trT -AT"- ' 1 i .aBMBBMBMMBMBMIMgl : ZJT : : . THURSDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 23. 1920. THE QGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER 7 fB "DOWN WITH THE DANCE HALL BOLSHEVIKI!" M "CALL TO ARMS" IS SOUNDED BUT IT WILL BE MERRY WAR! 1 S J TOO ?VV) by MOK r RnrRRv. X. E A staff nrrc-spondcnt. m HOUSTON Tex. its bolshevism, that'i what It is! And it has got 10 . " be stopped!" I' Policewoman Eva noclier, (r , i" Houston department, sounds I Hie f ull to amis agalnsl tin- ..liini- HHL mj and Jan Hut bow t.. st,,,, l' 'Well, it will Ik.- Iinrd." she jij admits. fjj "Talk about Russia' " My she. "If I I the Red has control anywhere, its i'L-a on the dance floors right in this country. It's not a menace this shimmy business it's an cver-prcscnt T9& ovll! "Dancing!" she adds diagustedij t in s jazz tilings they do aren't :r"2 ilancca." C'XH Policewoman Bacher's particular Job is to hunt down the male ' vamp" ijfi F"arJ tne sweet Clapper. Bh has no doubt about tho damage Eu9 he dance hall Trotakys are doing bui ''t'&m halting tiie Jazz mania is somriliiri else ngnln. I HBAn 1 i p YH 1 The Utah Hot Springs OPEN I ALL I YEAR E.fcfc 1 Special Car Service 5A LEAVES OGDEN Saturday Sunday 12:30 P M 12-33 P. M. 3:30 P. M. 1 30 P. M. J g:30 P- M. 2;J0 p m SJ f- S: 3 30 P M 8 00 P M 4:00 P- M- 8 30 P. M. 6 00 P. M. 9:00 P. M. B;3o p. M. 6;00 P. M. Leave.ar 7:1 P' M 1 forPOgdLn 8 30 P. M. at 11:30 P. M. 8:00 P, M. 4- 4 4 1 BIG FREE DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT t ! CABARET DANCING I 4- ' SWIMMING, BATHING WATER SPORTS III DAILY f, COME OUT1 The National Association of Dancing I Master! "sounded the doom" of such! dancing at the recent convention. I lint Policewoman Baclicr says It will lake more than "sound ing the doom"' to quiet the ShOUI-dcr-trerabllng, wriggling mm squirming of tin hopping bolahcv" IkL "In the old days dances, in whlcn everybody was doing the same sicp, al the :-ame time, were beautiful, and! now '" I First Direct Statement Says America Already Has Meddled loo Much MARION. 0-i Sept. 23. Declaring! the iri'h problem is "not a question for official America." Senator Harding paid in a statement today that in his , opinion the movement for Irish lndc-j pendence would be under the league . of nations a subject entirely "internal or domestic." "MJEDDLIKG ABROAD" Without referring directly to Demo cratic promises to bring the Irish ques-i tlon to the attention of the league, the Hepubllcan nominee eild that Ameri ca already had "meddled abroad ex cessively without Invitation," and as serted that official consideration by this government was quite another thint from an expression Of sympathy. The statement In which the senatoi discussed the Irish question directly i for the first time since his nomination follows: "There are two phases of the 80 called Irish question In America In dividual sentiment la one thing and It i is recognised that tuoro is a wide-1 spread sympathy here for the cause of j Irish autonomy. We voted nn expros-l tiion of that sympathy in the senate j at the time the peace delegates werO colli i rrlng In 1 'aris N I il l ICIAL QUESTION "Official consideration Is quite an other thing, it U not a question tor official America. America has aire a meddled excessively without In vita-, tlon. "I huve said, as I truly believe that under the provisions of the league of nations the Irish question Is internal! or domestic and I recall distinctly thatj at the. hearings beforo the senate for eign relations committee that thoj American advoates Of Irish Indcpend Mioc bitterly opposed the league as, proposed because it not only closed the door to Ireland, but committed ua ot the use of force to maintain terri torial Integrity as it exists today" oo Charles Ray Coming To The Ogden Sun day in "45 Minutes From Broadway" Eugene O'Brien opened n four-day engagement at the Ogden theatre yes iterday in what Is pronounced one of his strongest pictures, The Figure head," founded upon the Interesting story from the pen of John Lynch It Is a wonderful story of love and poli ties, showing how the great wheel of rolltlcs goes round While politics is one of the themes of the picture there is also an unusually strong love story. "Snub" Pollard in "Live and Loarir' is a smashing big comedy full of laughs and action. Next Sunday tun Ogden will offer Its I patrons Charles Ray In Georgo Cohan's famous stage piny, "5 Minutes From I Broadway." It is the first of the pic- i lures from Charlie's own 3tudlos and pionounced ths biggest and best he has ever appeared in. It is one of the I 1 Ig features of the early fall season. She sighed n hopeless sign. "Every night, on my rounds of the dar.ee halls. I marvel at