OCR Text |
Show 9t 10 S Friday. March THE OGDEN' POST USER - ALLEY mu, nCEJT BE mom night Automobile Buyer Adds To Nations Prosperity .Every lime a nun li.v.s u mr continued rity, in i.:ch , Announces the chares. Promoter Kevell lltc 3Iutch for Tigerweight Title 1.-- Eight Minutes Required To Bolt Victory Body and Chassis Into Single Unit . 11 ii ins beyond calculate. l;. 3 A.WVi' & as to be S) re liooM'velt usat to say that Msn and tnn.t is WiS.? between Ogden Star And is that be true to certainly spending Reed ill tiie light uf cur iiimunii i conomicul situation.proving Man Who Beat Ira Bern; Today pind thvir mur.ey, ail alung the lna-- , unid it conn.- - k.wk and Tappas Matched of an until. n. bile. air al-r.i- ost i'ar-ivaehi- i'iie.'d-- . e t. Tern p te yi,er, of Ogden, and ilfpv of Portland, Ore., are booked wrestle for the tigerweight title Monday night 3 the world here next made by Charles in announcements ore moter. l Snc'e Alley defeated Ira Dern hand-ii- v two 'weeks ago there is a good 2Li in all appearances of ffataw up on the mat in Salt Lake mat here. Al-the Oregonian on the explains that the reason he did listed as a kst week when he was cinch hitter is that the money he asked for the bout was not forthcomito meet ng He is here and ready is workiVisser he stales. all comets, with next bout the Alley for hard ng Vdi-el- U Monday. A fast and Gus lined up preliminary with Jack Reed Pappas on the mat has been for Monday nights event. Aggies Win Majority Of Championships at A. A. U. Mat Tourney coached by George heavyweight grap-ple- r, of Logan, carried off three of the eight championship! at the seventeenth annual A. A. U. tournament held in the Weber gymnasium Tuesday and Wednesday nights. The Weber gymnasium of Ogden and University of Idaho southern branch took each two titles, and the Deseret gymnasium of Salt Lake copped one. About sixty amateur grapplerg took part in the tourney during the two nights and furnished some lively The Utah Aggies, Nelson, well known events. Intermountain A. A. U. wrestling champions for 1928, the tournament. 112 pounds A. C. gymnasium. 118 pounds Aggies. 126 pounds Aggies. 135 as a result of Iloggan, Weber Dean McAlister, Utah George Bankhead, Utah pounds Ned McBeth, Utah pounds Noel Franklin, University of Idaho, southern branch. 147 Willard Dursteler, Unisouthern branch. 175 pounds Clarence Saunders, We- versity of Idaho, ber gymnasium. i Heavyweight Bill eret gymnasium. Longson, Des- Bell Telephone Co. Shows Creat Growth From the annual report for 1927 American Telephone and Telegraph company we take the followiof the ng: During the year 791,000 additional telephones were put in service, maki- ng the total number in the United in and with thq N system at the end of the year 18,365,000. At the same time that telephone service has thus been the limits of telephone communication have been extended and n2w Pssibfe generally to telephone from anywhere in the United States to anywhere in Canada, Cuba and Great and to mapy of Britain, the principal cities of Mexico ind States interconnected er:-larg- continental Europe. To care for this growth in business, the original spou.iir wh. uits it going again. Thus a little money goes a long way further than it ever did before and out one vnjo.s its use, cm.il living better than he ever did befoie because of it. It is hard to see how money could be. spent more wisely or be made to further than in the purchase of gj a:i automobile. In fact, 1 d ) not know of any way to secure so much value for Towiicr Upper left Fastening body bolts in Victory Six ter body has been let down from floor above (right) and proceeding to next operation flower right). Ah this brings health ami mental Tn'IGlIT minutes after the Victory Six f scene wt.enevcr T.- lie-ad- ! Jd ' ; The1' 'SutSllK fsavhes open it is wilhout as much effort a ml i:o more expense than going to the movies, perhaps less. It literally places any kind of recreation in ew-im.dy's l;uk yard. It means seeing something your own town, a l.luiul ediieation in the ways a!!.:l ivard.ige s of oilier communities, education on cun make alllul;;, i i.ei-de- -- a given sum. It minn and a change desired i r SHF-rr- TZ. " - V body is let down from the floor above to the final assembly line at Dodge Brothers, Inc., factory, it has become one with the chassis. There is no welding, nor riveting, in the operations which make the body and frame one. Reversing the operations, the body can be removed from the chassis through the removal of the bolts and the lifting of the body. Any service station equipped with a small chain hoist can easily lift the body from the chassis. In these eight minutes, consumed in fastening the body to the chassis, twenty-thre- e bolts, twelve horizontal and eleven vertical, have been placed and securely tightened by a crew of eighteen men. The car then passes on to other stages of final assembly. While the bolts are being fastened the Victory is having fenders, steering column, steady bracket and other parts put on it. Through the elimination of the conventional body sills, the Victory's center of gravity is lowered with normal road clearance and head room