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Br i V 4 THE STANDARD-EXAMINER TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1920 ' H IM J THE STANDARD-EXAMINER I ( j. PUBLISHING COMPANY j f ; ifrM Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Postoffce, Ogden, Utah ' I ESTABLISHED 1870 M I Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation and the Associated Press I ( " flj An independent Newspaper, published every evening- except Sun- I ' H day' whout a muzzle or a club. I j H .Subscription in Advance I ' 'H 0ne Mnth $ .75 I j One Year " ' ?9'00 ijl MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I I fl "?e As30ciated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republi- I Br cation of any news credited to it not otherwise credited in this paper j jB; and also the local news published herein. f'jllp. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. ' Tho JSlandard-Examincr welcomes letters upon questions of pub- j H lie interest but the IcLUm-s will not be published unless the name and i jlP address oC the sender nre attached to the letter. Owing to the high 1 11 price of print paper and the necessity of conserving space letters to i hI published must not exceed tfOO words in length. CAMPAIGNING IN UTAH. Away biiclc in 1S03. AVilliam Jennings Bryan usinic to Ogfln to apeak. His" only fame thou was the faet,.that he had delivered two masterful speeches,' uiiu on tariff, theolhc'r on the demonetization of silver.. ' - Yesterday that same Bryan was" in .Salt Lake, the guest, of the Jeffcrsonian banqueters, and, si range as it may seem, he was the idol of the gathering of the leaders of Utah's Democracy. The dis tinguished Xcbraskau wears well. Une reason is that, regardless of tho harsh things said of Bryan's theories of government and the man's extreme views on peace and other political issues. Bryan is recognized as one of the greatest moral forces in the United States, and. as a public speaker, he is without a peer. When Bryan left the "Wilson cabinet, where he was honored as mm uiui v ox siiiLi-, Leiiii'i-raus me rummy uer hum mm; (.umuiuun Hlpft ' had destroyed his usefulness, for he had geme out of the council of Hk ft llation at a most critical period, semijigly deserting his post in Hiff J'n unjustified manner. Last night in Salt Bake, when be arose to H-Af speak, the ovation he received proved he had not lost in the affections II 111! y PeoPc u' ns P"'l.v- Senator Owen, who preceded him. was H ' 'it! J warmly greeted, but when Bryan was introduced the welcome was IE W 3 prolonged and the great audience stood and cheered. , ui 4b The banquet proved to be the vehicle for introducing Senator II i ' 1 Hubert Owen of Oklahoma as a candidate for president on the Demo- n .ri cratic side and Bryan, in most eulogistic terms, -endorsed the ean- WiM A , didacy of the southern gentleman. IK H I " Senator Owen h a man of fine appearance, an orator with the H H pleasing accent of the South, just slightly noticeable, and a diction H tl j proving the scholar, lie said nice things of Abraham Lincoln, Theo II W dore Roosevelt and the Progressive. Republicans, disclosing the dev il 1 1 tac a P'ls'1Ct' politician, lie took up much time explaining II ! T Nv-V vot'c ur t'le treaty of peace, with and without -reservations. II 1 q ai1 Bryan, when he spoke, also dwelt on that subject, declaring that H 'S j, he would resent any attempt by his party to make campaign capital MM du Peaee treaty, by so doing, the ratification of the treaty, II 1 1 even with reservations, be delayed, as he asserted that delay was dan Hi i'i gcrous to the peace of ihe world, the elements of discord already Mm? being at work in Europe, and war again looming large on the eastern II -1? horizon. llrJ"! Bryan said he would fight at the San Francisco convention, in- llr,; fl! sce P0SS10'C' but outside if necessary, to prevent candidates of the II " I. type of Edwards of New Jersey- or Hitchcock of Nebraska, receiving H ?3'' endorsement, as they stood for whiskey. He also said he would bat- H tj tie for a plank in the platform condemning profiteering and monop- II oly and h'e indicated that, in his opinion, one of the big issues of this IIF!4 year's national conflict would be profiteering. lie said that in l F Omaha a clothing merchant was found who was asking $87 for a $13 j ' suit of clothes, and in Lincoln a shoe dealer was making a profit of H .".I S6 per cent on the shoes he sold. Bryan declared that the income IT S reports at Washington showed 300 coal companies had made excess H & fi profits in the war period and four companies had accumulated prof IE '- 1 s -QQ Per ecn 011 l-hcir capital stock, lie affirmed that, to elim- I r inate such robbery, Avas the first obligation of his party. REBUILDING- AN INDUSTRY. Allyof the space on the two top floors, of the Eccles building is j yl (o tye occupied by the Amalgamated