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4 .HE QGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 2, ij I The Ogden Standard-Examiner PUBLISHING COMPANY. An Independent Newspaper Publlehed every evening and Sunday morning without a muule or a club Entered aa Second-data Matter at the Poatoffloe, Ogden, Utah. Eetabllehed 1876 Member of the Audit Bureau of Circuit- tlon and The Associated Preia. subscrTption IN ADVANCE Delivered by Carrier Dally and Sun day, 1 year $10 80 By Mall Dally and Sunday. 1 Year. ,87,80 j MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TIM Aaaoclated Press la exclusively en titled to the use for republication of any new credited to It not otherwise credited In thla paper and alto the local newt pub. Ilahed herein. V" standardTexaminer tele phone NUMBERS Classified Ad. Dept 66 Bualnett and Circulation Dept . ... 56 Display Advertising Dept . 428 Editorial and News Dept 870 I NO REFLECTION ON CARBON FUEL COMPANY. On June 24 The Standard Examln or In an editorial commented on the news from Carbon county that the national guardsmen on duty there had I turned back three nun who were be iug escorted by representatives of the Carbon Fuel company The editorial went on to sa that tho commander of iho guardsmen haB made it known that Individuals who voluntarily seek work in Ihe mines 6hall be protected but that groups with fares paid will be stopped. The editorial praised the ofticer's policy, declaring that it was right to keep tho gunman type Of strike breaker out of Carbon county. The Standard Examiner did not In tend that this editorial should be a re flection on the Carbon Fuel company or on any other operaiing company The paper did not wish to Rive the impression thai the" Carbon Fuel com nanv was eniplovins the gunman clas 1 Iol strike-breakers Cnfortunatelj there is an Impres slon in some quarters thai this edi torial accused the Carbon Fuel rcmi pany of employing gunmen and ihug6 The( Standard-Examiner regrets that! uch an impression has resulted This paper has a high opinion of the men making up the Carbon Fuel company, and had not the least intention of re- fleeting upon them in commenting upon the Carbon county situation oo KEEPING OUT FOREIGNERS I So great has been the rush of immi grants to the United States, that the congress had to pass restriction laws, allowing only a small percentage of the former flood which swept in upon 1 our shores to land. As a result, ltal ian, Greek, Russian and other foreign era watch their opportunity to knock at the doors of Ellis island for admis slon. Each half year there Is a clearing : of ihe records, and then the ports are; thrown open to receive the quotas lor H ihe next six months, at a rate not to' exceed 20 per cent in any one month. Last night great ships approached New York harbor, keeping outside the j ihree-mile limit, and this morning SH .1 I.- r..M . , .. rv, .U I Imey were uuuei iuii cicnui, mar. for quarantine in order to he the first io discharge their 7000 aliens on the shores of America When the full quota of any foreign countr is filled, all arrivals in excess are ordered deported at the expense of the steamship company which brought them. How great must be the disappoint ment suffered by a family which has gathered sufficient funds to leave the old country, hoping to make a home in the land of opportunity, to find on landing at Ellis island that America has closed Its doors' There Bhoud be some method worked out by whlrh the foreigner would be denied a passport until America was ready to receive him Then the ex treme sacrifices which are made, ac companied by heart breaking disap pointments, might be avoided oo DOES NOT TRUST HAYES- Senator Myers of Montana lacks j confidence in William Hays, who is managing the movies, having stepped down from the high position of post master general. The Benator demands a censorship by the government. Having made note of the fact thatj Mr. Hays, talking to the general Fed eration of Women's Clubs at Chau tauqua, N. Y.. promised to cleanse the movies at their source. Senator Myer? ' said: "1 am afraid the dollar mark will be the censor unless laws are enacted providing official censorship and it looks to me as though Mr. Hays was employed to prevent censorship." This is a direct charge that Mr Hays is not sincere, In fact is em ployed for no other purpose than to keep off the hands of the censor Senator Myers is right in saying that if censorship Is needed the work should be undertaken by some one i other than a hired worker for the makers of the movies. aw oo H CRAMPED. I Txndon finds its smallest house, op poslte Kensington Palace Gardens Its) H atret frontage Is only six feet. The owner uses the ground floor for a H -shop, the cellar for cooking and eat ing atu the second floor for a bed room and living room. is thlstb sort of domicile that cir- '.ed coug,.Bt.ion is heading the ma- Jority of ua tnwarrp Steadily mount I' fj&kndTaluy