maintained. The over all height of the car has been reduced two inches by bolting the steel double-wa- ll body to the sides of the chassis frame. k padding is placed throughout, assuring a silent Deadening lilt and body. All body ami door panels are also padded. In the illustrations the three stages of the body boiling operations on the final assembly lines are shown. The Victorys revolutionary design anti construction are laid cm principles so simple. say the engineers, that one often wonders why this type of car had never been built before. In this new type of construction, the frame channels are built to follow the body contour, there being no body overhang. Besides front and rear motor supports, four major cross members are employed, and further strength is added by the steel floor plates. Tho body of the ear is fitted directly to the frame side channels, the sides of the body extending downward over the aide channels so that frame and body are virtually a single unit. This design gives the Victory Six long sweeping lines and, engineers say, has many advantageous effects on the performance of the car, reducing side sway and f senger, t',ual automobile is time. It gives him ease and comfort cheaper than any other conveyance. contrasted with all other means of You give your purchase money to tin- - local dealer. Some of it he transportation. Thus he can conduct the same and spends right in town. Thekeeps rest . , amount of business in less time, or of the imney to the munufuct-mor- e g"cs business in the same lime, and urer. lie pays wages, the largest keep in better condition doing it. payroll of anv industry. That means It gives him freedom and indepcnci- - employment, which is the very back- ence. With a car ho may go wher- buiic of the nation's prosperity. ever he pleases whenever he please Some of your money goes for mawithout regard to the timetables or chinery and buildings und insurance. routes of other conveyances. Distance but above all, your money goes into is no longer any obstacle, and with raw materials with which to build the good cars and good roads uf to- - untomobiles. And in this respect the day, weather, temperature and night automobile contributes to more other are no obstacles either. Industries than any single industry in The automobile has enabled mail to the world. And they all spend the enjoy such freedom, such power and money to live and enjoy living even control over his movements for the us you and I . first time in history. As Arthur BrisSo buy a car if you wish to continue bane, the famous editor, says, a man to enjoy the present prosperity of the should spend his last nickel if neces- country. But wisely the car which is sary for the sense of personal power most economical for you but buy a and confidence an automobile gives to car. Keep on buying ears as you need a man. new ones. Tho whole family benefits in health It is the most important thing you and experience through the ownership can do with your money. for improvements in service and for SIMPLE RECIFE FOR TIIK betterments and replacements of MAKING OF MARMALADE From time immemorial marmalade plant, $377,OUU,000 was expended on new plant construction. At the end has been an honored delicacy on Engof the year the Bell system had t lish tables; and it deserves such a and other assets amounting at cost place on American menus, fur served to $3,457,000,000 devoted to furnish- with meat, with breakfast toast, in ing telephone service to the people the fold of plain omelets or with cake of the United States. marmalade is a tidbit calat Effective December 1, 1927, a re. culated to pique the most disillusioned duction was made in palate. adding greatly to riding comfort. rates, amounting to a saving to the Preparing marmalade throws no Mrs. Ruth Hooper Powers of Hooppublic-oapproximately' $1,500,000 a more of a strain on the family budget ! than any other preserve. Moreover, year. Increased use of 26, died at the local hospital Tueser, is due for the most part to improved it requires no exceptional culinary day afternoon following a short illservice. This reduction in rates will, prowess and the ingredients are simness. She was born in Hooper, Ochowever, tend further to increase its ple. Housewives will find that beet reuse. tober 8, 1901, the daughter of Bishop excellent as sugar produces just John Gilbert Brockmann, 22, died John 1). Hooper anil Nellie Child During the past five years con- sults in the preparation of marmalade struction expenditures for additions, as cane,sugar. at Ilixhup, Calif., Monday morning at Hooper, and wus married in Suit Lake He was on 5 o'clock of heart trouble. betterments and replacements have Orange Marmalade January 18, 1922. Surviving are amounted to $1,800,000,000. During 6 oranges Water the son of George and Alma leterson (he husband, two daughters, Ellen and the next five years it is expected that i'.mckmann nnd was born in Milford, Delma, and an infunt son, fifteen Beet sugar further expansion of the tclephore Select large oranges, scrub, cut in- October 26, 1915. He had lived in Og- duys old. One brother, John C. Hoop- business, as well as further improve- to very thin slices and reserve