Sugar Company. The expan P i -ion in office space demanded by-this sugar company comes from the k resolve of the management to extensively improve the plants, and I 1 room is being obtained for the engineers and otjicr experts who are coming in from Denver and other points to work out the en- largements in factories. The plant near Ogden is to be increased V lo a maximum of 1000 tons capacity a day and the other factories are to undergo similar improvements. I i This is getting ready for a day in the future When sugar prices ;' ! will drop back to the normal, when, to survive, the industry must be c most economically and efficiently conducted. f One of the best features of this stir in Amalgamated head- r , quarters is the decision to put on an intensive campaign of edu cation in training the farmers of this region in the necessity of keeping up the fertility of the soil. Where farming is scientifi cally carried on, the maintaining of the elements of crop produc tion is as carefully pursued as is the planting, irrigating and cultivating of the crops. "Rotation is studied, soil dcficicnces are inquired into and nothing is left, to the haphazard of "luck.' A research bureau is to be established and such problems as the quality of time used in purifying the syrups are to be studied. This is a forward move promising well for an industry which has been of great value to Ogden. It will add population and wealth to this city. If STATE AND JDAH0 NEWS Latest Items of Interest From Utah and Gem Stats I BOISE BUSINESS MEN PLACED UNDER ARREST ' , -BOISE, Idaho, April 5. Charles S. Rathbun, auditor for the T-ioitjc Arlc t 'A sian Hot and Cold Water company for il''? aovcral yoars, wna this afternoon ' f placed under arrest upon a charge 1 of embezzlement. I,.r Bonds of 31200 wore demanded of !! . Kathbim by tho court immediately I I after ho was arraigned, but up to a 1 r' late IloUr ths afternon they had not 1 " ifr been furniBhed. 1 i I (p Tnc complaint was sworn to by E. I p ! S. Delana, prosecuting oattnrey, who , ll k brought tho action in the Justice court fl as oi JU(SC Alfrod Anderson. It charges " Ck Kathbun with tho ombezzloment of r fi, funds to tho amount of $1200 from tho J!K water company, covering a period , m from November, 1019, to December 1, 1 1 ll i Wt Bathbun is said to havo admitted a ! I ' shortage of $14,600, but full roparu- I 1 fi' tlon wa? mado by him, Ho Hignod over u .W a handsome residence ho had Just I ' v completed on Warm Sprlnga avenue, I M" ' , together with tho expensive furnish IM li ixs and other personal properly. COALVILLE MAN DIES AT AGE OF 63 YEARS COALVILLE, April 5. Funeral services were held at tho stake taber nacle this afternoon for John G. Car ruth, 03' years of age, who died Fri day night of last week after a long illnesH. Mr. Carruth had been a resident of this community for many years, fol lowing farming for a long time near GraBB creek, after which he workod at tho ininoH here and, iu GraBs creek, aa engineer, -Mr. Carruth was born at Murray, Fobruary 1, 1867, the son of William and Margarot Ellwood Carruth. He canio to Coalville in 18fil and had lived hero contlnously, Ho was mar ried to Jano Black, Docomber 24, 1883. Besides his widow, ho is curvivod by tho following children f Mrs. E. W. Farnsworth, Bessie, Wallaco, Scott and Georgej also his brothers, Wil liam, of this place, and Georgo, of Evanston, Ww0., and one sister, Annie E. Cluff, 1 ( i DOINGS OF THE DUFFS I Ited THIS LEASE EMT.TJ.ES 1 1 Hq We vV jMt US to STAN IM This House AHoTWeBJ yjjg R1S" , HAVE To Rl)hl To lUSBHHS!!! wS SOMBRCUEFJ VJttM WOVoU aSwSdT&Bo!? " MW0YeS ifiSSSS HAVE iTFgAMED.TOMp ptACG 711 3EE HH ( HA.TrtlS GUN PI5PIAVS WfA VACUUM VAS RGHr! I .H His lease! oodfoba ! i; 1 i'lu that gun gt Near.U25o per mojth I ml l stung for- Jojav '; AMD Mo REPAIRS- jj ' nffffii ALU RIGHT- AMD He's J ' N SKllt Foreigners Fight Over Their Prowess and Guns Brought Into Play SALT L.AKR, April 6. Spake Deni ze y. Serbian, was shot through iho Jaw by Mike Eros shorlH' after 7 o'clock last-night as the result of a fight between the two men. Eros is alleged to have taunted Donizey, be littling his character, fighting prowess and integrity, all, of which Domzey stood until Eros showed disrespect for women. In the fight that ensued 13ros shot Domzey with a .32-ca liber revolver, the bullet lodging- in the roof of his jaw. Eros sustained lacerations about the head as the result of his fight. Tho men were removed to the police station, where, after storming it each other in Serbian, they calmed down and conversed In JEnglish. The men apparently settled their differences, for upon parting they shook hands and seemed on tfie best of terms, It Is stated. oo PROMINENT ATTORNEY OF IDAHO FALLS DIES IDAHO FALLS. Idaho. April 5. William L. .McConncll. prominent Idaho Falls attorney, died Sunday aft ernoon at his residence. Mr. McCon