tmpriBon us m smaller and smaller metropolitan cells. Yet It is only a few generations since nearlv every one could Bfford a large yard Before ibe cells get smotherlnglv small, the airplane may break up the cities. oo HOOKWORM. Can hookworm, the "laziness dis ease." be cured by carbon tetrachlo ride" It seems so, according to evi dence from Ceylon and the Fiji Is lands, where thousands of hookworm cases have been treated with success in nearly all cases. Research work along this line was started by the discoveries of an Amer ican Dr. Maurice C Hall of the de partment of agriculture Part of the honor goes to a con- damned criminal in tho Bogambra prison at Kundy. Ceylon, who was the first volunteer ns a sublect for exoerl i . ments. A post mortem after his exe I cution showed that tho hookworm euro in bis case was complete. Carbon tetrachloride is very cheap If It proves to be a real cure. Hall's discovery will be of infinite value. Mil lions of people have hookworm Oth ers act like iL j RADIO Marconi predicts that the best radio equipment of today will be obsolete in ' ten years, possibly sooner. What will the future be? Wireless has extended man's sense of hearing, thousands of times the dis tance a sound can be heard by the ear, without the aid of Hertzian waves Soon radio will be extending the sense of sight, by radio movies. Will it also extend other senses, no- I tably the sense of smell" Will in-' mnn In a city office be able, by radio, ' to smell the fragrance o( meadows and woods" It is no' impossible. save that civilized man has almost lost the sense of smell PROSPERITY Important news, for all who work I The railroads announce i hat in th. I week ended June 10 they loaded Sit".. I 002 cars of freight This was 38 797 cars mote than in I the corresponding week of 1919, dur i ing the big boom The gain would be 1 around KHT.OOO cars Instead of 38.797. If coal were moving normally instead of being held back bv the strike. Many are wondering if a business boom really Is coming, roraint ' 1' Is here now, in many industries. And !' is no? a false alarm. oo WORK Frank MoManarm. traffic eipert, 1 finds that the railroads have 334,000 freight cars and 13.128 locomotives in bad order" that is. laid up for re- pairs. Gelliug this crippled rolling stock Into good shape again will provide jobs lor many thousands of men. In every branch of our economic system we hae bad order" equip ment buildtug and repairs needed Everything wears out Repairing or replacing it is what, brings prosperity. The momen'um of prosperity Is gener ated in hard times oo ; SCHOOLS. f"ur educational system is not yel ! practical enough, though better than j it was years ago. One proof of this: Thousands of high school girls and J i boys are seeking work in vacation Ask them, "What have you been j I trained to do?" Most of them answer, "Nothing " "Can you dance?" "Can I? Hot dog " vu I THE SUPER SIX. j The six greatest men in history, ac cording to H. G Wells, are Jesus. Bud dha, Asoka, Aristotle. Roger Bacon j I and Abraham Lincoln The names are familiar to you, with the exception of Asoka He was a I I king who reigned In India 2145 years ! ago. Wells Includes him In the super- ' six list because "He Is the only mili tary monarch on record who aban j doned warfare after victory." Roger Bacon was an English philos I opher of seven centuries ago, who delved in Black Magic. Most of his greatness is based on myth and sup position. Aristotle, the Greek philosopher, might be included in the list, though he was not great enough to induce his pupil, Alexander the Great, to re frain from waging vicious wars of conquest No two people will agTee on a list of the six greatest men 'in hlstroy. Most Americans would exclude Jesus, be lieving him a divinity instead of a man. What list do you nominate? In com piling It, keep in mind that real great ness depends on service to humanity. The most Important thing In civili zation is the home. And most house wives, aTter thinking about it, will agree that the most important service to the home was tho invention of the cooking stovo and its big brother, the heating furnace No one knows who Invented them But the honor of con ceiving the fundamentals or the mod em form goes to Benjamin Franklin. Viewed from modern standards, It Is probable that several of history's six I greatest men are living todav Marconi, inventor of wireless, be ' -ongs in the list We live too close j to ihe crude, pioneering, early stages of his invention to conceive of the tremendous importance It will play in the life of our remote descendants If peopl" live on Mars or other bodies out in space, they win gt In touch with us only by radio. Breaking man'? earth shackles and putting him in touch with far-off spaco would place tho inventor of radio In every list of the great. The Wright brothers, who flew the first airplane and opened the way for man's conquest of the air and dls tance, are among history's greatest Einstein also belongs on tho list, for he Is the forerunner of man's think Ing In terms of four dimensions In slead of three And how about Watt, Inventor of the steam engine, without which the railroads would not have been built? At tbo tip-top of tho list should bo Gutenberg or the other man, an un known Chinese, who Invented printing from movable type Nine tenths o' our progress physical, Intellectual and spiritual Is duo to printing. DEATH. Fifty years ago realdents of New York City died at an average ago of 42 Now they live eleven years longer. So says that city's health commission er. Dr Roal S Copeland. In tracing family trees, however one celst the Idea that more people lived to an advanced age a half cen tury ago ihan now. In a rough way, this impression is correct The uverage duration of human life lias been extended largely b redUC ing the dealh rate among the youup especially babies Medical science has made ii possi hie for people w ho reach maturity to I live longer than their ancestors Bui usually t his Is counteracted by Ignor-1 mg the simplest of health rules or h ing i he pace that kills . uu- SUICIDE. Nearly every one wants to live to I be very old By nghi living and rlglr ! thinking, the average, person should live to 100, according to Dr Royal S. copeland The average person falls io reach j 100. largely because he commits slow j suicide Every time a man lakes a drink of , bad liquor, he snips months and possi bly years off his life. Slow suicide j comes in many other ways, especially n' c-r eating. You know ihe formula foi old age. But are you living up to the rules" If so. you are exceptional oo RINGS. Jewelers in many cities notice a, growing tendency ol bridegroom wearing rings, the same ap brides It Is not a bad idea A potentially I i wayward husband might he kept In; the straight and narrow If his "en gagement flnget" had a gold band as' a constant reminder I Considerable opposiilon to wedding l rings has risen lately among people; who believe the tradition that the wedding ring is a survival of ancient days when men supposedly used H aa. ' a symbol of possession, same as a i hain on a dog The origin does not matter Most people keep closed contact with the psychic when they can embodv 11 In a material symbol Wedding and en gagement rings are to love nnd mar riage what the flag is to patriotism on a gold badge to a secret Id let 00 Tom W M Sims Hjf 1 Say There are too many flies that haven't been swatted eL Woman is going to marry the man who shot her Revenge is sweet Even time gas goes up the shoe 1 dealers crin Strange things happen We know a bachelor who Is in debt If she looks good In short dresses, I so do the men. We have tho unwritten law What we need is the unbroken law Some of our gardeners have had Vegetables. You can tell by the emp tv cahs In their sardens Every auto accident Is caused by Jay walkers or Jay drivers. Any man who gets up early on Sun day is lazy. He does it so he will have more time to loaf. Wonder how this man with two wives in one bouse found a place to hang his clothes We have our ups and downs. An I optimist looks forward to the ups. n pessimist to the downs. Justice is blind. All of us ihlnk we are eye doctors I Our army may be cut to 125,000 but I as long as strangers walk across I lawns we will bavo fighters. I Voliva Bays all flappers are going to hell Some of them are nearly dressed I for the trip I Some men stav down town so much 1 that when they do eal ai home they ' look for the menu. Times get better A pie hasn't as many pieces as It once had No July Fourth Is complete with i out somebody calling our flag "The I colors that never run " Yale gave 14 honorary degrees ihis year The thermometer is doing bet i ter than that. From what we hear of the ex kai ser's book, be knows more about fight ing than writing. And he lost the war. If vou don't want to associate with reformers in the nexi world, he eonrl in this ona, 7 m ABOUT THIS, m THAT AND , T'OTHER By D. J. G. I have watched ;inl waited fOl some brniny vrltcr to us a pon derous essay on the subject of lawn sprinkling-, but In vain. It is my opinion that here In a subject both for the medical writer and the scrib- bier dealing with psychology, for no I matter What worries may besot the ' housewife or what troubles may have camped upon hubby's trail an atmos phere of contentment, peace ami comfort eeoms to settle upon them as ' I they grasp tho hoso and proceed to spray aqua Upon the green Turmoil. 1 heat and bill nro forgotten as one goes through the lawn sprinkling I rites. Sprinkling has all the Soothing I qualities of tobaceo smoking without ( its III effects Test your neighbor bs , he sprinkles You runnot Irritatt i him He sees good In everything I congress, high taxes and the gasoline trust. ine COUld go on for a COlumt describing the fine points about lawn sprinkling md then enumerate the best thing about it which Is this One I does not have to do It In the winter.! Just when the publication of infant mortality statistics nave northern cdi-tor- a chance to litht In upon th southern states for their poor show-; intr and Incidentally work In a hltterl arraignment of the soirth for its poor public schools Its ciiihi labor Ita Ku' KlUX Klnnlsm an. I Its brutal lynch-j lnjs, Illinois, a northern state, breaks loose with a fine carnival of horror-, jand spoils the whole works. The other day a group of .Ogden nun who were going on a fishing trip wen- in a grocery store buying upile. 'I lies were selei tlnK all1 sorts of delicacies, including canned I grapes, stuffed olives and expensive relishes, The grocery clerk was in old-timer He said this modern a of buying camplne. supplies remind 3d I him aboul three oden worthies, all ' dead now. whom we will call Bill. Flank and Steve. These three old ti llous made an an nual fishing trip together for years and years In a one-horse rig They got all ready for their trip one ium i mer and drove up m front of tin late Dan Kaftan's grocery store on Twenty-fourth Htreet. The throe dug down Into their pockets and got $5 togeth er. This fund was given to Ste,. i buy the grub for tho expedition Steve first took a goqfd-sljsed demi john and went to the rear department 'of the Kiesel wholesale establishment, I then Standing where the K. J Kjc , bllUdlnC Is situated. He returned with the bottle filled und put it in the I back of the wagon Then he wen! into Ragan's store and bought a sma'I j chunk of salt pork with which to fry fish and a couple of loaves of bread and brought these to the wagon Re if known that all three cronle-s were flrst-clacs drinking men and both Bill and Hank scrutinized th" supplier very closely as Steve put the two loaves of bread and the pork I alongside the demijohn of whlskej I S'tevo observed their keen Inspection. "Well is everything all right"" Stevt i finally asked his partners. Hank hesi tated, looked at the grub again and finally said: "Bill, don't you think Ste spent too much for bread and pork?" Cornet players continue to put quaint devices into their Instruments to provide the desired putrid tone quality, trap drummers continue to licnt right lustily upon metallic ob ject for torturing the ear and Jazz players generally go through ill the contortions deemed necessary in the trade yet all oer the country COOK reports that the dance craze Is wan ing. The movies report that their business Is not as brink as it mlKht he. Managers of theatres where the legitimate plays are beating th' all over lack of patronage. Th. pa-..' i service station seems to be the only plaee patronized by the public in search of amusement. What Is hap-1 penlng? What win tickle tho fancy of the amusement seekers? lilt upon the right thing and get busy your fortune will be made. There may be r prettier and greener: spot than the valley region at Liberty in i ipden valley, but 1 don't know' where It is. To leave tho hot city In an automobile at about 6 o'clock and drive slowly over the state road ih rough Eden and Liberty Is a real I treat. GERMANY MADE 10,000,000 GUNS Figures Show Tremendous Production of Arms and Munitions Which Reached Peak in 1918 BERLIN". July 1 fBy The Asso ciated Press.) Germany manufac tured a total of 10 000.000 field gun?, rifles and pistols durlni; the war, ac cording to statistics Just made public, besides hundreds of millions of tons! of munitions. Enough barbed wire alone was produced to encircle Ger many with barricade Co meters ' The year 1917 seems to have oen ' I the high water mark in the volume of war supplies turned out. New hand grenades appeared during the I winter of 1916-1917 at the rate of 9,000.00(1 monthlj PROm tTION SPKKDETD. j In 1917 also there were prodt i I 2, 3 4 0,000,000 shells, 110,000.000 pled of ammunition for close action, more ! than 100,000.000 kilograms of powdei i 'nil more than 32G, 000,000 kilograms I of oilier explosives. At the same time -I "'i trench mortars were mantlfac ;iui-ed monthly, and during the same year 76.000,000 Illuminating bomba and 193,0&0 u00 signal cartridges were delivered Klve months after the beginning of hostilities, 1.200 gun were being turned out daily and later this figure 1 .was Increased to I'OO.OOO monthly Machine guns were delivered at the ran- of L'300 monthlv In th- middle of 1916. at the rate of 7.000 in thol .'spring of 1917 and at the rate of : 13.000 In the fall of 1917 Heavy artillery numbered 1,640 bat terlea In 1918. For light artillery the monthly production of R-uns waa 1,6004 In 1916. 2,000 In 1917, and latei thi ' , production w.i.s i tlsed to 3.000 Twenty million sandbags i moil l were required during the war in approximately 500,000 .steel helmels I and gas mu-sks were manufactured -ery month The army printed 1,500, 000,000 maps during the war. In the summer of 191&. owing to the shortage of rubber and other ma- terlals. the German- had barely 40,-1 000 automobiles on all fronts, while I the entente, according to these stat Is-1 using 201 ' u-rn irom aJuuu. Start Tomorrow Morning al This Store These Julij Sales open the way to definite economy at the same time providing excellent choice of merchandise for household and personal use. They include many attractive items for vaca tionists. As me have broadcasted this clearance policij into every department of the store, you mill find it profitable to do a good deal of shopping around among the many bargain aisles. Doors Open Promptly Monday Morning at 9 o'clock BURT'S : " FUR BEACH SUITS-THEY'RE REALLY R EM j ERMINE COMBINED WITH SEAL IS VERY FASHIONABLE BY MARIAN HALL We have with us today the modern version of the ancient cavewoman. Recently some designer, a furrl;i we epspect, realised the plcturesope of the prehistoric woman's garb, and i has used It as ;l model for the sea son's sartorial M-nsatlon the fur . bathing suit' Doubtless you hnve struggled along several seasons without a sable swim ming suit, and unless your family budget warrants an expenditure of several thousands, you can do so again, but If you wish the very lat est here it Is, The why of the fui bathing suit eludes me. Why one should aWSltei under a coat of fur on a hot day or -uiin In weather so cold ai to war rant one, is beyond me. But reason and style do not always walk hand In hand. At a fashionable behch, not man) miles from New York living model" parade the beach each day, wearing fur bathing suits. These are cut on the popular lines ! of the silk or wool variety and are I made up In the popular furs of the I , season. i Rrmlne, which Is not nearly so , costly as It used to be. Is very fash ! lonable. Sometimes It is combined with seal, the combination of black and while against the blue sky and' ".iter, being greatly admired. Some snappy little suits of leop ard skin, made up very much like ballet costumes with a bodice and boulder straps, are very reasonable only a hundred dollars. Moleskin lends Itself admirably to ihe season's modes. So does squirrjl I and kolinsky. Six or eight hundred dollars will ! buy you a very nifty little suit If you stick to medium priced furs, but If you have sable leanings then there's' no limit to what you can spend But what would the original cave-i woman have got If she had handled the family funds so casually" 00 BELGIAN BUSINESS MEN TO VISIT JAPAN TOKIO, July 1 A 6mall Belgian business menu delegation, consisting of probably alx persons. Is planning t i visit this country sometime In the autumn. The mission will represent about six of the different Industries of Belgium namclv steel and Iron, paper, glass and textiles and will also visit rhlna, the Philippine Islands and ! Slam. Iuring June 1st Ambassador de Bassorqplorrs advised bis home gov ernment that he thought n party of Molglun business men should come to Japan and see trade conditions for I themselves This the Belgian dlplo ! said was due to the fact that the war the trade of his country With Japan had grown considerably. As a matter of fact only Germany and Belgium Showed increased In their re ports for 1321 to this country overl those of the preceding year At the present time there are very! few Beie.:-,, business housea in this I country, yet the trade continues to: grow and the object of the mission Inl I visiting this country is to get first hand Information as to actual con-1 dltions ho that future business may! be handled more Intelligent! NEW KING OF EGYPT WILL VISIT AMERICA CAIRO, July 1 King Fuad I of Egypt intends to visit the United States as well as Europe in his tours this year. In order to acquaint himself with the new movements of the world and so bo better qualified to govern his people wisely; This project, coupled with the offi cial announcement that the govern ments of Spain. France. Germany, It aly and Per.sLa hae informed Egvpt that they have raised tholr diplomatic - A .agencies and consulates . n 1 ICalro to legations, has iro igl lose I to the Egyptian pi i thai B pi bac last attained tnil independence. it is rumored that the . .mmissloH enti , neaj "ii on ' dH ld( 'l the , t'ibl)fl which is to be elected soon houB i onsist of two bodies, u ber ofl deputies and a nate n .beiH ot the latter arc to he . onfined tH I princess 'of the royal famllv c-prenH lers, minister.-., high i. i i ial chleH and leading notables ... .. i, ,,,, ;,, anS. to be elected and 30 nominated. J i The commission win provi.i.. for toB creation of a supreme court modelli after that of the rmt.-.i xutr-s, witV power to ;.a.s on !,. ..rvilitH. of the laws of the land. M Tho king Is to h.iv. mm. In ,1 powenW onlj the real power . ested V tic ..lit" I of ' i i uoulew bo responsible to h. ,i .cmK ALL READY FOR THE BI6 HOLIDAY I I JULY FOURTH I I K CELEBRATE IT RIGHT AT THE 9 - K I M UTAH HT SPRINGS 'V I VM TWENTY MINUTES FROM OGDEN ij jfrSk fi'" I (( SOMETHING DOING ALL DAY S-;! Big Free Dance M I I BATHING -