile with though privately you fervently adperienced in a generation the reform of the he mire it there are depressing cc everybody looking for 1 fight d d divorce laws English casions when you seek criticisin unwrappeda toy elephant-wounMr Herbert has been campaigning against it up and as it lurched across the and preface the seeking- - with the narrowness of the divorce law for years table said "there's luck for tell something 'like: 'I'm at all He wrote a book entitled "Holy Deadlock" satisfied with this What do you you boys" It induced good 'huwhich besides being a rather entertaining mor and there was no shooting think of it?' And the critic You've A lifelong Republican he 'has appointeciAtutes with You enlight novel was a serious tract against the evils of a system underwhich divorces could backed Secretary Hull's reciprocal thusiastically and heartily and be granted only on the ground of adultery In Damn such trade policies—but he says we positively peothe commons he devoted himself almost exmust be sure that the deals' are ple!" Yea and verily see L reciprocal and not make any jug clusively to the propagation of this pet rebandied contracts He is a salty form Now he has put it over Last week 'Notes on the Cuff Department and original careerist w h saw the final passage of the amendatory act Howard A Means and Harm Jr permitting divorces for cruelty desertidifind :preaches that it is a sin to he a left Saturday morning for a motor rap for incurable insanity It brings tto Vnglish tour that will include stops 'at Copyright 1937 for The Tilbune Jaw Into closer conformity with the realities Sun Valley Boise Portland San -and wjjLic Pr a ntisccratid- - totrAbgeles--'1- 11 —hypocritical procedure to which alotnttpe law the old Statement have worked since Wrong youngsters - Sam—Did gave rise That the change is largely the school closed to earn money to you ever see anything work of a humorist ought to give funny men as unsettled as thisweather?-- Mrs MAY) finance the trip 'with political aspiration s a new hope—BaltiDeBusk loaned Ham Jr a big air- there's your bill Landlady—Well more Suns —Stray Stories plane Suitcase' and with 114 ' Z4 1 ) 1 10::- - :!040 - — NEW YORK — Opera singers of Genoa had a union early In the eighteenth century and sundry heads were broken in Highlights and Brightlights of New York by tieiblock t Gatti-Casaz- ll View 1 t -- -- a pa r -- a Scouting as a Force For Goad Will and Peace Other Points of 0 - Eye: I its furtherance but LawrAce Tibbett is according to alLayallatile ricords the first baritone tenor or bass to take up that line of wok in modern times Mr Tibbett as head of the American Guild of Musical Artists joins the drive to form a union of radio broadcasters in the American Federation of Labor It is indicated that they are beating the C I to this objective Large-scal- e organization work is to get under WRY this week Mr Tibbett was upped to fame on the night of January 2 1925 - Before tat he had sung meager roles under his $60 a week Metropolitan contract On this occasion singing in Verdi's "Falstaff" he stole the show from Scotti with a thundering ovation rarely given any singer at the Met He was ihe son of a sheriff in the "badlands" country around Bakersfield Cal His father was killed by a bandit and young Tibbett grew un in Los Angeles He knew he had a voice but he didn't want to sing He wanted to be a Shakespearean actor Hoping to study for the stage he earned money Singing at churches and movie palaces becoming soloist for the California theater Mumps Prevenf Appearance In 1922 he arrived in New York on borrowed money He worked up a concert and sold a lot of tickets but he wasn't there He had the mumps All that came out of the concert was an para "T" dropped in his name by' the program printer He let it ride and that's how he became Tibbett instead of Tibbet Numerologists would say of course that that was what changed his luck At any rate the change came soon after gave him a hearing and he was soon on Metropolitan "Pel is intalltheand good looking and lacking in those stellar eccentricities which make newspaper copy There is though one little oddity worth noting Apt to have headaches he cures them by walking around on his hands He says that sluices the blood down into his head and stops the pain In 1890 a 'young Englishman tossed his laset $10 on No 7 on a roulette wheel in Chicago In two plays he made $875 That gave him a chance to work into the to play at Nib to's Gardens itnNall York in 1892 and to England's greatest theatrical producer The gracious and amiable Charles B Cochran friend of multitudes of American stage folk passes through New York and the news is gut that 'he is expecting to traverse old trails by putting on some shows in this country The first probably will be Broadway musicals Ile has gone to Hollywood where it is understood he is negotiating for stars Landed With $ 0 s J reclamation and R Iakisch engineer charge of construcmodern a engineering repmodel of is tion resenting the last word in safety economy and efficiency Located in one of the most beautiful offers spots in Ogden canyon the project entersomething more than A utilitarian ' j few days before Filling stations were looted in Idaho and one attendant was kidnaped Evidently they have circled back to Utah Burglars petty thieves bandits and highway robbers are breaking into homes and offices snatching purses from lone woMen on the streets beating up citizens who resist assault commandeering automobiles band abducting the owners thereof wail it is high time'for extraordinary-iMitilreto be adopted for the protection of the public g citizen should Every honest take part in the search and give to the police department any bit of information that may seem to have a bearing on the situation Through publicity and in no other way crime consciousness is awakened and civic responsibility in the suppression of lawlessness is developed The cost of crime and pursuit of criminals is something the American people never realized until newspapers Law began hammering such facts home enforcement offieers tare tioing their best risking their lives a rounding up susBut they are only human and their pects numbers are limited It is the duty of every citizen resident scout and schoolboy to report all suspicious circumstances and conduct that come within the scope öt their observations of the Pine View dam in marks the completion of an- chief — 16 I a the development of economic and agricultural opportunity in Utah The gineer 16 4 UtlionMoves - - 'Wake Up and s of Tibbetts' ' Daily Salt ---- MORNING 'AUGUSnri3uNE 1161DAY ' r " 1 — 0 Lase Tribune Pubilaning Company TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION- - - -- - -- T- THE SALT LAKE 1 -- — r - - — ' 4 4-- de curiosity got the best of iher and she asked him where he had to go Ha says "Well there's a lodge meetin' tonight and if don't 'show up they're liable' to fine me 25 cents!" Copyright 193T for 'rho Tribun :r |