nell came to Idaho Falls in 1904 and has practiced law here since that time. He was a nativo of Pittsburgh and a! graduate of the Michigan university. He practiced law in Ohio before com ing to Idaho Falls. From 1907 to 1911 he was county) attorney for Bingham county and later j was appointed United Slates commis- sioner and federal court representative by Judge Dietrich. I Mr. McConncll married Miss Ger-j trude S. White of Idaho Falls, in 100 1.1 Mrs. McConncll had completed plar.3; for a trip abroad and would have loft Sunday but for the sudden turn for the worse in her husband's condition. He transacted business at his office Wednesday, but was confined to his home after that until his death. The funeral will be held from the residence at 2 o'clock Wednesday aft-1 ernoon. EXAMINE TALESMEN FOR OBLIZATO TRIAL SALT LAKE, April 0. Talesmen for jury service in the trial of Nick Oblizalo will be examined today. Oblizalo, with' Slcvo Maslich, is charged with murder in the first de gree for the allegod killing of Marko Laus, August 3, 1919. The trial will start this afternoon at 3 o'clock In tho fhlrd district court. Oblizalo is alleged to have confessed to killing Marko while in tho county jail. nn Sir John F. Fraser Speaks Here Saturday Sir John Foster Fraser, traveler, writer and lecturer, will speak nt the Tabernacle Saturday night, his sub ject being, "A Diplomatist at Large." Sir John is said to be particularly well fitted lo handle such a subject, his many years of travel and largo experi ence In practically every country in the world, especially in the Dalkuna and the Orient, provide him with a wealth of material for highly enter taining and Instructive locturo3. Ho was with tho British army In France and Belgium, with tho British fleet, has seon Russia under war con ditions, has crossed Siberia, traveled extensively In Egypt, Palestine, Ar gentina, A.uttralln, and was present at the cofnpletion of tho Panama canal. Ho iu tljOi auUpr of a dozen books, in which he' do'scribos his interesting ex periences in nil 'parts of tho world, Ho canio to tho United Statos at tho beginning of 1918. Intending to stay ten weeks. Ho stayed ten months. Sir John will appear hero under tho auspices of the University club, jl LITTLE. BENNY'S I Wote&ooM jl By iE PAPE J! umnniB" inn ineii i. n i smgaEggTgaaroTfcri'.Ejy CANDY. Candy can be either sucked, chewed or allowed to melt and run down, de pending on wat kind it is. The most ixciting)is the kind that melts and runs down, sutch as chocklit crcems, but the best wearing kind is the kind you can suck, sutch as sour balls Some fellows can make a sour ball Mast a hour jest by not werking it too 'hi' id, and they also get grate plezzurej In taking it out every once in a, wile to 'see how mutch smaller it is and if its J color lias changed eny. The saddest ' moment of a sour ball is wen it gets so little it can't do anything cits but dis appear. I The most ixciting candy to bile in half is assorted chocklits. on account of you never know wat theyrc stuffed with till you bite and look, and then if you're disappointed you can ixchango the other half that you like nnd they don't. Wen people 'eat assorted chock lits hole without caring wat theyrc stuffed with, its a sine theyrc getting old and careliss. The 2 most ixciting jthings lo rind inside of a ssorted I chocklits is loose jooce and cherries. The stingiest kind of candy to cat is all day suckers, because you can suck one rite in frunt of sumbodys jfaco on account of knowing they havo too mutch pride to ask you for eny of li. The politest thing to say wen lyoure eating a all day sucker Is, Im sorry I started to suck this or I would offer you some. If you are eating a peppermint stick and enybody asks you for a bite, tho safest way is to hold your thumb so they can't bite off too big of a peece without biting your thumb and giving 'you a chanco to get mad and change lycur mind about giving thorn a bite in the ferst place, all depending on weath er you are a quicker jerker than what 'they are a biter. I The most ixciting place to eat can idy is in skool on account of the dan ,ger of having it took away frum you i forever. Before the high cost of living went up you used to be able to buy ienuff candy for a sent to last awile, but now If you havent got at leest 2 scnts you mite as well not have eny. uu I World Problem Based I on Brotherhood of Man i WASHINGTON, April G. A solution of the problems of the world is to be found in "the brotherhood of man, based on the fatherhood of God," John D. Rockefeller, Jr., declared last night in an address at a dinner of officials of the interchurch world movement. planned the world war, ho said, was followed by a decided trond toward utter individualism, which, also, has proved a failure. "The policy for the last few years has seemed to be every man for him self a selfish, personal policy, regard