the den for eight years and recently made ments in the service, will require the seeds (tying these in a cheese-clot- h his home in California. Surviving are expenditure for construction of ap- bag) to be cooked with the fruit. ne brother, Frank Brockmann, and proximately $2,000,000,000. sisters, Ada and Helen Brockmann, Measure; add one pint of water to In the report the par value of the each pint of fruit. Set aside over- all of Ogden. . The grandmother, Mrs. companys holdings of Mountain night and in the morning bring slow- Laura Peterson, of Brigham, and an States Telephone and Telegraph com- ly to the boiling point. Cool; repeat uncle, Alfred Peterson, of Salt Lake, pany is given at $27,990,000. The the process the following morning, also survive. The body will arrive in total number of miles of wire owned cooking until the rinds arc thorough- Ogden today. Lmdiyiist & Sons will by the American company is given at ly tender. Cool, measure and add beet be in charge. 56,822,895. sugar in the proportion of one pint of sugar to one pint of fruit. Simmer Abagail lliglty Wadsworth, 90, All wool materials should be dried until the rinds are clear, then turn in a warm place, but not near a. fire into glasses and seal with hot, melted died Wednesday morning at the homo of a daughter, Mrs. Frank Simpson, or in the direct sunlight. Never allow paraffine. in Hooper. She was the wife of 4 4 4 them to freeze. Hang knitted underW. Wadsworth. Joseph the the wear from shoulders, shaping From Way Down East to the Far Mrs. Wadsworth was born in Leeds, garments occasionally and squeezing West the trend of lumber production N. Y., on October 6, 1838. She was bottom. the the water from in the United Slates has fairly con- among those whj walked across the first followed the path of the plains to Utah in 1852. The family Why does a chicken cross the road sistently sun. In system in 1819, the leading lived in Uintah at first and 50 years setting has been changed to how. state in production of lumber was ago moved to Hooper. She was lorg the West was the pony Maine. In 1829-4the leader was active in L. D. S. affairs. express. New York; in 1859, Pennsylvania; In Surviving arc the husband and the From St. Joseph, 1869-8WisWadsMichigan; following children: Joseph W. to San Francisco Mo., 1905-1consin; Washington; 1914, worth, Jr., of Idaho Falls, Idaho; Wilthese riders carried EdWhat Louisiana; 1915-2liam M. Wadsworth of Hooper; Washington. state wil hold the crown in 19507 I win W. Wadsworth of Taylor, Idaho; the mails over mounwill be, says the United States forest Mrs. Ephraim Garner, Mrs. John tain ranges and across service, the state which shows the Simpson and Mrs. Frank Simpson of wilderness and plain. most foresight today, while it is har- Hooper; Orlin Wadsworth of Hoy. The motto of their vesting the present crop of timber, by Mrs. Robert Summings of Idaho Falls, making provision for a future forcut Idaho. There are also 68 grandchilservice was Get the crop. dren and 113 !" ! j i i I anti-squea- pl-in- tea-tim- e, long-distan- ce long-distan- ce f DEATHS t-- o er, two sisters, Mrs. Afton Ilipwell and Jennie C. Hooper, and the parents also survive. Services will be held Sunday afternoon at 2 oclock in the Hooper chupcl with Counselor James Widdi-so- n presiding. The body may be viewed at the family home on Friday, Saturday and also on Sunday until lime of services. Flowers left at the Lindquist chapel until 11 oclock on Sunday will be taken to tho home. Get the Message Through THE 9, 1899-190- 4, 9, 3, 5, for thirty years this store, under the same management has been serving the people of this community. its idea, from the beginning, was to give you dependable merchandise at the lowest prices consistent with quality; to deal fairly and honorably on all occasions. thirty years hf continuous business is a record attained by very few business stores, a thirty-year-ol- d that is still owned and managed by the same man who founded it is still more uncommon, there can be no doubt about; the public confidence in such a house. great-grandchildre- n. Message Through The telephone worker of today is inspired by the same ideal. Men and women brave dangers and undergo privations to establish and maintain this modem service of com- munication. 2481 It is noteworthy a at that, Washington Avenue splendid which Special From Our Bargain Section it is to signalize this almost unique record that we shall devote the week of march .12-1- 7 to a series of special values which we hope to make as resec markable as the record itself. our windows for these special Denver, Childrens Patent Strap Slippers trimmed in dj 4 gun metal, tan or white; sizes 4 to 8 will building be this company's general headquarters, is being erected on the site of one of the stations on the old pony express line. Like those coAriers of another day, the people who will occupy this building are animated by the first principle of telephone service: Get the Message Through 1 AJ Growing Girls Strap Slippers Sizes 8Vi to 11 Sizes 11 2 $2.45 to 2 Womens Low, Medium or Hi Strap Slippers Ilc-e-l (t n QC tpswsJO The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. |