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The Ogden Standard-Examiner from Ogden, Utah • 14

Location:
Ogden, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER WEDNESDAY EVENING JUNE 3D 1037 4-B -If II By OREN ARNOLD Copyright 1937 NEA Service Inc Elmer Lynn Williams of Chicago will address the society His subject will be New Frontier" Women's Missionary society of he Methodist church will be en ertained at the home of Mrs Mowbray 1050 Twenty-seventh treet Thursday July 1 at two-hirty Mrs Kinard ill be assisting hostess The Rev yiu be assisting nostess ine xtev CAST OF CHARACTERS CAROLEE COLTER heroine daughter 4 STUART BLAKE eastern "dude" tourist lover HENRY COLTER prospector PAUL AND SILAS COLTER sons -NINA BLAKE sister The Aid society will meet at the dispensary Friday at two two clock Dorothy ix Talks tress today I take it best to let her yearn a bit anyway Where' will you go then?" -Stuart was stuffing cartridges into his pistol know exactly For one thing do a little target practice Dad traced out the route he took -yesterday He was about four miles from here go there and learn what I can" Nina was suddenly concerned be a fool Stuart If somebody shot at dad somebody might shoot at you And the aim might be better today Why you take a guide?" armed I am I think the shooting will occur again anyway I just want to investigate Besides getting interested in that Lost Dutchman Mine If Important enough to make fools of the Colters and cause dad to be shot at then some of those other stories about the mountain may be some of them are Nina declared are on record The deaths I mean But why are you Interested?" He smiled then for the first time this morning out to adventure we while dad rests? So far done the adventuring I want to trace down a few clues myself But go spending the treasure until I find it" MOLASSES TO SAVE OREGON'S HAY CROP SALEM Or Juns (AP) An experiment to aalvage hay which has been damaged by heavy rains may save Oregon farmers hundreds of thousands of dollars Dr McNary superintendent of the Eastern Oregon hospital said today He is conducting tests Dr McNary said the rain-beaten hay Is chopped and 100 pounds of molasses to atonofhay Is sprayed into the stack 'which is allowed to stand six weeks--He said the only cost Involved the molasses at $18 ton The molasses- serves- to pack and ferment the hay There is a slight fire hazard Involved since the stack might burn from spontaneous combustion but this is largely overcome by pouring water Into the stack FARM DEBTS REDUCED WASHINGTON June The resettlement administration said today debts of 2499 farmers had been reduced $2322721 during May by voluntary adjustment committees of the agency Local governments received $99640 in delinquent taxes as a result TIIE GIRL MtO HAS RECENTLY GRADUATED SHOULD TAKE STOCK OF HERSELF AND CAPABILITIES BEFORE SHE DETERMINES HER FUTURE dren he informed them he could backtrall Stuart decided immediately that the Colter men had done the shooting He mentioned that fact to his father and the latter partially agreed Still there would seem to be no logical reason for it The Colters might harbor enmity for Stuart following' the episode in the Phoenix store but hardly for father Mr Blake pointed out that the store incident had been in the first place But the Colters obviously were touchy surly hence likely to do fool things And on top of that they were out after gold and suspicious of anyone who tried to thwart them They may have thought Mr Blake was trying to spy on them Nina Blake declined to get worked up about It as usual She was more interested in probing her personal affairs out all day you brother de-e-e-ar? love the grandest he grinned all right ma II Surrisn wnoA a just the same watch out The old man probably itches to use a He threw spurs and a quirt and assorted things at Nina until she ducked and ran while everybody laughed at them A group of girls who have just their education" as the phrase goes ask my advice concerning the choice of a career and whether it will be better for them to go into business or take up a profession I know fust how bewildered the poor little sweet-girl-graduate feels as she stands where the brook and the 1 river meet with a diploma under her arm wondering where she shall go from here She is all set for the top flights and ready to go in for science in a big way or be a feminine Napoleon of finance or write a best seller or be a new star blazing across the Hollywood sky But this pletthora of opportunities she know which to pick out It is the embarrassment of riches logical problems Write him In care of this newspaper enclosing a S-cent stamped addressed envelope for reply) (Copyright by The Hopkins Syndicate Inc) Yesterday: Stuart and Carolee after much searching finally locate the trail back to camp Arriving there they arrange to meet again CHAPTER VI Stuart" Blake escorted Carolee back part Way up the trail toward her home after they had begged mid-afternoon lunch from the cook In Superstition lodger The danger over both could laugh at their mountain adventure and enjoy