less of the brother and of the neigh bor and of the needs of humanity," Mr. Rockefeller said. "Today we arc j hearing from the great leaders of the 'nations statements that the solution of ,the world problem Is to be found in tho brotherhood of man and of na tions. And we are hearing business men in various parts of the world say ins that the golden rule must bo ap plied in business, that only when that golden rale Is applied in industry can there be cooperation, good will." . oo : Oil Advances to Investigated by Board WASHINGTON, April 6. The fed eral trado .commission was directed by tho house to mako immediato investi gation into the causes of recent ad vanceH In pricoH of gasoline, fuol oil and kerosene. A re.porL not lator than Juno was called for under a resolution adopted without a record vote and which also asked that the commission determine whether "any combination In restraint of (ratio exists between" those ongaged in tho oil business," : Rippling' : Rhymes I j By WAuT MASON, j ii i in ii 1 1 1 1 him mi i i ii in i ii i 1 1 i ii 1 1 EVER HIGHER. We all are after higher wagos, the old time stipends won't suffice; and! oven clergymen and sages rear up and' say they've raised the price. The price is multiplied by seven, though nothing has increased in worth; it costs us more to go to heaven, it costs us more to stay on earlh! Today I met a sad eyed father, whose first-born just ar rived on deck; he said, "It is beastly bother it's left my bank account a wreck. The doctor soaked me good and plenty, though he just came and skipped away; the nurse, a dame of three times twenty, demands five ses- I AND SUGAR 1 j H ij The problems of house- m ! keepind inthese troublous B II times are lightened iy j serving Shreddedeat 1 1 Biscuit, a real whole II ! I wheat food,ready cooked 1 1 ill i andready-toeat- Contains M I the natural sweetness of M ii ( the whole wheat Lerry with IS jj; , jg all the elements necessary ij J; ; i to sustain strength at gjj 1"! I ' m top-notch efficiency.lwo M 1 iH 1 of these crisp little loaves IS , IH of baked whole wheat with $ j jH f . hot milk or cream (or hot jlj pi 'iH If water and butter) make a i! . i I ; 1 satisfying, strengthening III i J IH I i itiealaiacostofafewcents. i i iH tcrces a day. This offspring graft is I vain and giddy, it leaves me with two Arctic feet; how shall I feed that lit ; tlo kiddie, 'when he is old enough to era.?" And then I met the village sex ton; he said he'd dug a grave for Jones; "It was n bargain, but the next 'un will cost the buyer two more bones." The price of everything is humming, each day it makes a record new; the blamed thing gets us when we're coming, it gels us when we're going, too. WOOD 2000 YEARS OLD. mmU DURANGO, Colo., April 6 P. W. '1 Pittman of Durango has constructed ll a violin from wood said to be 2000 lH years old. The wood was excavated Il from Aztec ruins near Aztec, N. M., Il by. Prof. Carl Morris of the New York i'l Historical society. I Ml Candidates for athletic games in IH Greece wcro dieted on new cheese, I IH dried figs and boiled grain, with warm H ! water and no meat. H J16ADY ROOFINGS & ' H i This picture shows the "dry end" of a huge felt-mak- V " ' j ing" machine in one of our mills. ' " Z LLm $ : Felt is the "base" or body of ready roofing. Quality in ; j ,v roofing depends so much on the quality of this felt foun- v, 1 dation that we manufacture in our own mills all of the felt used in making Ru-ber-oid and Malthoid Roofings, . 1 : ' 3 In this way only can, we be assured of securing the . . t extra-tough, long-fibre wool-and-cotton felt necessary for building long-lasting qualities into Ru-ber-oid and vi! . Malthoid. Ru-ber-oid and Malthoid Roofings are made by saturat- 1 ?' ing this etra-quolity felt with a highly waterproof 'V , asphaltic compound, after which the saturated felt is -rr 1 coated with a long-lived, weather-resisting compound. , . ' Both the saturating and coating compounds are refined v : , v . in our own plant for this special purpose. i From rags xo wrapper, Ru-ber-oid and Malthoid Roof- ' 'H ings are made within our own organization made to , . j give lasting service. We have been, making ready roof- 'V V - ings for 35 years. During this time Ru-ber-oid and Mai- -""r , r'j LW thoid have proved their quality under all sorts of trying ? ij i conditions. They are sun, rain and fire re- y ; J ( sistant. The price is higher, but the cost is - tm . .iXvf r; ' less because they last longer and need SfiN ' I 1 . ; fewer repairs. When you bay roofing, buy 9 real protection. I r,..?.... j. t V PABCO J fJ ) V ' ilX -Te PARAFFINE COMPANIES," Inci - i I San Francisco, California Roofings Feits 1 'j4 ll fmU Building Ppera 1 : t vLLM Water-proofing j r LLt Materials B f - (1 Wall-Board ( " : Floo. Covftrlnp f I n-, a - iTr Induatrial Paints ' EACH THE SmNDARD OF ITS KIND p - Fibre Containers ' mmm 1 . mmW