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Show 24, 1928. august Ubiat. flf FRIGIDAIRE PUT ON SMITH SPEECH IWith Improved Pleased Type 0f Food 'Saver. . m oth tu- - ' nfld that has been received by Mehner, local representative. 53 Dayton plants, covering are being fioor space, It als. full 'speed to meet the demand which has been lae newest product of ested by .neral Motors. lLis radically changed and greatly electric refrigeratbr evl-!ti- y represents what multitudes of bare been thinking about and for, said Mr. Mehner. iet to the superlative degree. no hint of the h,ere is absolutely echanical in appearance. have visited our sales Many who to find that the surprised were om , ig ter f advantages of the new not confined to the are rigidaire are found in each They line. luxe markable ter the nineteen models smallest to the , largest every one of j the om ust the entire line. This makes it possible for families moderate circumstances to have type of refrigeration 9 same high with more Lich is provided those 1st. oney ust -- 29 at their command. ding freezing trays, and in ail (models. The self are to he During development it was subted to the severest tests. Hinges, mechanical door slammers, as gineers looked for defects in cabinet sign. That is why the new type of igidaire closes with a sound like limousine door. , "For a month or longer, various in a moisture odels were operated ten room to test the rust resistance the hardware and the enduring ah mil? r by its paint and enamel, of lalities le new i r were actually worn and sills isps it . Frigidaire is a fitting symbol General Motors resources, leader-i- p and engineering. (It) 4- -t GUARDIANSHIP 1R0BATE & NOTICES j Clerk or Respective insult County slpers for Further Information. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Burns Whitney, estate of Robert ceased, . , will present' claims with luchers to the undersigned at her Creditors i it at Tremonton, Utah, on or the 30th day of October, ddence fore i 1 D. 192S, Whitney, administratrix Iean Estey lidC tbe if 39c deceased. hitney, 19c of Date 29c li K A. p. 1 i: i i' I KANT COLUMN -r Ji i 5c J Oc j 59c 1928. ah. i 9c first publication, August THATCHER & YOUNG, Attorneys for Administratrix. 914 rst National Bank Bldg., Ogden, i! !9c Burns Robert esMe R RENT modern home. 219 If. Forest. Mrs. Sarah Box. (a-7-t- hi RENT Wm. South. IR modern apart-en29 West, 3rd L Hadley, f.) RENT ith bath. furnished house Inquire at 624 South street Phone 280. Ifaln ; SALE; 9cJ 9c j 9c I 9c 9c li 1 59 Baby bed and South, 2nd East OR RENT New and clean. urnished. Apply Wes ANTED 1 I 1000 Coal. j!!3611- I customers ,rand 1 t hiPLtah- - 1 Delivered. All Phone No. 2. W. B. pje - bead of cattle with with bar underneath, on Notify J. o. Read, Ogden, (a 7 to 24) Y0Urb PROPERTY sold a good deal of Norman Lee. i l -- fl Hi-- p - I, Ic I -- for Stove, $S.00. j! )c I If modern cottage. Furnished or unfat 108 South, aucy Lump, $8.00. ers cash. C mattress. street Nut, $7.00. I For sale. land this . (tf-- ) care for aged lady or CDfinement cases at my home. J8-- . Ben Bowden, 439 South, 1st City. Risked apartment -- iJtore, R. Kaiser, xja.ee (adv.tf.) ike p Jour F0T TROUBLES to Dr. FISHBURN, 508 First NatJon-Bldg- ., tf. Ogden, Utah. r fonrtf(ALEpaby (17on' See in god John Valberg. bl,ggy Ms. ST?S,INup WS per week. Any qualify Quickly; new job-sur- o trainng method. Easy, t0 big pay as expeHpn 0 e!ectrician battery ,I2arn room and fioard niDJf illustrated Auto Bonk N'atinnlf5', Tellt everyhing. Write fC' Pert ex-whi- ie 1 a Automotive, BB, 4004 So. Los Angeles, (adv. tf.) ; HUMAN, STAND Damocratic Nominea Plcdgss Self ,onts of the new Frigidaire allotted to dealers upon a Quota basis- - according to Administration for Benefit of Ail tiie People. AGRiCULTURALPROBLEM TO GET PROMPT ACTION Will Enforce Dry Law, Stamp Out and Recommend Changes to Congress Promises Honest Tariff. ALBANY, N. Y.. Aug. 22.Defore an mmense throng which gathered to bear his first pronouncement on the issues of the Presidential campaign, Governor Alfred E Smith accepted the Democratic nomhiation for President , here tonight in an address which was as progressive in character as it was courageous in its terms. Governor Smith pledged himself and his party to the restoration of honesty in government; to the promotion of a real prosperity for the whole people through actual rather than fancied economies and reorganization in government and the enactment of sound tariff