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Show Friday, October THE OGDEN POST Silver Is Not An Issue That Utahifs Should Split On POST THE OGDEN Editor P. W. EPPERSON, Member Utah State Press Association. Senator Reed Smoot made an speech at a dinner given for William II. Bassett, president of the Institute of Mining and matter October 17, 1927, at the postoffice at American Entered aa second-clan- s Metallurgical Engineers, at Salt Ogden, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Monday night. The Salt Uke Tribune said Senator Smoot spoke for 2.00 per Year silver, but more than that, he spoke Subscription Price for the whole world. Continuing, the said Senator Smoot had no Tribune Telephone 365 plea for sectional interest nor fo t special industry. He recognized that the EDITORIAL world needa the help of silver more than ailver needs the help of the epoc-marki- ng Published each Friday by The Ogden Pont Printing and Publishing 417 Ecclca building. October Term of U. S. Court Is Opened Here Quite Right, Mr. Ray The Power to tax is the power to W. W. Ray in a destroy' quotes in article opposition to the newspaper adoption of the proposed constitutional amendments. You are quite right, Mr. Kay, quite right The assertion has already been proved right here in Utah the power f i 'i , t ed States district court for northern Utah opened Monday morning at 10 o'clock in the federal building. A ong calendar of criminal, civil equity and other cases will come before the court for consideration. Judge Tillman D. Johnson is presiding and District Attorney Charles K. Hollingsworth is directing the prosecutions. Judge Johnson announces that he called a jury for the session and wants every case on the docket disposed of in some way or another. Cases ready for trial will be taken up both in civil and criminal actions. The federal grand jury will open its session October 27 in Salt Lake,, and it is planned to take care of all cases tax-fre- ? Give Us a Tangible Argument , i J H I ,!i j - ' . i i n u V f, The opponents to the proposed amendments to the constitution persist in telling us that if the amendments are adopted, capital will be driven from the state, and that capital for new industries will not come in. Now, let us do a little careful think ing about this proposition, as has been suggested by Mr. Rees and other obus analyte this situation. jectors. For years and years Utah has been very partial, very partial indeed, in her treatment of intangible weaRh. It has slipped by without taxation and charged about any interest rate its owners have been fit to exact Notwithstanding this favorable con sidcration, notwithstanding the favorable conditions which for years have prevailed all over the United States, notwithstanding Utah has the raw materials for many lines of manufac ture local capital has not entered the manufacturing field, nor have we observed any great gobs of outside cap- in A !$ the court for the Impending 0, y in silver should do unite in one common purpose, to be pursued by one common method. Thi Tribune is not surprised at Senator Smoots emphatic rejection of a proposal to inter vent an international conference on silver before the work of the Pittman committee can be conand its recommendations sidered by congress. For thirty-thre- e internationyears this proposal for an before been has conference dangled al the eyes of humanity, and not one step of retfl achievement has been taken. In that whole generation of false hopes of wilful misleading and has ignorant following the world from been steadily growing in misery which millions have perished and millions more will perish unless some direct method of relief shall be applied. As a money, silver is worth to the of people of the Orient about one-ha- lf and few some of value ago, years its therefore their buying power is about of what it was in 1897, when the promise was made of international conference. Thj Pittman committee is investi con-elud- ed one-ha- lf world question of gating the. whole as a cause silver and its depreciation Expectation is of world depression. will committee justified that the action t take some direct eventlead immediate effect and io worlds the of ually into a doubling power. consuming and purchasing the