Show I The GARLAND TIMES Published at Garland Utah— --A little city in which People like to live SECOND SECTION Local and personal happenings from the communities of the Bear River Valley Advertising messages from' Editorial and Magazine Features of interest to all the family merchants who are anxious to serve To present the news of our city and county completely and fairly Aim: every week To foster the growth of a sense of valley wide unity and pride that will pay dividends in valley progress To give expression to the finest ideals that are characteristic of the people of the communities we serve Garland Utah Thursday October 16 1930 Vol 3 No 10 $200 The Year Times Timely Comments (EDITORIAL) OUR GREATEST VOTING THE COUNTY GLORY CONSISTS TICKETS Once again election time is here at our Once again the time has arvery doors rived for editors those guardians of public morals and what have you to issue their timely sagacious injunction to carefully study the issues of the campaign and remember that it is the man that counts and not his politics As an editor let “us” say that if you must and will have politics let the politics be the politics of real manhood Champion the principles in which you believe if the campaign involves principles vote for the man that in your opinion most nearly possesses the qualifications for the office and finally don’t forget to be neighborly but vote for your neighbor if he is seeking position whenever you can conscientiously do so That is “our” advice editorially speaking The tickets that are being presented in Box Elder County this year contain the names of a number of men of such worth that we wish almost that “our” politics were a little less the independent variety for how can a fellow choose between two equally good men who live equally near by when the rooster and the elephant are just plain rooster and elephant to him Now if one just had an uncontrollable yearning and affection for one or the other of these animals or for a picture of one of them the whole matter would be easy Someone we know is due to lean a long while on the desk of the voting booth and not without good reason Our county tickets are a credit to this little commonwealth ENCOURAGING SIGNS There is one bright ray of hope that has been generally overlooked in all the pesimistic discussion of the business deThe cost of living is now six pression percent lower than it was last year at this time and it is at the lowest point since In other words 1918 general wages could have droped more han five per cent without affecting the buying power of the worker Also it has been brot out by a number of experts that the employment trend which was downward for close to a year has taken an upward turn The coming winter will very probably see industrial activity improving Good news for the nation is contained in a letter just sent bv John Zimmerman President of the United States Gas to heads of the var NOT IN NEVER FALLING BUT IN RISING EVERY TIME WE FALL— Ralph ious companies in that system Mr Zimmerman stated that prices have reached a level which justifies the placing of orders for normal requirements and said: “Purchase of materials can be jnade advantageously at this time and improvement in business conditions may make later purchases less favorable Business conditions in this country are essentially sound and I look for a steady and gradual improvement “I suggest therefore to assure your ability to render prompt service to your customers when the change comes that you immediately estimate your needs for such construction as you will require during the next several months and place ” your requirements for them Conditions affecting the great public utilities are a reflection of general conditions thruout the nation The action of the United Gas Improvement System which will undoubtedly be followed by other of our major industries is a testimonial to the faith of business leaders in the immediate future of the United States SINGLE regular quota immigration allotments How much suffering the act has caused before it was amended was shown in' the “Kolitsch case” Madame Viado Kolitsch American citizen and wife of n violinist M Kolitsch was married to M Kolitsch last March in They had just settled Pennsylvania themselves happily in this country when the immigration authorities notified the Emerson bridegroom that his visa had expired and he must leave the country His wife frantically went from one authority to another telling her plight and begging that something be done to prevent the imThe officials listened pending calamity sympathetically but all gave the same answer “That is the law” According to the Commissioner Gen eral of Immigration thousands of similar cases existed in the United States" WHO WOULD PAY THE BILL In its declaration of principles for the Congressional campaign of 1930 the socinsurialist party makes unemployment ance its first plank and advocates insurance for old age sickness maternity accidents invalidity and death Its platform among other things also favors immediate nationalization of banks insurance companies railroads coal mines water power sites and power systems n W EI£ 5 © A IT HOW A LIBRARY WAS BORN Blue Black Nigger Head Coats With Velvet Colar Ultra Special $2750 Other Coats at $1500 to $3500 This comparatively tiny nucleus of the modem- Congressional-Libraris housed in a small room of its own and is easily accessible to visitors Latin French and English authors are prominent in the collection Scientific works that read queerly in the Ight of present day knowledge are abundant and there is a respectable array of political literature Included also is the famous “Jefferson Bible” Think This Over: OF American men who marry foreign women no longer have the edge on American women who take foreign husbands By a recent act of Congress the immigration laws were amended to permit the “alian” husband to remain’ in the United States even though he was orriginally American here on a temporary basis husbands on the other hand were never forced to see their foreign wives taken from them and shipped back to their native countries to await return under the Our present Library of Congress with its several millions of books cost only It then con$23950 in its original state sisted of the private collection of Thomas Jefferson which boasted 6000 volumes when it was purchased by the govern- ment a century ago to replace a collection that had been completely wiped out in the Two-thirWar of 1812 of the newly purchased volumes were also destroyed by a later conflagration but the remaining 2000 books representative of America's largest collection of literature one hundred years ago stand today on the present library's shelves One volume consists of a friendly epistle written in longhand in the French It is the establishment of an language American University and a system of schools The Writer du Pont de Nemours shared with Jefferson the idea of importing Switzerland’s entire University of Geneva STANDARD DEPORTATION Waldo Friday and Saturday Specials Men’ Unions Socks 5 pr Scowcroft’ Overalls $115 $100 Super 8 $110 S’ Coombs & Perssoni Co c Reliable Studies Show that when the home mercrhants cease to advertise the mail order houses prosper |