legislation; to the establishment .of a foreign policy opposed to unwar ranted intervention in countries and for the outlawry of war; and to the stamping out of corruption in prohibition eniorceinent. an The Democratic to placed himself squarely on record for farm relief and promised to call together the best informed minds among farm ers, business men and economists im mediately following the election to devise a practicable plan for the control of surplus crops for submission to Congress at the beginning of his administration. Upon the steps of this Capitol where twenty-fiv- e years ago I first came into the service of the state, 1 receive my party's summons to lead it in the nation, said Governor Smith In accepting his partys call. Within this building I learned the principles, the purposes and the functions of government and to know that the greatest privilege that can come to any man is to give himself to a nation which has reared him and raised him from obscurity to be a contender for the highest office in the gift of its people. With a gratitude too strong for words and with' humble reliance upon the aid of Divine Providence, I accept your summons to a wider field of activity. He sounded the keynote of his entire address when he said: Constructive Government "Government should be constructive, not destructive; progressive, not reactionary. "I am entirely unwilling to accept the old order of things as the best unless and until I become convinced that it cannot be made better, he con tinued. It is our new world theory that government exists for the people as against the old world conception that the people exist for the government, he said. The candidate reaffirmed his belie in the soundness of deliberate action He reof an informed electorate. ferred to the public issues he carried to the voters in New Y'ork State and added: That direct contact with the peocample I propose to continue in this conin the I am if elected, paign and, j duct of the nations affairs. He said he would strive to make the nations policy a reflection of the naClevelands phrase, tions Ideals. "Public' office Is a public trust," now takes on new meaning, he said. The Republican party today stands dishonresponsible for the widespread adminesty that has honeycombed Its asserted. Smith Governor istration, The Governor attacked the claim of Republican prosperity. The Republican party builds its case upon a myth. he said. Four million men out of work, widewhole industries prostrate and not do spell spread business discontent continued. he prosperity, we Prosperity to the extent that has and concentrated have it is unduly of the not equitably touched the lives indithe and r farmer, the Governor said vidual business man, Smith. tried to diRepublican leaders have situation real the from vert attention of governmental a propaganda by economy, he asserted. reThe Republican party promised e government, the of organization structhe said, yet after seven years ture is worse than it wa3 in 19zi. Into the Governor Smith pointed appropriations, federal in crease ciad tb against which, he said, NVe have only, answers spokesman administration. given an economical Is no proof, there that I assert Governor Smith declared. of the govAfter giving a summary out tha ernment finances, he pointed reductions tax of claim the as against mom there were actually $24,000,000 wan rear last collected federal taxes Ad Coolidge the of in the first year administration. to make It is not economy to refuse to provide expenditures for the transaction of goverm ment business, he said, Pom ing h in the cou ry that scarcely a city federal bUo.ness for adequate quarters at the present time. misrepre Anticipating Republican Latin-America- n ( wage-earne- sentation of the Democratic party , Position on the Governor Smith declared: tai-iff- MARKET IS PROGRESSIVE, & Mehner fto THE BOX ELDER NEWS, SEMI-WEEKL- PAGE THREE Y No Business Upheaval The Democratic party does not and under my leadesship will not advocate any sudden or drm-tirevolution in our economic synem which would cause business upheaval or popular distress. The Democratic party stands squarely for the maintenance of legiti mate business and a high standard ol wages for American labor. Pay no attention to the Republican propaganda and accept my assurance as the leader of our party that Democratic tariff legislation will.be honest, lie declared. It will play no favorites. It will do justice to every element in the nation. lie said foreign policy has its roots in the approval of the majority of the people and that he regarded it as a paramount duty to keep alive the interest of the people in questions of foreign policy and to advise the electorate as to facts. He promised to stress the necessity for restoration of cordial relations with The Republican administration has signally failed in its endeavor to re move the causes of war, he continued. I pledge myself to a resumption of a real endeavor to make the outlawry of war effective by removing its causes and to substitute the methods of conciliation, conference, arbitration, and judicial determination, he declared. The President has two duties with respect to the prohibition question, he said. The first is embodied in his oath of office, he went on. If with one hand on the Bible and the other hand reaching up to Heaven, I promise the people of this country that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States and to the best of my ability preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, you may be sure that Will Call Conference I shall live up to that oath to the last Governor Smith then promised to degree. summon an agricultural conference to I shall to the very limit execute work out the solution, saying: the pledge of our platform to make "If I am elected, I shall immediatean honest endeavor to enforce the 18th amendment and all other provily after election ask leaders of the type I have named, Irrespective of parsions of the Federal Constitution and ty, to enter upon this task. I shall all laws enacted pursuant thereto. join with them in the discharge of The Governor promised "ruthlessly their duties during the coming winter to stamp out the present corruption and present to Congress Immediately in prohibition enforcement. Such conditions cannot and will not upon its convening the solution recommended by the body of men best exist under any administration presidfitted to render this signal service to ed over by me, he asserted. the nation. I shall support the acsaid: he Continuing, tivities of this body until a satisfacThe second constitutional duty Imrecomtory law Is placed upon the statute to the is President posed upon mend to the Congress such measures bookst as he shall judge necessary and expeOn the subject of transportation dient. Governor Smith said he believed in I shall advise the Congress In acthe construction and use .of cordance with my constitutional duty modern highways to carry the short haul of small bulk commodities and to of whatever changes I deem necessary or expedient. It will then be for the aid in marketing farm products. people and the representatives in the Also of great importance, he said, is national and state legislature to deterthe development of transportation by mine whether these changes shall be our waterways, which are still in a made. highly undeveloped state. he conI believe in temperance, Linked with waterways developWe have not achieved temtinued. ment is the control of floods, the govperance under the present system. ernor said. He. declared that the two The mothers and fathers of young men Republican administrations had waitand women throughout this land know ed for the Mississippi flood of last the anxiety and worry which has been year instead of taking leadership in brought to them by their children's this important work. use of liquor in a way which was unThe money actually appropriated I believe known before prohibition. flood relief is too small to mako for in reverence for law. Today disreeven a start, Governor Smith assertinIs laws gard of the prohibition ed. "Too much time has been spent sidiously sapping respect for all law. in squabbling over who shall pay the I profoundly I raise, therefore, what bill. believe to be a great moral Issue inGovernor Smith pledged himself volving the righteousness of our nato a progressive, liberal conservation tional conduct and the protection of policy based upon the same principles our childrens morals. to which I have given my support In In the found be to The remedy is the State of New York, and to fight fearless application of Jeffersonian selfish aggression wherever against for allow to principles, he continued, and irrespective of whom it appears different habits and customs of differinvolve." it may of the country. ent parts "The sources of water power must "Some immediate relief would come remain forever under public ownerfrom an amendment to the Volstead ship and control, he said. of the definition scientific a law giving Benefits growing from the developalcoholic content tf an Intoxicating ment of water power as an incident defiThe said. he present beverage, to the regulation of the Colorado Rivnition Is admittedly Inaccurate and unshould be "equitably distributed er be would then state Each scientific. althe states having right of ownamong of allowed to fix its own standard Governor Smith declared. ership," the to always content, coholic subject not would could be the policy of his adminIt proviso that that standard Conto istration the fixed develop a method of opermaximum by the exceed ation for Muscle Shoals which would gress. that there reclaim for the government some fair I believe, moreover, to the submitted people the revenue from the enormous expendibe should In the provi- ture already made, he said. question of some change CertainRed tape and autocratic bureaucrat amendment. 18th the of sions the amendcy should be brushed aside in caring ly, no one foresaw when ment was ratified the conditions which for veterans in distress. Governor exist today of bootlegging, corruption Smith said. Likewise, he said he and open violation of the law in all would continue his sympathetic interin the advancement of progressive parts of the country. The people est legislation for working men and wothemselves should, after this eight to say men, the proper care of maternity, years of trial, be permitted whether existing conditions should be infancy and childhood, and the enrectified. I personally believe in an couragement of activities which adamendment to the 18th amendment vance public health. which would give to each Individual His Labor Policy state itself only after approval by a to the labor question. Gov-ernTurning referendum popular vote of its peosaid: Smith borders within its ple the right wholly contentment of "The reasonable to be cause or manufacture to import, unmanufactured and sell alcoholic bev- those who toil with the conditions der which they live and. work is an made only by be to sale the erages, essential basis of the nations wellthe state itself and not for consumpbeing. The welfare of our country, place. tion in any public demands governmental contherefore, ' Our Canadian neighbors," he said, cern for the legitimate interest of to solve manner have gone far in this labor. this problem by the method of sale In conclusion the governor said m not and itself by made by the state part: individuals. private "I pledge a complete devotion to the Saloon Wont Return welfare of our country and our peo"There is no question here of the reple. I place that welfare above every other consideration and I am satisturn of the saloon. When I stated that dethe saloon is and ought to be a I fied that our party Is in a position to promote It. To that end I here funct institution in this country' it today. I will nevand now declare to my fellow counmeant it. I m, er advocate or approve any law which trymen, from one end of the United rmUs the reStates to the other, that I will dedidirectly or indirectly cate myself with all the power and turn of the saloon. a be cannot healthy, energy that I possess, to the service country "This if one of its of our great republ. economic body strong, c Latin-Americ- I members, so fundamentally Important as agriculture, la sick almost to the point of economic death, said Governor Smith, taking np the subject of farm relief. The Republican administration has made many promises of legislation to aid the farmer, but has kept none of them, he continued. The tariff is ineffective on commodities of which there Is exportable surplus without controlled sale of the Our surplus! said Governor Smith. platform points the way to make the tariff effective for crops of which wa produce a surplus. marketing and warehousing of surplus farm products is essential just as control of the How of capital was found necessary to the regulation of our countrys finances. Our platform declares for the development of marketing and au earmNst endeavor to solve t the problem of the distribution of the cost of dealing with crop surpluses over the matketed unit of the crop whose producers are benefited by such assistance. Only the mechanics remain to be devised. I propose to substitute action for inaction and friendliness for hostility. In my administration of the government of my state, whenever I was confronted with a problem of this character, t called into conference those best equipped on the particular subject in hand. I shall follow that course wi(h regard to agriculture, farmers and farm leaders with such constructive aid as will come from sound economists and leaders of finance and business must work out the details. There are varying plans for the attainment of the end which isio be accomplished. Such plans should be subjected at once to analysearching, able and sis, because the interests of all require that the solution shall be economically sound. IB a w 15 Years of Development but an overnight POPULARITY a a H B B B B B GENERAL fair-minde- d ELECTRIC esatar fair-minde- d or IBS 1 B a Wherever you go you hear people praising the General Electric Refrigerator. Almost overnight it has taken a prominent place in the thoughts of home makers. One hears of its remarkable simplicity. That it hasnt a single belt, fan or drain pipe. That it hasnt a bit of, machinery under the cabinet, or in the basement. That it never needs oiling or attention. There are many, many comments on the quietness with which it operates.- - There is much enthusiasm for the extreme roominess and the splendid strength of its gleaming cabinets. Overnight, it seems but for more than fifteen years the vast laboratories of GENERAL ELECTRIC have been busy with the development of this truly REVOLUTIONARY REFRIGERATOR. B B B fl B You are cordially asked to come in and see the various models. Stohl Furniture Co. B B B BRIG II A!.: CITY, UTAH id IHBI Timepiece Not Simple Attest: JESSIE B. JENSEN, watch is comparatively it simple City Recorder. machine, containing an average of The reason for the increases above! about 150 distinct parts. However, by actual count It has been found that stated is as follows: the production of these parts requires The $9000.00 increase in bond over 8,700 separate operations. interest Is to create a sinking fund for the redemption, of the $35,000 and $141,00 outstanding bond issues. Until Failure Skook Country tax the levy for 1928 was determined, Ci September 11), 1S73, the hanking no appropriation was made. firm of Jay Cook and company of PhilPolice Department. Purchase of adelphia, ngents of the United States new Ford automobile. of bankers and government lending Fire Department Motor the country, failed. This failure pretruck: cipitated the financial panic of 1S73 maintenance and convention expense. Executive. Printing and stationery. Statutory and General, General NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION advertising, two and years (PUBLISHER) audit and premium on surety bonds. Department of the Interior City Court. States cases one-haof fine to county, supplies and' U. S. Land Office at Salt Lake City, stationery. Utah,' August li, 1928. City Hall and Grounds. Seating NOTICE is hereby given that Ed- armory. ward Lee of. Grotjse,, Creek, Utah, who, Other departments have been deon March 15, 1924, made original creased in the total, sum of $2,888 76 stock raising homestead entry. No. and Section 033083, for 24, Township 12 North, Range 19 West and . on May 20, 1926 made additional stock raising homestead entry, Serial 036108 for Lots 1. ?., 3, . 4, Section 19, Township 12 18 Lake Salt Meridian, West, Range has filed notice of intention to make three-yea- r proof, :o establish claim to the land above described, liefer Wm, C. Betteridge, Jr., U. S. Commissioner, at Grouse Creek, Utah, on the 18th day of September, 1928. Claimant pames as witnesses: Lorenzo Lee, Debert F. Ilart, Ernest Warburton and Mark Warburton, all of Etna, Utah. . ELI F. TAYLOR, Register. A - t- one-ha- lf lf E' EW, ' No-th- NOTICE OF MEETING TO INCREASE BUDGET APPROPRIATIONS given that a meeting of the Mayor and City Council of Brigham City will be held at the Council Chambers in the City Hall Building, at Brigham City, Utah, on September 1st, 1928, at the hour of 7 p. m. for the purpose of increasing the January 1928 budget in the following departments and amounts: Bond Int. and Serial Redemp. $9000.00 471.91 Police. Notice is hereby Fire Executive Statutory and Genera- l- City Court City Hall and Grounds 207.44 345.80 1160.06 619.61 5S3.83 $12388.65 By order of the City Council. Dated this 16th day of August, A. D. 1928. ADEL I S. RICK, Mayor. enthe Crash Comes V7HAT a satisfying feeling t0 realize that the resources of great insurance a- - organization are behind you, ready to aid, assist, and re- imburse in whatever part of the country you may be. Way we tell you further about the Etna Combination Automobile Insurance Policy? iTNA-IZ- E SEE NORMAN LEE Brigham City, Utah ' ' |