the present day youth j "What do the dancers see In the Sidestepping and hesitation and er i antics they go through' Everybody rn ' everybody's way Why, the best traf tie officer In the country couldn't untanglo them. "Women used to be graceful In the days of the waltz. ' Now look at them'" : HURDIIb TELLS BUSINESS IDEALS Human and Materia! Progress, Candidate Says, Should Go Hand in Hand MARION, O.. Sept. 23 A universal) realisation that human and material I progress must go hand in hand, was j stated by Senator Hardlns today to be necessary If the nation is to attain 1 an ideal state of social Welfare R FORM lis VIEW) Speaking to a gathering of Ohio I Republicans, the Ohio presidential I nominee declared that neither social reformers nor Industrial chieftains should lew the problem of social bet terment strictly from their own s tana point. "We must awaken the conscience of the Ignorant and the misguided," ho said, "to. the. fact that the best I social welfare worker In the world IS I the man o. woman who does an hon-l cat day's work. Wc must awaken their conscience to recognize that American business is not a monster, but an expression of God-given im pulse to create and the savior and I the jtuardlan of our happiness, our homes and of equal opportunity fori nil In America. Whatever we do ror honest, humane American business, we do In the name of social welfare. II i d AMTY IN B1 SINESb. "Hut, It Is equally true that we muat awaken the conscience of American business to new interest in tin- wel fare of American human beings. It Is not enough for America that her busln :-s and commerce shall be hon est; they must also be humane. Men, women and children of America arc not commodities. "Wo cannot have the fullness of America until all of us turn again to love of toll and love of production to respect for honest organization of effort and to a willingness to put all our shoulders to the wheel. But, we i can not have all that love, and all tnat respect, and all that willingness until throughout the organization of our in- 1 dustry and commerce there runs the flow of the love of man " BODY OF WOMAN AD WRECKED CAR MAKE UP MYSTERY HOUSTON, Tex., Sept 23 The body of a young woman 24 or 2T, years old, was found on a road I twelve miles from Houston this i morning. She had been shot through the head. Near the body was an automobile overturned. The young woman had been .! id several hours. '1 he police are Investigating. AGE RECORD BROKEN BELFAST, Ireland. Sept 3. (cor respondence) A unique record of :entonarlan brothers has Just been! broken ' the death of John Mullan, iged 108. who lived with his brother Henry, aged 103, at Doncydale, near! Dungaunon, oo The petroleum deposits of Alsace ire the only ones In the world opei ted by shafts instead of bored wells. '-'. syjkisf Mil LEAGUE CALLHOIM1 Important Nations to Meet in Brussels for Talk on Finance NEW YORK Sept 23 The Inter national Financial Conference to be held at Brussels on September 24th Is announced in the official bulletins of the league of nations as "the first gathering of the important nations of the world since August, 1914 " It Is xpectod that more than forty states will be represented. In addition to the no mbi rs of the league, the L'nlted States, which has nor yet ratified the peace treaty, was Invited to send a delegate, also Finland Luxemburg, Esthonla, Latvia and Lithuania vhlch cunnot he admitted to membership of i the league before thf meeting of the .s.-enibh In November, and Germany, Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria. For the first time in six years the most Im portant nations of the world will meet about a common table SUMMONED BY LEAG1 E Although Ibis conference is sum moned bj the league of nations, states not members of the league will parti cipate on equal terms with members They Will have equal rights of speak ing, voting and of holding office The (onference is being so constituted as to draw forth, not so much the views of governments as the beet economic and financial opinion of the world. To 'his end. th economic section of the league which Is in charge of ar rangements, suggested that each na llon Ll deli k'.itlon consist of a high gov- rnmcnt official, a leading banker and a business man acquainted with the pn tlCal side of the economic situa tion in his country The members of each national delegation will vote not as a national group, but as individuals. The .urpose ,v t,, obtain a registration Ol the best WOrd opinion rfgardles of national lines. The financial and economic situation of each state will be examined, and for this purpose the delegates have bene requested to sub mit wrUten statements showing the financial situation of their respective