test, bear shall if its And plan Senator that assured rest now we may will be one of ita strong and rec-mne- nd Smoot .nf'uential supperters. n a k, Sb&oS J. SHAW; JEMIBa NELLIE D. DYE; JULIA A nv P. CHILD; HENRY H CHILD T. Summons OK THE BE IN TUB DISTRICT COURT FOE OND JUDICIAL. DTWCT.EIgrAfA WEBER KRED LAWRENCE WEST, also know FRED WEST, PUintiff. as M. WEST, PURL. iIm knows h PEARLWEST WIL .Uo known w PEARL MARIE PENSON. M. 8. WILSON; CHARLES Wi known alao PENROSE. LUICETTIA ROSE: m LUCETTA PENROSE; WILLIAM 8TOK !R alio known u WM, STOKER; ELIZA Stoker; Christina pbintz; IKINZ, also known u CHRIST tian EMMA JANE PRINZ; EMMA J. a WARREN CHILD, al REN G. CHILDS: WARREN (TcnnnW-knowaa WARREN G. CHILD ka knows as W. CHILD; ROirr SHAW, abo know. ROstm SgHj C.HlU SHAW; SUSAN CHILD DUNbAk aa SUSIE CHILD DUNBAR; SIMov". abo known aa S. CHILD ; CLARExrv 51Ld. WILLIAM CHILD, abo W. CHILD; EARL CHILD; DORA CHILD; MERTLE CHlLB. C.H,1LD: CHILD, abo known aa ELIZABETH A221 EPF1E BELL H1CLEY ; CHILD; JOHN A. cIarVL.1 CHILD, abo known aa CLArVncK SYLVIA A. CHILD WEST, CHILD, abo known aa THEOIkiKp1 Chris- PRINZ; MOVES J. PR1NTZ. abo known BERRY, w EMMA JANE PRINZ; JESSIE alao known aa JESSIE D. BERRY ; D. H.a aim known aa D. H. WISE; A. H. WISE, abo known as H. H. WISE abo known as ALMA H. WISE: A. C. DUNBAR, abo known ahui known aa EMMA BROWNING; It f" Court. Thia action b brought the tract of land deoerbed in the Plaintiff and the known aa Pearl M. Weat. all Pearl Mario West Wilson, and same partitioned between the said defendant. Pearl Marie Wmt September II, 19S0. Collinston; A. R. Berstock, Story j i t .t m 'i r r-- Press-Scimita- Dill-ma- n, p ' n, i Kil-mart- in if I Airport af i - loc-atio- . ? nt . . I M No longer need your kitchen be inaccessible to visitors an unattractive place where you cook three meals each day and spend tedious hours discharging necessary family duties. A peep into the modem kitchen reveals the many superior benefits that come with ELECTRIC COOKING, ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION and ELECTRIC WATER HEATING. In your home, these Electric Servants will make life easier. They will mnke it possible to offer the unexpected guest splendid kitchen hospitalities with an assurance that your kitchen is the utmost in comfort, convenience and attractiveness. THE ELECTRIC RANGE Select one of the many famous West in gho use or Hotpoint models for perfect cooking. Completely installed in your home $5 Down Small Monthly Payments THE ELECTRIC THE ELECTRIC WATER HEATER The General Electric Refrigerator has no equal as a guardian of your familys food and health. See them in our store today. $5 Down Small Monthly Payments Entirely automatic in op- it completely eration, solves every hot water problem in every home easily installed on your present tank. $5 Down Small Monthly Payments nt 1 'l cross-countr- A special liberal plan makes the purchase of this complete equipment easily within your reach T0 HAVE UR REPRESEN TATIVE CALL ON YOU AND, WITHOUT OBLIGATION, GIVE YOU FULL PARTICULARS GLAD cross-countr- er i h " SS'EC'Ji &,a Paper Tells i- Hij . aa ABEL C. DUNBAR: SUSAN W. DUNwiL"4 BAR, abo known aa SUSAN W. DUNBAR, J. QUILL NEBEKER, trustee, abo known aa SUSIE W. DUNBAR ; MARTHA JEMO ELMER CHILD, abo known aa MARTHA JANE CHILD, alao known aa MARTHA JANE ELMER CHILD, abo known aa MARTHA CHILDS; ESTHER SOUTH. First publication October 10 ISM Last publication November it. WICK, abo known aa ESTER BOUTHWICK ses- farmer, Morgan; E. J. Gibbons, farmWe are still shipping out our raw er, Avon; Samuel P. Snow, farmer copper, our raw lead, our raw silver, and stockman, Orangeville; John our raw iron notwithstanding that we Gunn, farmer, Ifoytsville; Carl Lindhave unlimited coal, electric power and quist, undertaker, Ogden. natural gas for manufacture. Fred C. Graham, musician, Salt Como again, Mr. Objector, give us Lake City; Fred Barker, farmer, Oga TANGIBLE argument den; A. M. Ferrin, farmer, Eden; F. W. Vole, retired, Ogden; Ephraim Clawson, insurance, Salt Lake City; Memphis Mark Johnson, cattle, Holden; John E. of Ogden Boy Francis, farmer, llennefer; Joseph Hatch, rancher, Randolph; William II. Siddoway, sheepman, Vernal; The following clipping has been tak George S. Eccles