the comradeship that the experience wrought Carolee was afraid he would ask formally to call on her at her home on the high mesa That would never do she knew and he ought to realize it he had discovered her hostility To forestall him she suggested meeting him on signal at the trysting place She would hang out the white sheet when she could ride When Stuart returned a second time to Superstition lodge the hour was near sundown and there was a hubbub of conversation on the front porch One glace told him something had happened His father was there obviously excited But Nina greeted Stuart buckaroo and listen to the old she called been shooting at matter? done what?" Mr Blake Sr was serious about it and agitated shot at me this noon up in the he explained or four times I might have been killed I could hear the bullets plopping right near Stuart was incredulous for a moment you serious dad? Are you I'm sure! I was just telling the folks here about included Nina Blake and half a dozen other lodge guests and employes who happened to be within hearing even the old Indian women who were eternally weaving baskets or molding pottery in the shade nearby stopped to listen open-mouthed same evil disposition cannot be Inherited It is time we stressed this psychological axiom until everygody knows it BEWARE OF FAMILY PRIDE Pride in family is an excellent thing providing we do not reach the Indolent stage where we foolishly sit down and think the world owes us a living just because one member of our remote ancestry did a good deed If we occasionally look backward for the sake of renewing our resolve to go out and emulate the fine deeds of our forebears then a family tree is of benefit Otherwise it becomes a liability There are thousands of ancestors worshippers loose in modern society who might amount to something if they had been orphans At present they Interfere with their romances with commendable young Americans or produce family discord and even divorce because they have a false family pride Many a boastful dowager realize her glorious ancestor sim ply dug latrines for fighting men! BEAUTY WORK Price I wish I could tell her which road to follow sure of finding fame and fortune 4 the end of it but no one is wise enough to do that Success depends VJn so many different things Principally of aptitudes upon her character her health her ambition her will to succeed- Butit depends also upon the breaks she gets and how heavily she is burdened down with family responsibilities No pack horse can win the Derby If a girl has a real genuine vocation she does not choose it It chooses he' and she sin9s or acts or dances or a because Nature made her so And if she has no especial bent any particular direction but fust good plain ordinary intelligence it does not matter what occupation she goes into She will succeed or fail according to how much of her heart and back she puts into her workJ While I cannot tell a girl what career to choose there are two or three homely facts that I would like to call to her mind that she often overlooks' Are you one of those polishers" trying to live in the reflected glory of some ancestor who really did amount to something? Snap out of it and earn your own right to glory! CASE G-163: My aunt Is a devoted member of the A She always attends meetings and never gets into a strange group that she inform them that one of our great-great-great ancestors fought with Washington She seems to think that she too becomes famous just because she is a remote descendant of one of those colonial' soldiers She wants to bask in reflected glory The A Is an admirable organization But when some of its members get so obsessed with the glory belonging to the dead that they mistreat their maids and butlers or try to honest workmen who are actually doing things today then these members are doing an injustice to the A It is fitting and honorable to accord due respect to those men and women who died for the founding of this democracy We should have historical societies to help remind us and our children of the glorious dead GHOSTS AMONG THE TOMBSTONES But many men as well as women of good intelligence are simply ghosts among the tombstones They live with the dead They are trying to get by on glory belonging to their ancestors They are They fail to realize that specific acts of gallantry or courage are not inherited That the son or daughter of a great man may be very cowardly and worthless in society today The value of a man or woman in this country has nothing to do with hb ancestry If you produce in your own right a painting or a potato a song or a hill of first class beans then you have no right to acclaim any distinction ANCESTOR WORSHIP The Romans had nothing on us as regards ancestors worship My aunt belongs to the same cult She thinks that will This belongs with other superstitions of the middle ages will only a few things such as our inherited intelligence our tendency to deafness or color blindness diabetes longevity possibly cancer obesity and height But does not tell about our morals or our courage our honesty or our tact