countries, especially with reference to the budget, the internal and external debt, currency and exchange. Each delegate will be allowed a quarter of an hour for oral explanation of the main points In his written brief, si KM s in RESOLUTIONS After discussing these various prob lems, the conference win instruct a dratling committee to embody the main principals adopted In a series of resolution! tor submission to the dele v Ites The resolutions finally adopted will be submitted to the assembly of the league at Its meeting on November 16. Questions still under negotiation be tween tho allied and associated powers and ex-enemj powers will not be dis ' i od This prohibition applies cspe clallj to the question of the total urn, iint of German reparation which Is to be taken up shortly by the allied and German experts at Gcnea. Should a decision be reached on this question, however, during the meetings of tho conference, the conference would be empowa red to take It Into consldera tlon and enlarge us powers according ly. oo THE STORY OF A LOTOUNT '.suds." Mary Plckford's fortheom Lr. production for L'nlted Artists Which will bo seen at the Alhambra theatre on Sunday, might well be t i m.I 'The Talc of a Shirt," for the i Mi I are nil laid in a little launflry In the Slums of London, nnd Miss i ., l.i T.l, as Amanda Affllck, weaves BUCh a romance about the shirt which h;is been left by B casual customer that even her girl chums believe In almost ;ls much as herself. Having preached the philosophy of gladness In Pollyanha," Mary rick ford in "Suds" teaches the advantages and consolation of a vivid Imagination and when Lavender. the dell'very horse, is about to be sold for glue, fjh,. rescues him, takes him up two Of stairs to her room and tells him such wonderful tales that even this poor old animal bolle-es it. Bul with all Amanda Affllck is S little figure truo to llfo and with Miss I' i fiord's (left touches she brings the .i Mil, ru e bark from laughter to tears and bach again with her wonderful tales to the tingle termination of her romance. oo The American Red Cmns conducts an artificial limb factory for Greek) war crluclcs at Athens. j uA GOODVUt TO TRAPS ' I j A Hundred Suits Sfe I Fifty O'Coats mBm I j Values That Are Worth JjjK : M j -do you remember that remarkable wjl lll ! I sale of suits that we gave to the i ilmyf I j fl I men of Ogden last fall? mnMMir ! -it is certain Uiat you will remem- I ber it if you were one of those w took advantage of the saving. I mmBk I today we offer a sale that is just mvf ! as remarkable. One hundred IVnH ml men's suits smartest of the fall winSwM ! I models - suits worth from $ 1 0 UWlifflHli B to $ 1 5 more than we are asking. IllfflM I -there are suits for men of all ages; lllffl H J ' I I smart, nifty styles for the younger ll w V Hi I I j chaps - conseivative models for 11 1 11 I the older men. I Ha 1 1 H I -there is no obligation incurred in m 1 111 i ; 1 coming for a look. Drop in to- JlgS 11 ' fl I ridi.'4 TlLijl j .A GOODVIE TOTRAOB jj H BIG FRUIT CROP ALL01DT0 ROT Half Million Dollars Lost By: Lack of Transportation and Market Conditions CHICAGO, Sept 22. A half million dollars' worth of the greatest fruit crop Berrien county, Michigan, has grown in five cars lies rotting on the ground, four hours from Chicago by boat or rail. This estimate was made b expert growers to an investigator for the Chicago Daily News, which published tho story Men interviewed declared the crop of peaches, pears, apples, plums and cantaloupes to be worth from 8. 000. 000 to $10,000,000 Thousands of bushels of fine pi ti hes are being fed to the hogs or droppod on the ground to rot. Karinors, commission men and farm! organization experts gac various roa-j eons for the situation. Some of thesei were car shortage, inability of boats to handle the huge crop a sudden gen-1 oral ripening due to tho late warm I weather, and ' welching' In contracts! made last spring with thfe growers, ' Peaches w hich are selling In Chicago for iZ.oO to $3 60 a bushel are going in the Benton Harbor market for 75 cents to $1 25, and tho farmers de clare the cheapest peaches they have raised have cost thorn 1.7 0. The Kl bcrtas which have brought $4 to 6 a bushel In this city have been sold In I Benton Harbor for $2 50 Growers admitted, the article said, I lhat their onl salvation Is organlza-, tlon. such a6 the men of the Pacific coant have perfected COLLEGE GIRL, 22, BECOMES MINISTER FOR M. E. CHURCH OELWEIN. la , Sept 2:,. Miss Klla Pratt, 22. of Walla Walla. Wash , a senior at Cornell college here, today as ordained a mini ster, by the Davenport district of the upper Iowa Methodist Episco pal conference. C LAIMS HIS AGE is MS YKARS (By International New Service) CONST