banker, Ogden; Anr, en from the Memphis tler (Cap) Nielson, butcher. Richfield; under date of October 14, 1930 Henry A. Peterson, auto painting, Salt Silently, secretly searching the faces Lake City; H. B. Miller, watch inspecof men and women hunting in the tor, Salt lekke City; J. B. Armstrong, slums and in mansions eating with wall paper, Salt Lake City; S. P. farmer and fruit raiser, Rooseragged bums, dining with aristocrats and always hunting for some fugl velt; Orville Merrell, merchant, Briglive face or a tip that will lead him ham City; Charles S. Gardiner, bankto the information he wants. ing, Salt Lake City; A. L. Scoville That's Edward E. Conroy of the printing, Ogden; C. G. Adney, stock-mnU. S. department of justice star of Corinne; John F. Fitzpatrick, all that body of investigators which Salt Lake Tribune, Salt Lake City. Amos Epperson, real estate, Salt has a reputation for getting its man Lake even the tradition of that surpasses City; Charles Rasmussen, merthe Canadian Royal Northwest Mount- chant. Gunnison; W. B. Taylor, collector, Salt Lake City; Alfred Nieled Police. retired farmer, Mount Pleasant; Conroy, regularly assigned to the son, Scley, sheepman, Castle Dale; St Louis, office, is in Memphis now Karl G. Berrett, farmer, Ogden; Arthur to look into records of the U. S. disJason, merchant, Salt Lake trict court here preparatory to a hear- Carl R. W. City; Thayne, farmer and real esing before a house of representatives tate, Logan; Harry J. Stewart, caron Nov. 12. committee when judicial Lehi penter, charges of misconduct of office by Judge Harry B. Anderson will be aired. Government Bulletin Working with Conroy is F. J. Describes of the Philadelphia office. Conroy has been with the department for seven years. During that The Ogden airport is described in time his duties' have taken him to the new revised airway bulletin just most of the states of the Union. He issued in Washington, D. C. The airway bulletins which are sent has journeyed even to Alaska. II? has hunted criminals and faced pis- on request to pilots, aircraft operators tols in mine wars. As an undercov- and others concerned with air navigaer man, unarmed and without creden- tion facilities, are published in loose-leform, punched for binding and tials, he has been threatened by irate citizens who took him for the bum he are being issued on all airports that have been developed to the point appeared to be. He has probed into dealings of of- where they can be so characterized, ficials high in the employ of the gov- and on which the aeronautics branch ernment; he has been chosen to aid has suffiicent data. committees of congress prying into The front page of the bulletin em possible indiscretions of judges on the bodies two line cuts. The first, or upper one, is a general map of the federal bench. He probably has been given more city and vicinity showing the important assignments than any oth- of the aiiqtort with reference to the city and all outstanding landmarks er agent. He numbers among his triumps the such as principal railroads, rivers, capture of the notorious De Autre-mo- lakes and highways. The second, or lower illustration, is twins, Roy and Ray, among the hardest and longest sought criminals a close-u- p sketch of the airport showing the dimensions of the usable landof the past decade. On the night of October 11, 1923. ing area; the positions of hangars and southbound Southern Pacific train No. other buildings; the location and char13 was held up by the three young acter of the night lighting installabandits as it neared the mountain tion; the location and nature of obtunnel just beyond Siskiyou, Oregon. structions; airport markings; and any The train crew was held at bay as other data which might be of assistone of the young men attempted to ance to those using the airport A wind rose illustrating the freforce the baggageman to open his coach. When he refused the coach quencies of wind directions and forces was dynamited and the baggageman from eight points of the compass is killed. Before the affair was over placed on the lower sketch when obthe engineer, the fireman and brake-ma- n servations necessary for the compilawere murdered. The bandits fled tion of a wind rose are available. On page 2 of the bulletin appears a without any loot. The man-hustarted after the condensed summary of the facilities bandits had been identified as the De installed, the owner and operator of Autremont twins and a younger the airport, its latitude and longitude brother, Hugh. It continued for four and magnetic variation and a weather years and cost the government a half summary for the district prepared by million dallors. Hugh was finally cap- the United States weather bureau. The airway bulletins are published tured in the Phillippine Islands, where he had enlisted in the U. S. army. But primarily as aids to air navigation and he knew nothing of the whereabouts as such are used extensively by pilots y of his brothers. over strange terflying Conroy at last was put on the trail rain and who may be desirous of loof the criminals. He followed tip cating suitable landing areas. Air after tip to its fruitless end, and fin- line officials, aircraft operators and ally effected their capture at Steuben- pilots use these to determine routes to be followed in ville, O. y fly. The twins now are serving a life ing, stop-ovairports for servicing, term in the state prison of Oregon. night stops where storage is availEdward Conroy, formerly resided in able, airports providing weather inOgden, and is the son of the late Dr. formation and many other important Edward M. Conroy, and Mrs. Bertha i required in the systematic A. Conroy, of 2525 Adams avenue. operation of aircraft. ULD; HANNAH merchant, Provo; Hyrum Jensen, merchant, SP AUSTIN W. CHILD and KEUjSSF1'! cHlLD. and WINIFRED g. WEST. Abo nil other persona unknown .1 any right, till. eaUte, lien or real property described mLTJ h verse to plaintiffs ownerahi? "r tlM upon plaintiffa title thereto. THE STATE OP UTAH To 8AU DE. FENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to twenty days after service of thiTV. won you. if .weed within which thia action b brought : the thirty day. after aervice ; and entitled action ; and in ease of to do. Judgment wiU be according to the demand ufoL n,D,t which has baen filed with tL CbrkS1 sion before that date. Those called to appear in court Monday morning for service were as follows: Elmer Addley, farmer, Emery; A. 11. Ackerson, bank, Richfield; Ruel W. Nielson, farmer, Axtell; Robert Butler, mining engineer, Salt Lake City; J. B. Milan, Jr., cigars, Salt Lake City; Isaac Jensen, farmer, Brigham City; ti. Wood Urie, mechanic, Cedar City; Irvin Carrigan, farmer, Peterson; Wilford Gray, real estate, I'rovo; A. J. Liddlc, retired; Salt Like City; Moroni Doxey, railroad clerk, Ogden; Frank C. Howe, automobile dealer, Murray; Albert W. Norton, farmer, LaPoint; John W. Glazier, fanner, Kanab; Ilyrum Olsen, farmer, Mayfield; E. B. Brown, proprietor Broom hotel, Ogden; John T. Taylor, ital coming in. 1 de-pric- ed The October session of the Unit- to tax as practiced here has already destroyed most of the real property so far as income to the owner is concerned. But how about your income, e Mr. Hay how about your income world. When Senator Smoot pointed to the great and tragic fact that more than a billion people of the world are of the purchasing power of their historic money, he pointed the duty of all atatesmen throughout the earth to give their best thought and energy to immediate rectification of the appalling ilia which have been entailed and which have been increasing in their fatal effect in recent years. It la now known that one of the causea, if not the chief cause, of stagnation in world industry and commerce has been the deprivation of more than a billion people of their purchasing power. If they cannot buy, they cannot con sume of the world's goods. If we can not sell, we cannot continue to live at our present standard. The restoration of the money function of the 7,000,-00000 ounces of silver in the world U essential if we would have world and world security. SenurosiH-ritator Smoot heartened his auditors and imparted to the whole cause a thrill that of hope when he gave assurance be would and congress the president beIn forward step favorable to every half of alleviation of. the world s need. When Senator Smoot pledged his comhelp to the labors of the Pittman believers all what mittee he indicated 21 POWEIRl & LDGMT CO. EFFICIENT PUBLIC SER.VICE as |