, THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 10, 1920. B THE STANDARD-EXAMINER PUBLISHING COMPANY Intend Second-CIi Matter nt tho Potofflce, Ogden, Utah. Established 1870 Member of tilt Audit Bureau of Circulation and the Associated Presa An independent Newspaper, published every evening and Sun day morniug without a muzzle or a club. Subscription in Advance ONU MONTH ' 75n'??,viT ONE YEAR W ... "quaggy MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Asoclated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of any news credited to It not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local n published herein COLBY'S NOTE ON RUSSIA. When the note of Secretary of Stato Colby "caches the Russian masses, it should have a reassuring effeel and offer encouragenient to tho struggling people of .1 better day near ;.t band Answering the inquiry i the Italian ambassador as to the posi I lion l tin 1'nited States in 1 1 1 - Husso-Poland situation, the secre tary q! state said : .''While deeply regretting the withdrawal "i Russia Erom ill" I war at a critical time and a disastrous surrender at Hrest-Lito sk. the United States lias Eujly understood thai the people of Russia 'cre in no wise responsible "The United States maintains unimpaired ks faith in the Rus 1 Kian people, in their liigh character and their liiturr That they w ill ovrcomi L-iincr anarchy, suffering and (Institution we do not entertain tin- slight. --.t douhl Tin distressing character of Russia's I 1 transition ins many historical parallels, and the United States is confident thai restored, free and united Russia will aain take a I leading place in the world, joining with the other nations in uphold- trig peace and orderly justice. ' "Unlii thai Itme shall arrive, the United Smtos feels that friend ship and honor require that Russia's interests must he generously protected." 1 Thai tins might not he interpreted as in any degree recognizing the soviet, government, the American note further says: "That tin present' rulers of Russia do not rule by the will or the consent of any considerable proportion of the Russian people is an incontestable fai t. Although nearly two and a half years have passed since tiiev seized the machinery of government, promising to I ;roteet the eon.-t it aen1 assembly against alleged conspiracies against ' j it, they have not yet permitted anything in the nature nf a popular I election. At the moment when the work of creating a popular rep resentative government based upon universal snflrage was nearingj ' Completion tin- Bolsheviki, although in number aud inconsiderable ; minority of the people, by force and cunning s.-i.-d the powers and Hj. machinery of government and have continued to use them with sav age oppression to maintain themselves in power. "Without an desire to interfere in the internal affairs of the jl Russian people, or to suggest what kind of government they should Iff have, the government of the United Stat.-s does express tin- hope iE that they soon will find a way to set up ;i government representmt; their free will and purpose. When that turn' eome:, tin- United States will consider the measures of practical assistance which an he taken! to promise ihe restoration of Russia, provided Russia has not taken itself wholly out of the pale of the friendly interest of other nations III by the pillage and oppression of tin Poles " Colby's statement of the situation will he approved by the Amer ican people. He draws a broad distinction between the Russian peo- I ; pie as a whole and the usurpers ! power, and he unmistakably U points out that aid from tins country will be given to a governm nt il -by the people of Russia, bul will be denied .1 minority who, bj con,- II piraey, force and cunning, are inflicting their will on a majorty, SIXTY-EIGHT KILLED BY AUTOS I i There were 68 persons kilted and 632 injured by auto aeci- I I ' dents in New York City in July. Outside of the metropolis, there M were 97 persons killed in New York state I j That is a record of death and injury most appalling. W-i The automobile is being operated so reekles.y as to make it a juggernaut 1 With the most stringent id' regulation the drivers are burning K their toll of lives at a rate almost equal to our losses in the world The great number of fatalities in New York City has caused I Judge Mclntyre to make the following statement to ,i grand jur in ) his court A "People are being maimed every dav, according to newspaper I accounts. My own observations have shown that chauffeurs pass f through our streets at an excessive rate of speed, thus imperiling the lives of our citizens. They pass the rear of this court boose on 1 Lafayette street at a rate of Bpeed between thirty and fortj miles j per hour Lafayette street is traveled much by jurors in attendance I in these courts Witnesses, litigants and lawyer sre constrained lo H cross to the rear of this building every day. Only a short time ago j one of our court officers was killed and a policeman seriously in jured. The taxi drivers in ever pari of ihis city give no heed to I he provisions of our highway law Tbdy will be seen on numerous I occasions driving at an extreme)) high rate of speed. Many taxi I drivers in this county menace the lives and limbs of our citizens I every day Something should be done to curb the taxicab drivers. H "The law is sufficiently broad to do so if enforced, and it might be well if the grand jurj 'ailed the attention of the poln-e depart- ment to the constant and frequent disregard of The speed laws. A I suggestion from youi body might have a wholesome effect, and a II .suggestion from you recommending more severe penalties than are 3 imposed would no doubl induce the courts to impose prison sen- H teuees more often. The imposition of fines doer not seem to stop H .reckless driving. Alter investigation on your part if you deter- H mine to conduei oik, presentment might be of great service to tln H Community J On the best paved streets of Ogden, the racing auto is one ol H he perils of life Along Twenty-fourth street. . ad at the lower end 1 "if Twenty-sixth street, the machines speed as though Ihe driver? 1 were filled with a desire to Ely, Children often play in the strcel M tnd when the youngsters arc on the highways and the cars are going I by with the speed of a limited train, there always is a big prospect n 'if a child being killed. d There should in something done in slow those who have a speci Hj It -3.. a I RAILROADS FIGHT MOTOR TRUCKS .3 When the railroads pushed westward, man n stage driver and J 3 eamstor was driven out of business and his investment m hprscs and j vagons rendered worthless. In many parts of the country freight- 3 .rs, with prairie schooners and freight teams, were reduced to bank- 1 uptcy. But the old stage drivers and freighters did not complain They accepted the ordeal as Ihe price of progress and went their ij H .'I But how conditions have changed' Yesterday 111 Salt Lake the 1 1 "ailroad officials and attorneys were before the public utilities com- 1 mission to ask protection against the possibility of a motor freight : lervice between Ogden and Salt Lake, claiming that to allow the ,-jf auto trucks to operate between the two cities 111 enrrving freight m The old tuners who saw their lug freight wagons pushed to one Jjl side by the coming of the steam engine would derive considerable 1 satisfaction from the present wry faces which railroad officials arc M making as they contemplate the loss in "business which the latest .jjl idder for traffic is threatening to inflict. 'M When you go to New York the hotel clerk will be pleased to i lave you tell him that in 1675 lodging in Gotham cost 6 cents a light and meals 12 cents each. B If a gas bomb were exploded over any part of Ohio, the mor- jjW .'ality among the presidential and vice presidential candidates would 91 be something frightful. OUTBURSTS OF EVERET TRuT Rinld cepesTes', 1 suppose j "You Mve Rcn of Ht, : YOU mair?i acjS, j Eg- : - gt's see, P- -1 U'M3"T WAS VOud " ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS CV OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON WIGGIL1 WORM'S TRICK f ' So." said W'iggily Worm .to Mr TinpaUno'. the faiiyman landlord, "I don't expect you to rent my br.md now iiiple-house In May hut I don't j think you ought to expect much rent tot an old. last year's apple like the one I am living In now. Mr. Ant, what do you think about It?" .Mr Ant. who had stopped in for a mug of cider and a nibble f apple seed cake, looked very Wise "Well,' said he gating around the walls and celling which had turned quite brown. I "I always believe In a compromise " ceo Wlgglly banded II pin over before you cbnld sneeze, and pocketed TlhgaUng'fl ihare before you could saeese tvit. "A compro what?" cried everybody, including Nancy and Nick who were listening to every word ' A compromise.'- repealed Mr. Ant ' "That means that everybody agrees I to something," j "What would you suggest?" asked Ting. ding Mi An 1 blinked his eyes "How would this do9 Let my friend. Mr. Worm here, p;v half his rent to ;ou, and you pay half to him." LITTLE BENNY'S Note Book By LEE PAPE 4 , i'op was reeding tho spoartlng page iv.th his feet up and ma was darning I boles out of socks, and I sod. Pop, do j I you think It would hert you to cat coap? o you think It would, inn? Thats a sensible quesUon for a brltel i oun; man to put to his bizzy father,' bod pop. Ma not seylng cm thing, and I Bed, Well do you think It would hert j you to cat watermelon fine? Do you I think It would, ma? I think some chlldern ask redlcklll6.s Questions, ed ma. Meenlng I was one J ol tbern, and pop sed, I 2nd the mo-1 lion. Meenlng hi tluit so too, and I scd. Well how about candle grecce, do1 1 yon think It would hert you to eat' j candle grecce? Do jou, pop? Do you, inia? nave you tne sngnifMt inclination to pat candle greece, soap, or s atermclon rlne? sed pop. No sir, 1 sed. Well then wats the big idcei ? sed pep. lvc ate them alreddj-, I t.c-d. The doose you have, sed pop. and ma sed. Ucnny Potts, youvc done nuth Ing of the sort, and I sed, Yes mam.' es sir, this afternoon I was erround 1 at Puds Simkinses and we had a bite taking contest and took bites out of things For mersey sake, no wonder you feel sick, sed mo, and 1 sed. I dont feci sick, ma, and ma sed: I think I bettor give him some medicine. No, let bad enuff alone, sod pop, and I sed, 1 o you wunt mo to tell you w at cits we took bites out of pop? Do you ma? With they both sed they ciident, so I dldent tell them about the dog blsgltt and the cako of ycest and the sunflower 00 LA1MS "MESMERISM" GOT HER IV DUTCH" (By International News Service) , CHICAQOi An eighteen-year-old girl, Glondpra Jones, who Just pradu-i ated from high school, appeared In court here recently seeking annul ment of her marriage to one Arthur Jones. She eald Jonea hypnotized ).i . Into marryinif him after she had mar ried the man sh loved and threat ened If she refused to 'turn h-r Into a dog and make her bark." Tfalgaling scratched hi:t hrad in .' puzzled way. "It's a bit queer," h said, "but It sounds fair enough. Her. you are. Wlggily. Here's my half Now gl i- nie yours " Wigglly handed it right v ' 1 !" fore you could snooze, and pc.en le. Tlnicallnp's share before you couh sneeze twice. "That's BOtttled," remarked tti. falryman, much pleased. "Mr Ant you must bo a lawyer to give sue! good advice." "By no moans," answered Mr. An sipping his older, "only I like to se everybody get fair play. Tingallng and tho twins said good bye then, and bowed themselves out It wasn't until half-past midnight tha Tingallng, not being able to sleep, be tr.m to e.mnt ilntis up Sinldenlv I dawned on him that Wigglly hadn' given him any rent at all! Oh, very well, Mr. Worm,' he ox claimed in the dark. "Next time 1 I rent you the greenest apple I owr and if you and your friend don' need a doctor, I'm a Chinaman." j Rippling' I Rhymes By WALT MASON 0 f st pi EU LI l 1 1 1 I nm always making payment on the things I do not need, furbelows and gorgeous raiment, rubber tiros on which to speed; to the village shops I'm golns, every day, with ojH r tread, useful, shining kopecks blowing for all kinds of gingerbread And as round the town I'm flivving, throw ing money to the hirds, I denounce the co3t of living in excoriating words. Nothing Cheap in price will suit me, costly things I must demand, or 1 fear my friends would hoot mj, as they prance in garments grand. For . 1 ss ssi 1 ASTJIT WASHINGTON Aug. 11 Presi dent Wilson already Is beginning to1 Wind up affaire at the- White House preparatory lo vacating March 4 next. His first slop In getting ready to yield possession of the executive man sion was an order that his flock of 48 sheep, which has become a familiar sight on the spacious White House lawn, should be sold No use carrying them through an other winter, It has been decided. In solving the purchase of feed and the hire of a care-taker, for before the succulent grass of another spring is high enough to crop someone else will be president and the newcomer may not have either lime or inclination to bother with sheep. The president's patriotic venture in sbccp-ixxlslng, taken as a sllmulus lo wool and meat production during the War; has been most successful. The hi id I'.'is Increased In numbers from i is 10 '!:. Tho 11)13 crop of wool alone , donated by the president to the Red loss, brought that organization more than $52,000. President Wilson, however, is not alone In b( , ruining plans for a change of residence next March, cicores und hundreds ol men high 111 official dr ew g are giving leas and less thought to the problems ahead of them in their governmental Jobs and more and more thought to what they aro going to do when the administration changes. Many or these will not wait until March 4 to make a change Know ing that even though a Democratic president may be elected the new comer will fill the offices closest to i him with men of blfl own choosing and not carry-overs from the present I administration, these already are be- 'gbinlng to lurn in their resignations. They return either to already os . tnbllshed Interests of their own outside Ol to east about for some new con- I r.ectlon. Even many men who aro ostensibly I rotectcd by being under civil service an preparing -to look elsewhere for Jobs, as thej say t h .i t civil service reg ulations become mighty clastic, at least with respect to choice positions, I when subjected to the heat and pres sure of a changing administration. f JUST FOLKS I By Edgar A. Guest i ; 1 BOB 'Vt H1TE. ' nit near the links where 1 go to play My favorite game lrom day to day. 1 There's a friend of mine that I've never met, 1 t Walked with or broken bread with, yet l vc 1 u.. .-'i to him oft and he's talked ' to me Whenever I've been where he'i chanced to be; He's a cheery old chap who keeps out of sight. A gay little follow whose name's Bob White. Bob While' bob White! 1 can hear him call As 1 follow the trail to my little ball Bob White! Boo White! with a note of cheer That was just designed for a mortal ear; Then I drift far off from the world of men An' stand an answer him back right then. An' we whistle away to each othci ihcrc. Glad of the life which is ours to share Bob White ! Bob White! May yoi llvo to be The head ol a numerous family! I May you boldly call lo your iriend. ' out here, With never an enemy's gun to fear J m a better man as I pass along, For your cheery call and your bit o! i song. May your food be plenty and skies b " bright L To the end of your days, good friend 1 Bob White! (Copyright; 1920, by Edgar A Guest. 1 ,'. 00 J OHOLERA TAKES 600 t SKoL'b, Korea. Aug. 6. (By the A: 01 iati d 1'i css) Six hundred dcatlu I have resulted from the epidemic 01 'cholera in Korea and 31,125 cases have 1 ' been reported. 00 The woman who is a good talker Is apt to be a good auditor. all kinds of gems and rubies they have blown the minted bones, and they look on folks as boobies who don't dank with precious stones. We art all hlamcd fools together busing junk whose price is high, heedless of the rainy weather that will hit us by and bj And while dally, hourly giving inibitlons of the kind, I denounce the cost of living as a graft that's most unkind When wo all regain our senses and just buy things we need, simple duds and picket fences, bay and bread and nutmeg seed, cutting out the pomp and spkmdor and the st reels where "bargains;" bloom, salt ing down the legal tender H. C. D. will see Its doom Labor's bujy mak inK motors when it should be making plows; let us soon, oh, men and vot ers, brush the cobwebs from our brows. Copyright by George Matthew Adams. GRAND CARNIVAL DANCE LORIN FARR PARK FRIDAY, AUGUST 13 B ists mm 1 bbbsbbbbssVbbsssbsbssVbbsVbIbbsbbsVH j LAST TBML TODAY d I "JUST Together With H A PATHE NEWS 1 WIFE" and I "TOPICS OF From Eugene Walter's . puy THE DAY I I Starting Tomorrow Herbert Rawlinson "Man and His 1 Woman" 2B9HHLBL9ffiHRsVr THE TITANIC FIGHT I FDR GOLD When news flashed around tho world that gold was discovered In J Alaska, O mad rush started for the; frozen north. !ld men. young men, I Ramblers, outlaws, hangers-on left 1 c.vlllzatlon in search of glittering gold, j Tent cities sprang up everywhere in this land Where nature ruled with an lion hand. Tho weak dropped by the; wayside and the strong, suffering dire! privations, fought for life and riches. I Robert W. Service, poet laureate of the northwest, and Charles Miller, om-i linont director of screen claries, have j immortalized the epoch-making strug gle between man and nature In "The i.: w of tho Yukon," .1 Mayflower I'lio Itoplay production. Mr. Miller's Intl-j I mate knowledge of the early history 'of tho Yukon country flls him pre eminently for the task of putting into Pictures the spirit of the Injplred lines ' y Mr, Service At the Albambra theatre next Sun day The Law of the Yukon" will ho the principal feature of the program. 00 The original navel orange tree was brought from Hrnzil more than 10 years ago and is now in a greenhouse Of the department of agriculture In ; Washington. I : "Ian and His Woman" Is Title of Big Picture I At the Ogden Tomorrow I Woman Is the glory of man. Krore his soul she spins the heart strings . H of his life and weaves them Into the M H fabric of hi funire "M::n and lll 9 Woman," the j. Stuart Blackton-Pathe W . 1 1 1 1 r si. 1 i-rim. ll.ri.'il I : . II 11 -.0 n n t P-. the Ogden theatn tomorrow, shows ejSrj H 1 1 .. two n 1 wovi the life fabric of sflfl Herbert Rawlinson portrays a doc tin .vho has discovered a tuberculosis serum that will benefit humanity. The woman he loves wrecks his life. He sinks to the lowest depths and his )JH Ood-glven power of saving life is wasted. But such a man owes something to Ihe world, If not to himself. Eve Car tier, a woman whose life was devoted lo service for others, with her purify ami faith and her love foi him, spur red him on to a new life Soul and body, she restored his strength. "Just a Wife" will be shown at the Ogden for the last times thU afternoon and evening. 00 Tho long lasting little flowers, called "immortelles " in France, have Hfl grown in popularity for decorating sol dhrs' graves. 111 II I 1 1 I llllll BMBMIMBI '.( Braiiswick Principles g In Fine Tire Making I The reason you are interested in the name on your tire id that it identifies the maker. By knoving the maker you can judge his ideals of manufacture. The only secret of a super-tire lies in the principles of the maker. His standards decide the quality. For there are no j . secrets in the tire industry. What you get depends on what is behind the name on your tire. Brunswick, as you know, means a veiy old concern, 1 jealous of its good name. Since 1845 the House of Brunswick has been famous the vorld over for the quality of its products. The Brunswick Tire is all chat you expect and more. Your first one will be a revelation. You'll agree that you've never known a better. And you'll tell your friends. So spreads the news among motorists. The Brunswick is the most wel come tire that ever came to market. k, Try one Brunswick Tire, Learn how good a tire can be built. And remember, it costs no more than like-type tires, THE BRUNS WICK-BALKE-COLLEN DER CO. Sail Lake City Headquartoi-s: 55 59 Wctt South Temple Street I Guarantee Basis OGDEN SPORTING GOODS CO. Distributors, 2311 Washington Avenue ROWELL & THOMPSONS Dealers, 262 Twenty-fourth Street, Ogden, Utah