ANTIN' iJ'LE. Kurdo Zeral wants to enter who-ls-the-oldest-man-i in-the-world contest He can prove bv church records that he is 145 years( old, having been born in Turkey in tin year 1775 Ho has been married twice and has had fifteen children, tho last of whom, said Zera, Is still living al the age of nlnety-slx- ENGLISH LABOR TALK1STIE Chiefs of Triple Alliance Meet to Consider Support To ward 'Miners LONDON". Sept. 2.1 Decision reta tlvs to a nation-wide strike of miners and support of the movement b im portant labor organizations was ex pected when the executive commit tees of tho Miners' Federation, the National T'nlon of Railway Men, and the Transport Workers' I'nlon niei. here today. The representatives of these unions tho triple alliance or la borconsidered the reply of Pronuer Lloyd George to representatives of tne alliance" during an interview yester day which did not seem to meet tlie demands of the miners for an increase In w-jik' -s and a reduction in tho price of coal. Mr Lloyd George proposed that the mat It of wages be submitted tn an Impartial tribunal for adjudication, and that the miners work out with tho owners of mines a system by which they might augment their wages h increasing production. Statements made by union leaders have Indicated thoy have reached a conclusion that the miners nave proved they aro entitled to a wage advance, and that the rallmen md transport workers will heartily sup port a strike. oo HERE'S WORDS THAT ROUT RANKS OF SPELLING BEE WASHINGTON. Sept. 23 Tho who consider themselves expert spell ers may bo interested tn the result of a series of old-fashloncd spelling bees held In a popular summer resort of North Carolina to determine the words which are most difficult for the person of average education to spell. By almost unanimous consent, "ele emoaynary" was given the stellar posi tion, 91 per cent of the contestants meeting disaster upon one or another Of the essentia vowels. "Connoisseur" wrecked the ambitions of all except those who could be classified under that term Itself, "fuchsia' was thirl In terms of difficulty, being followed In order by "tranquillity. ' fricassee." consensus. ' supercede," ' question naire and ' periphery." ' Separate,' long in disgrace as tho most easily mlespollcd word in the or dinary vocabulary caused little trouble In this particular circle; and despite the spread of Ihc neumystle cult. ' oulja" was familiar to only BO per cent. The n s and one t In Cincinnati still kept it in the general class of "saccalaureate." 00 The river Po begins to form Its delta s'xty miles from Its mouth. COX HURRIES ON I TO NEW MEXICO I Cancels Arizona Speeches Be- B cause of Delay by Train Ht Wrer.k h9 I EN ROUTE WITH GOVERNOR Hr COX. Sept. 23 With " his Arizona Bll campaign terminated abruptly by the ll wreck of his special train yesterday I n near Phoenix Governor Cox. Demo- , cratic presidential candidate, today r O was en, route through New Mexico, to speak tonight at Albuquerque. The governor and his party today was none the worse for their expert enec in the disaster to their train, Out thankful that so few Injuries resulted. Through the wreck, tho governor 1 I ! lost two speaking engagements sched ued today in northern Arizona. He I had no speaking engagements today Hi except tonight's address at Albuquet - It ; que. but It was thought possible that In- might to ne or two ' H rear platform talks. Al Doming. N. M , a largo crowd Hl gathered about the governor's car and routed him out of bed to speak a few words. From Doming to Rlncon tne candidate's parly again traveled Dy special train in order to connect with the regular train which was to tafke 1 flH them to Albuquerque , H m mm show I ST OKI TODS! I The new Pantages vaudeville bill ( 1 opens ut the Orphcum toduy with I H six stellar acts headlined by the "Some- H where In Prance," a delightful sins- jj ing sketch with wit and satire on tne B war Tom Kelly is with us again with , II his wonderful singing of Irish soricj : I H 'and a number of new Jokes and storljfs. H Hal Davis and Dixie Nelson have1 a I H d( llgbtful sketch wliUc Jim Reynolds, 1 I H Dorothy Manning and Doagon and i Bl Clifton have acts of unusual enter- HJ t. lining qualltn .. The v. h,,' bill; is one of excellence and has pleased large. ff J ! audiences in Salt Lake the pat wttk. B LmAlBjl on glJJJJJJJJJJJJgi M M; ND1N liONDS. VffW (Oy International Newt Service) lAjHgv WINNIPKQ, Man. During AOg R , just Manitoba disposed of several I K blocks of bonds, amounting In all to jjmlBJ $4,500,000. which have all been sold HHHJ in the United States at a rate to yll.J I Q IB the Investor i llttlo over S per cent- BBBJ Tbu bonds wore tor five years and flBBJ bear t per cent. 'flS