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Show Friday, August 12, THE OGDEN POST 4 The Ogden Post ANI) THEATRE-GRAM- S Published each Friday by The Ioat Printing and Publiuhing company, 2120 Kieael avenue. Telephone 365 Editorial COOLIDGE IS A OK EAT PIIESIIIENT Now that the atatement of President Coolidge that he does not "choose to run for president in 1028. is being taken aeriouaiy, a slashing battle ia predicted between Secretary Hoover, Vice President Dawes and Frank 0. Dowdcn, for the Republican nomination for president. Wiaeucrea daim that Hoover will have the support of 1 'resident Coolidge, but there ia little to indicate that the president will seriously interest himself in Hoover's candidacy or in that of any candidate. Such action has not yet became a habit with him. The action of the preajdcnt' in withdrawing from the presidential race ia commended in the highest terms by many of the leading men of the country. One great editor says: "Calvin Coolidge has been one of America's great Presidents, and he has never shown himself as great as when he refused to consider a nomination for a third term, refuse to break the historic precedent established by George Washington and maintained by Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson and Grover Cleveland. , "Calvin Coolidge has not been a great President in a sensational way. He has not put mcrira into foreign wars. He has not spilled American blood and wasted American treasure in conflicts which are in no sense essential to the welfare of the United States. "In point of fact, his greatness has been not in putting the burdens of war upon the backs of the American people, but in lifting those burdens, and in developing the opjiortunitiea of peace aand establishing the fundamentals of prosperity. "He has not sought to build himself up at the expense of the public welfare. He has, on the contrary, endeavored almost to obliterate himself personally and to think only of the public benefit --to decrease taxation, to increase the income of the average citizen, to promote good business, to create good times. "He is himself a typical American, and his ambition has been to make life comfortable for the typical American citizen. "This may not be a spectacular ambition, but it is a useful one, and a . noble one. "He has followed the injunction of Fathers of the Republic to keep free from foreign entanglements. "He has followed the example of the Fathers of the Republic to sacrifice personal ambition and to refuse a third term. "President Coolidge deserves t o stand with the great American Presidents and with the good American Presidents, and deserves to be held ever in grateful remembrance by the American people. Commission Concurs THE I.EGION IS CUMING Ogden will be the host to the American Legion, Department of Utah, next week. It goes without saying that the Legionnaires will find a hearty welcome her. Ogdens reputation for hospitality will gain new laurels when the last buddy leaves town. Herman Baker Post and the various civic organizations are giving their full measure of effort to make the annual convention one to iw long remembered. Ogden should be especially proud of its legion Post. It leads the state n activity and its personnel nrludfs the flower of the city's young manhood. The city will give the tin hat boys a real welcome. Willi Governor I)ern Ix-gio- There are many industrial plants and about town that present a wry sorry exterior appeurance. Many of tho structures sru in need of paint and the fire hazard from dry weeds The plant h not to be disregarded. uf the Utah Packing corporation has recently been landscaped and presents a very pleasing appearance to Food plants, especial-the passer-bshould pay more attention to the exterior appearance of the factories. Cleanliness begets cleanliness. This fall will be a good time to start the planting campaign by getting the ground in rendition around our faclawns rost but tories. ittle, as the fall and winter ruins germinate the seed and when spring comes the grass is well through the ground and but little attention is required to bring it to maturity. Money expended for paint and grass seed will pay big dividends. It costs less to maintain a lawn than n Full-plant- to be-use- d ff v y, ed re-ort- ed fight weeds. Let's make Ogden the spotless town. U. S. Civil Service Announces Vacancies The United States Civil Service Commission has announced open competitive examinations as follows: Senior engineering draftsman, Patent Office, Washington, D. C., at The duties consist $1,860 a year. irincipally of malting perspective drawings from sketches or models, making drawings from rough drafts snd specifications, and making trademark drawings. Junior physicist, Naval Research Laboratory, Bellevue, I). C., and the Bureau of Standards, Washington, I). I., at $1,860 a year. Optional subjects are electricity, heat, mechanics, optics, physical mctalludgy, and radio. Junior entomologist, Bureau of Entomology, Department of Agriculture, for duty in Washington, I). C., or in the field at $1800 a year. Optional subjects are insect habits and development, insecticides and physiology, and cultural control. Principal scientific aid. Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of for duty in Washington, D. C., or in the field, at $2,100 a year. The duties consist of work under general direction on experiments affecting tests of refrigerator and storage equipment. Senior instrument maker at $1,860 a year,, instrument maker at $1,680 year, Bureau of Standards and Weather Bureau Washington, D. C. The duties are to design, construct, and repair scientific and technical instruments and apparatuii of high preAgriculture, Another Case of Too Much.Culvert on Road There is a car in a local garage which was brought in Monday morning from its resting place on a cul- vert near Bennetts place north of Kaysvillc. The car has a California license plate and was borrowed by a drjver from tho Cullen garage in Salt lake. The car was evidently forced off the road at this point where the culvert is only 4 feet from the con crete highway. The car vftis, badly damaged, especially in the frame. An accident like this practically ruins a car and steps should be taken by the state to place them the required distance from the road. - Don Fail PURITY. trans-continent- al SEVEN TEARS AND THE END IS NOT YET May 5. 1920, Sacco and Vanzctti were arrested for the murder of a Massachusetts paymaster. Two months later they were found guilty and convicted of first degree murder. And then began to be exhibited before the American people one of the most flagrant cases of the laws delay on record. These defendants, through clever attorneys, used every dodge in the catalog to cheat the chair. And the remarkaable thing about the whole proceeding is that they haw been able to postpone the day of fina reckoning for seven years. Bomb outrages, perpetrated by the Communists in this country and abroad, as sympathy gestures, have snuffed out the lives of many people, and every court delay in this case has meant the further loss of life. The courts, the attorneys and all and sundry that have had to do with this unwonted delay, have much to answer for. If the case had arisen in England, two weeks time would have been ample time for trial and execution, or acquittal. American courts need speeding up. &t artists are painting the panels that art panels have been erected on a long frame board to the that the outdoor advertising man work that extends the length of the shop. This frame is large enough to erects. In the old hold fotir of the largest sized outdoor vacant used any poster So if you fail to see .the sign boards. on daubed get and from a perilous perch writers thif and hanging poorly pri hung up paste a dr ate you will know that building, that atop and flimsy posters day. covered fences, barnf, walls and any- Mr. Sign Artist is at work inside- the his stuff, away from thing that paste would adhere to And big studio doingsnow or the dust and called it a day. A lout all the capital the rain, the that was needed wyta sufficient molej the dirt. . Ample skylights are proIt's a far cry from the old-tim- e bill- present-da- y - vided in the new building, and the men work under the best of conditions. After being painted, the panels' are taken out and erected on the job. The new plant, erected at a cost of $20,000, ia 55x110 feet In the front are the business office, a lobby and the managers office. Immediately in to buy a broken avack of flour, s wide paste brush. But the outdob is in business now. dvertising Take the c Harry Anderson's company. spends $80,000 per year in Ogdi labor, paints, sheet iron, lumber, the rear are the carpenter shop, the trucks and the other hundred a used in the business, panel department and the commerthings cial department. Many useful innoyear the Anderson company usei carloads of lumber, a car of gat1Ift vations are to be seen about the plant, nized iron, and 20 tons of white acTThiere is a design cupboard, where As an electric light customer Harry the original designs are filed in alphais not to be sneezed at. His illum- betical order. Lockers have been inated boards use up more than $400 viiflaXor the men. A well-shestodkutffn attracts the eye. worth of juice per month. At the rear is the bill posting l3i, The new plant on Grant avenue has the modern art posters are preinterwhere considerable of features many est to the uninitiated. For instance pared for use. The paper used for there is the carpenter shop where the this work is especially prepared prepanels are built before being painted. viously to being taken out on the job This well equipped department is fit- so that when a poster is, applied it ted with everything necessary to build will lay flat against the board. In front and above the offices is the modern outdoor sign. The panels are built with an ingenious lap joint the manunagraph department. This and while the ornamental posts and is where the posters are the lattice work that goes beneath painted. The original copy ia prethe signs are being constructed the pared and then it is mounted on a . lv hand-paint- Dairymen commonly feed skim milk to their calves until about 'six months of age. The' time of weaning usually depends upon the condition ed growth' of the calf. If the feeding of milk is discontinued the necessary protein must be supplied by some other feed. Probably this can be done most economically by some legume, such as alfalfa, clover, soy bean, or cowpea hay. When hay of this sort is not available it is neces glass panel and lights turned on behind the poster to render it transparent the sign artist then has but ittle trouble in duplicating the first copy. Mr. Anderson says that 80 per cent of the bill posting business is national advertising. He has contracts for such products as Palmolive soap, Old Gold cigarettes, Continental oil, and various other well known products. The outdoor advertiser ia going in for real art these days. It ia a very common practice for the national advertisers to pay $10,000 for a single design for a poster; the world's best artists at employed, and, as a result of this, the outdoor advertising man. is now calling his signboards The "the poor mans art gallery. Outdoor Advertising association of America has had a liberal hand in the upbuilding of this business. They tiave employed the best engineers, architects and optical authorities of America to obtain information that will be of benefit to the craft Annual poster contests are conducted all over America to stimulate the interest of the artist and the purchaser of the outdoor advertising service. This new plant is a real credit to the community and its business is constantly increasing. John Williams is the superintendent and designer for the company, and James Kelley is in charge of sales. Mr. Anderson has very recently purchased the Bird & Jex interests as far south as the Farmington City limits. sary that., the grain mixture fed should be high in protein. During summer,' when good pasture is available, the heifer needs no supplementary feed, providing she is growing normally. A little hay and grain are sometimes advisable late in the son when the pastures are dry. sea- irj i DUCO TESTED I 1 By Comparison The First Authorized Dulo Auto Refinishfrtg SaionBn Ogden Three Years Experience WimThis Product Repolishing and TouchupTCeasonauIe Our Prices Are Rights Auto anks Painters Variderborg & Phone 322 Utah Bottlin Visit us ri of the calf And the availability and cost of milk. When milk is fed in abundance it furnishes the greater ment of the penitentiary shoe factory part of the protein necessary for the and to instruct the prisoners assigned TO THE PUBLIC st . 1 The latest in the building line in Ixts Angeles is a block of store buildings to occupy an entire city block, the roof of which will to such work. for an and landing field. airplane hop-oThe salaries named are entrance While Los Angeles is spending a mil- cision. salaries. Higher grades are filled lion and a half dollars for an imitaShoe factory instructor-forema- n through promotion. tion field, Ogden can have a real field (treeing, finishing, and shipping deFull information may be obtainec for a nominal sum. partment), United States Penitentiary from A. R. Ward, secretary of the Sendee, taavenworth, Kansas, at United States Civil Service Board of $2,400 a year. The duties are to su- Examiners at the post office in this OGDEN MUST HAVE pervise the work done in a depart- - city. AIR PORT It begins to look as though Ogden will eventually awaken to the importance of the establishment of an air port. There has been considerable talk about an air landing field from time to time but up to this time no concrete action has ben taken in the mater. In the past, landings have When you drink bottled beverages, you are protecting been made on the Utah Hot Springs yourself against trench mouth and all diseases. flat and on the hill south of the We paid $5000 for a sterilizing machine Globe mills. It is now proposed by F. Wallace Browning, director of the for your pratf&hun. Flying club of Utah, that a field be established on an eighty acre tract of land on the Birch Creek bench, some four miles south-eaof the city, and plans are being made for clearing a portion of the land and making tests in taking off and landing. The city commission has been asked to assist in clearing the field. It is planned to have a number of planes herC' during the American Legion convention. Ogden must get iq line with an air port for local and aviation, aviation has a great future and now is the time for action. -- Modern Outdoor Advertising Plant Houses Anderson Advertising Co. Af-.e- GET READY TIMS FALL y. Motion that tha Utah water storage commission concur with Governor Utah George II. Dern in his stand that Coloowns the waters and bed of the rado river within this state was passed unanimously by the commission at its regulsr meeting Tuesday. The motion was made by W. W, