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1 Til? 1 WU.KD: UC.UKN. VTAtf. TUESDAY OCIOBLK Jtt I'M'' 3 ': hi i ji j (ill 'UlftliOI h . m f 'j You cannot think of one without the suggesting of $ j t"5;' ":. the ether You will not 5jj find cnc wihout th. otaer $25 to $500 I . i ou do noi inoA the real pleasure and enjoyment ol a T ' Victiola, this is the ideal time to buy one. Long winter yt Hl f-vcn ngc w.il he hapoily spent and the men-folks will have ij KSf-'Slfc no desire to soend heir evenings any place but home. i M , BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS PHONOGRAPH NOW i plis ! First Aerial Derby Around World to I Start July 4, 1920 j LOS ANGELES, Oct 27 The first j aerial derby around the world, tor prizes totaling ?1,000,000, is scheduled I I to start Juh I. I'.i2'i, and ml on r I before January 3, 1921, according to announcement, made here tonight by Man r , pri ident ot th Aero 15lj" 1 .i.. a id mbi r of the rouii1, lennnipHon which is making a tour of 11 rnl tn i. i control station tbi thisi lD,:' ran ' xpe ted to pat ticipate In juK the derhv The commission, headed by .fjftC Commodore Louis D. Beaumom, at rived 1 todn . Mr. Hawley also made public rub B I Sovcrnin? the proposed contest, which AM FIGURE IT OUT FOR YOURSELF style plus fit plus fine tailor I ing, added to good, pure wool fabrics and the result is good clothes clothes that give service and hold their shape from start to finish. let us show you what we mean by good clothes. WAPPLER TAILOR TO MEN $35.00 to $75.00 05 Twenty-fourth at Hudson. I Is to be held by the International Aoro Inautic Federation, under the aspic s ; lot the Aero Club of America and tfco I Aerial League of America. The zone of travel will be confined to the area between sixty degrees north latitude and 15 degrees south latitude. Within this zone, the con- testants may select their own route and waj of travel, provided they re port to at least one control on the American. European. Asiatic and Afri can continents, and cross the Atlan'tc and Tacific oceans. The contest com 1 mittee believes, Mr. Hawley said, that in allowing the contestants to choose their own route, rhe advantages of dif ferent routes will be developed. uu High School Threatens to Go on Strike HELLEVILLi: III., Oct. 2S. De mands that a "hich school soviet" be established here an- made? in a memo i rial to the high school board by stu dents of the Belleville township high school The memorial states that if demands are not met by November 1. the students will "go on strike." The students demand a sis-hour school day, Friday afternoon holiday, a minimum passing grado of 50 rather than 75, teachers under the age of 35 years, pool tables and phonographs in the recreation rooms, free lunch to ! senior students and that all regula I tions originate with the students'! council. Fifteen Stars Have Entered Big Classic Here on November 11 Fifteen of the best long distance runners in the west have entered the big six-mile cross country champion ship run which will be held an one of the features of the armistic day pro gram here No ember 11. Some of 'he best stars in the west have already 'entered and others nave signified their intntion of doing so. Yeaman DeBusk and Tete Vog'ar, both stars of the first order will r p resent the .Salt Lake high school weBt in the games Both fit-Busk and Voge ' lar are flve-milers and are BXpe'ited to show plenty of class. I W E Towns, a veteran ot scores I of marathons in various parts of the I country and reputed 'o be one of i lie classiest Indian runners since the I days of Tom Longboat, has entered land will represenl Cheyenne in he big classic. Towns has been In the nnmm mma shims snnnnMg Denver iace several times and should be a hard man to defeat. He in now in training here. Fraukie Smith of Denver wired I te yesterday to the effect that h would J be on hand He will represent tle East Denver high school in the bit.' classic I With the event but two weeks avayj it Is expected that at least lorty of the best long distance stars in the j w'est will be on the line when Sta.ten Freeman Bassett sends the men on I their way. J. J. Brummitt, 2417 Hud son avenue, pays highest prices for Liberty bonds. , i -p&E R I S C O P I N, -THE WORLDS with " Our Office Boy. ' I TOMORROW! My friend, have you heard Of the town of Yawn, On the banks I Of the river Slow, Where blooms the Waitawhile Flower fair, And the Some Time-Or Other Scents the air, And the soft Go-Easy s grow? Ii lies in the valley Of What's-the-Use, In the province Of Let-Her-Slide; That old Tired Feeling Is a native there It's the home of the Listless 1 Don't -Care Where the ""ut-It-Offs abide. Anon. Success is the greatest tonic for courage and always has been. Rents are no soarer than the tenants these days. There's no greater inspiration for eloquent oratory than the sale of a used car. Those ctcht Mexicans who were ar rested by the Los Angeles county au thorities for shooting a Chinaman in an argument over a piece of pie now have some idea of the high cost of liv ing In the United States. Now that a French scientist h:s dis covered ihat monkey glands will pro long human life, police will probablv be swamped with complaints of zoo robberies. Inland lighthouses wouldn't be a bad thing to keep transcontinental lllers from bumpidg into hills and moun tains. If it wasn't for Italy, we might be abb- to find out if the Paris treaty is in effect or not- The woodcutters' union wouldn't admit Bill Hohenzollern, and as he didn't want to be a scab in addition to everything else, he's given up his first attempt to enter business. An eastern fancier says a super-hen is being de eloped. One whose eggs won't spoil, we presume? Without energy intelligence is better off in exile. If the experts who declare the flu 'won't be with us again this winter are as good as those who claimed the Whin Sox would win the world's se ries, we'll not bother saving our pri vate stock. There's nothing like a mild autumn to instill (he fear Of an awful disap pointment in the hearts of the coal profiteers. The twenty -fifth anniversary of moving pictures was celebrated re cently. My! How that child has grown ' We hope that Chicago's reeont base ball sorrow will drive it to "turn on" Mayor Thompson. j It's one thing ti race with an avi ator, and another to try the same thin with a "sky pilot " We entertain grave fears that Rus sia is under the dictate of the Ouiga board. j ' Forte to the utmost" was a dandy slogan for war and it's just as good j for riots. IT CAN'T BE DONE! "What was he pinched for?" "His father lei him use the auto for an hour." "Well:" "He tried to ride an hour in fifteen minutes. Houston Post. Now if Doctor Grayson can only ap pral e u-' of some improvement In the QGDEN HIGH VIE WITH LEOPARDS HERE SATURDAY IN FEATURE GAME Ogden Hich school gridders will do, battle with the fast East Hich school gridiron warriors of Salt Lake at Lo rin Farr park here Saturday in the championship game of the interscol astlc section for the 1919 season Both aggregations are fast and it Is ex pected that one of the largest crowds of the season will be on hand to root for the teams Two thousand spectators are expect ed In Ogden from Salt Lake for the came and locally three thousand or more are expee'ed to carry the colors of the Ogden Tigers over the top. Neither team has been defeated and, while the East high has a wonderful record as a scoring machine, they will be hampered in their championship fight bv the loss of Captain "Brick" Whitney. Whitney Lost From Team. Whitney broke his arm in the game aeainst the fast Utah Aggie team at Loan last weok and will be unable to take part His loss is sure to hamper the chances of the Leopards. On the other hand Coach Romney has one of the fastest teams in harness that ever represented the Fas' hlch and ean seo nothing but vlctorj Tauffer, Henderson. Smith. Mitchell president's relations with the senate With Ihe passing of the ' Blues let 1 us remark that nothinc will make a Cirl bluer than 10 reject a suitor who; won't wepp Fellows who hanc onto a dollar 1 1 k r it was the last one they'd ever make, seldom make anv more Down in Cuba they boast that they can raise seven crops of hay a year ! Well they probably nerd that much to supplv the demand for Havana smokes i in this count r . Some of the steel workers who are returning to their jobs must b in need of a new car. WHAT HAS BECOME OF The old family knocw-er on the door, not on the Inside The Boston Transcript sa b that; while a gun can newr be made to shoot around a corner the sight of a i and others are expected to carrv tin bulk of atta k for the Leopards. In their games to date they have rojiled up tremendous scores Their record follows: Fast Higb 148. L D. S. (j East Hlch 118. Davis 0. East High 6fi Jordan 0. East High 9 Utah Acai Fresh men 0. In the three games of the season I the Tigers have made the following scores: Ogden 9, Granite 0. Ogden IT Havls 0. Ogden 13. Went Hich 13. Thus a Just comparison of the two teams can be given in the BCOrlng d partment. On the other hand tne Easl siders have met but one red team all season and that was the 1'iah Aggie freshmen last week. Against a pood j team their scoring methods seem to bej minus the pepper that hns character! ' ized their earl season play Coach Clarence Douglas hns b".-Mi sending his men through fast work outs in preparation for the came and expects his men to show a complete revisal of form With Richards and' other stars in the game the Tigers stand an even chance at winning the I came Saturday. creditor often has that effect on a man. There are men in the world who can convince you or something without knowing a thing about it themselves It wouldn't do to arrest the profi teers. They'd raise the price on ev erything to pay their fines. WHICH REMINDS US THAT If it wasn't for jealous wives a homely girl would neet have a chance to make trouble for any man. OO - j Claude T. Moves Oden. Utah. Oct. 25. 1919. Editor Ogden Standard Dear Mr. Editor Through the medium of ;.our columns I desire to brine up for dis cussion the matter of the office of out city auditor, for which Arthur P. Lar son and Claude T. Moyes arc nomi nees. As an ex-service man I have dis- SUCCESS I Let This Spell O-P-P-O-R-T-U-N-I-T-Y For YOU Nothing Can Head Us Off. ' Our drills are rapidly apprc r'ching the deep sands and expec a gusher at oil at any time. Our immense holdings of 20,000 acres of m ILI proven oil lands in the heart ot Uinta Basm declared by many leading geologists and the bcsL oil experts in America, as the greatest sil field i 111 in the world It has million!, or dollars cf other assets beside oil that t will guarantee handsome dividends on its stock No other ofl company j in America has so promising a-future. You can buy thisctock ir block of 500 shares or more Wc will advance price of stock without notice. The company has no debts Eery dollar received rom sale of stock is used for development only Success is staring us in tne face, vve are thoroughly satic' ed witn result', of our operations to date. Our stock , is now 15 cents a sha-e The Uinta Oil and Exploration Co., is in a class by itself. There is no other like ,t. W.itc, wire or call. THE UINTA OIL and EXPLORATION CO. Oqrten, Utah 230 Eccles Building Pione 534 . GIRLS! WOMEN! GIRLS! M Come and learn a trade in cur Overall factory. Not only will you have a 6teady position, but it is a lasting experience. A 44-hour week and good pay to the capable A.re you one? Ap ply John Scowcroft & ons Company, Department "M " mcMMimi -i mum tm n wi up n r s I llS S III usse'd this matter with a number of my former comrades and also with nu merous business men of the city, the majority of whom agree with nfe 'hat each of the nominees to the office of cm auditor are to be congratulated upon their nomination. Mr. Iarson is the be especiallv Tonqratulated for the reason that the voting public Is gen erally opposed to a third term, which Mr. Larson has enjoyed as a public official- and he not only wenl "over the top" in his third campaign, bu" he is now seeking his fourth term. Now as to Mr. Moves, 1 find that he is qual ified b fifteen years of practical c periencc in accounting and 1 find fur :ther thai Mr. Moyes may expect a united veto from ex-service men for I Ihe valuable assistance rendered them ; in the preparation and filing of 'Ques tionnaires, during the mobilization of the aiTiiy, and other services rendered their families during the period of their enlistment. However, as far as patriotism Is concerned neither of the nominees jn question have fallen I short wiih the exception of the inci , , , ., , . ,,. j. f 'HI I dent which occurred in the office !of 1 ! i our present auditor during the de- ILa mobilize ;,-in ' tlu ;utiv wire.- a for- ll mer depu refused (lis position ij kI 'after being honorably discharged from 'J k ; the army and returning to his home A HI : This is to be regrctfelT; for as far as r SI the writer has been able to ascertain t H the record ot" our business men and '1 local corporations is otherwise tiear il1! in Hi iv respet I it la ale regretted that Mr. miW Moyes will br unable to make a per- sonal canvas on account of the acti- J! den' encountered b him in I90'J when he sutiereu tne ioss oi a umo aurinc the construction of our Twenty-fourth ffl I street VladuCt, oni of our most needed I I public improvements. ah things considered, Moyes is THF MAN for 'he office of cny auditor. r Let's see tha he is elected Yours very truly. v W r COOK. , . Sgl ' o. 3, Firel Dev. Rn.. Camo Lewis. American Lake, Wash. : Ad v. l oo ii II Read the Classified Ads- Women-Don'! Miss This Series 1 SSI It Is Exclusive For M STANDARD READERS f I l0Ve " Maed 'C'e ' 'l I J P ' "Alresdy ho eetned to have forgoUen Q )cA " Agm "inle ihudder hook me as I rs- ji jgi m- I hsd spoken and from bebi.id his U , zed ha" only a little while -before I had SKt H paner he zeroed to be procefdind wh r... J IJ mougb' 'ha' the greatcit oy that could come aWBigOBSBU b kf t wrth his uiua! none and ipeed." O j a thrill in Love W I ay' XU (j I J f ra t w f HH,. -Sfe fB ' in Ugden Mandard M f r "Then for the flHBHp nothintf of his family For the three weeka Kfl ' w" tel'in mT tat I vs tbe 'Jinck we had known cflch other it had been SHMHT T. edeit woman in the world the very wicked U niTi'-ien' for John that I rhould listen to his V-BtMf3?: 9H 1 e' a(e Gordon, had wubed tQa my It words of .ove and sufficient tor me .hat Lrtfci 9SF-"1 husband the niaa to whom ! had been mar- C J Y he shou.d speak them. Suddenly my heart U tL. ncd for 'three ye.ri-thc i-ther of my baby ,V J stood still. Who was this man I had .... J V married?" ' werc dc'd' Q ' I b "Love and Married Life" I I jhIIH