and unselfishness Your father can be good man but you may turn out a crook If unwisely reared Again your father may have been an arch villain but that $4 ZK DARRELL'S $3 Machineless Permanent No $5 Combo Rlnglett Permanent Permanents $1JS0 to $10 Nine leaned against a front post a crooked ironwood log and watched her brother mount She help being concerned for his safety but he did look out of place to her out of atmosphere She was accustomed to Stuart in full dress or a tux or in correct city sports clothes behind the wheel of his roadster He was strange to cowboy regalia look she conceded you only had a wagon train to rescue Or a Pocahontas to He glanced at the Indian handi-workers near the porch already weaving and mixing clay Not one was under 40 years nor under 180 pounds They were just old women tolerated there because they were picturesque sis but you make a squaw man out of me So long I may lay out tonight (he was already picking Up the speech of the western cowboys) so look for me for a day or another he flung back as he rode off any shooting done this trip going to do some of it Tell that to dad (To Be Continued) Saif Lake Woman Elected By Jews Phone 383 Bank Building (Dr Crane will give personal attention to questions on psycho- Talk of the shooting occupied the supper hour and the start light conferences too This was a balmy evening and the lodge people loafed on the great rustic porch enjoying the new thrill In conversation Mr Blake was quite the hero Both he and his son had telephoned into Florence the Pinal county seat and reported the matter to Sheriff Watson but the sheriff been very helpful Probably some careless hunter he had suggested hardly worth a search People were always reporting shootings up in old Superstition and he was prone to scoff at such yarns But even at bedtime the Blake men satisfied Soon after breakfast next morn ing Stuart ordered his horse sad died and more sensibly than the day before strapped on a gallon canteen of water and a small package of food He want to admit being lost the day before with Carolee and even admit to himself that he ride through the mountain alonfe' The horse was tied and waiting when Stuart came out And when he did appear he smacked -of a movie version of some terrible-tom-from-the-tall-timber At least Nina told him so to the villains on a day like she declaimed Joudly you capture them alive and torture them sir? Or just shoot them down to Stuart wore a cartridge belt borrowed from the lodge owner A business-like revolver hung on one hip too and he carried a shiny repeating rifle that he had bought in town YES BETTER! Speed-t-Mlx is an already-prepared pie cruet to un your time to lighten your work to msko your pic a joy to eat Bor Epd-I-MLx from your grocer The first is not to overlook herself and attempt to do things that are beyond her ability Because she would like to be a prima donna or a cinema star or a famous writer does not give her the looks or the talent to be one There are no more pitiful tragedies than those of the girls who have toiled and slaved and wasted their youth and impoverished their parents trying to develop a parlor voice into a grand opera one or vainly attempting to crash the doors of motion-picture studios or who have starved writing the stories that always come back to them from the publishers So I urge every girl to take a good honest stock of her own abilities before she picks out an occupation and then when she has upon what she likes to do best and what she can do best to develop her talent to the utmost There is always a place at the top There is always a demand and good pay for expert work The reason work is so generally ill-paid is because it is so often such poor work The women who are top-liners get fat pay envelopes I would also recommend girls to pick out some line of work that belongs traditionally to their sex and for which they have an inherited aptitude I know there are a few women who are steeplejacks and roustabouts and longshoremen but the best of these as good as a second-class man in that line would be When God made the two sexes He intended each one to stick to its own knitting and you will find that the most successful women are those who have done this and who are as feminine as a ruffled petticoat i Next bear in mind that the great demand is always for homely things "People can do without poetry music and art but they do without as the poet said long ago There is a limited demand for social secretaries and art critics and book reviewers and airplane hostesses and so on but there never will be enough stenographers who know how to spell to go around And nothing can keep the supersaleswoman from getting to be the head of the department People will always want good food comfortable homes and hats that have style to them instead of being mere lids And the women who keep good boarding houses and run hotels where the guests brag about the will always be in the money And finally girls in choosing a carecr overlook matri- mony After all that is always a best bet DOROTHY DIX 1NDS Pll FAILUSIS! That's about all there was to the story Mr Blake re-told it a dozen times He had simply squatted behind a rock for nearly an hour badly frightened then he had gone back to the glen where he had tied his horse and hastened to return home He had no idea who could have done the shooting The bullets came from across a wide canyon evidently at considerable range Stuart remembered his own experience with Carolee and warned his dad against getting lost but the father had been on higher altitudes where the going was' less blocked by brush Besides he was a keener observer than his chil- SACRAMENTO Calif June (AP) The annual convention of ended last night with a reception for newly elected officers of the men and di visions of the lodge Chosen for the women was Mrs Jennie Porizky of Salt Lake City first vice president Portland was selected as 1938 convention city FOR PIE CRUST 3V THAT MELTS IHYOURKOUTH As a matter of solemn fact he did look rather impressive admiration was at least partly genuine Stuart could have been a movie hero with luck and talent added and he had the looks He was masculine enough Usually he was gay and prankish full of banter himself but not this shot at he announced as if that were sufficient Come to think of it it was Nina told herself the maiden is not In dis and owner of the trained stallion Stardust: Gloria Swanson is now back from New York with some striking new clothes and perhaps this time make that comeback picture Patricia Farr just left on an eastern trip and she was so excited she almost forgot her husband Bob Mayo Columbia casting director Patricia Ellis leaves for London to make a picture Grace Bradley cut short her honeymoon with Bill Boyd to hasten back and resume her role in For Fay Wray shopping In a Hollywood department store and had to sign 35 autographs before she could leave Grace Moore has bought a brand new trailer and it has all the conveniences of a ritzy New York apartment Going Hollywood By May Mann Standard-Examiner Staff KEEP wm 1 Harlow' scenes will be remade with Miss Johnson At this writing a report from close friends of Mrs Bella state mother is inconsolable about the loss of her daughter Her whole life was centered in Jean Jean who adopted her maiden name Harlow was constantly with her mother William Powell is with her in their bereavement Patricia Farr pert Irish lass who is rapidly ascending the Holly wood ladder of success and who was recently featured In the film is the great-great-granddaughter of first mayor Lorin Farr Pat lived her early life in Ogden being the daughter of Mr and Mrs Larry Farr who were Ogden citizens for many years Pat is now the wife of Bobby" Mayo the casting director of Columbia pictures And Pat marry him just to get in the movies She was already established as one of the up-and-coming leading ladies She has several near relatives residing in Ogden Among them Is Charles Sherer the erstwhile cowpoke ZL retir eH Rita Johnson blue eyed and 1 blonde petite actress arrived a month ago from Broadway for her screen debut in Umbrella It was super-t stition that brought her here after a starring career on the stage and radio One day she had her fortune told in New York The fortune -promised her a change nf residence and that she would take the place of one of the brightest stars One week after her arrival in Hollywood she was taking screen tests to replace Jean Harlow in Over $500000 had been poured into the feature picture and one more week remained when Jean died officials at first planned to complete the film with Miss Johnson so they 'might show Harlow in her last picture This is not according to picture ethics and a ruling of the Will office so the entire film will be scrapped and all On Your Next Trip To SAN FRANCISCO ih 15 Stop at Ciliuhc Cu SB Ekctri au ririiic se Whsu Now a Cream Deodorant which safety Steps Perspiration t7 Ji rli Ti EVER Hcnro you Had azT oppor-1 tunity io own such a marvelous range so much style and so many conveniences for so little money In view of rising prices this offer is good only as long as the supply lasts at the stores of the dealers listed Below Utahns Headquarters 4 A 7 4 5 -Managed and "owned! by Wallace '(Spick Carlisle former manager Hofei Eccles Logan Utah You will find the Washington Hotel in the heart of San Francisco's main attractions Every room completely re-decorated and SUMMER FORMALS beautifully laundered or dry cleaned VOUR lovely formal dresses will receive the careful attention of our experts wheth- er they need laundering or dry cleaning You will be delighted with the results 5 livens XsncOuf DRY 1 Cannot rot dresses cannot irritate skin'' 2 No waiting to dry 3 Can be used after shaving 4 Instantly stops tion 1 to 3 days removes odor from perspiration 5 A pure white greaseless stainless vanishing cream 39 flora 4pb vnd 4P I i end See Your WcsIinglinusB Dealer UTAH POWER LIGHT CO BOYLE FURCJITURE CO 1 1 Rates $150 and Up Cor Grant Ayo and Bush Street San Francisco California or i' i SOLD AT 'PayXess Jtaag 1 1.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
572,154
Years Available:
1920-1977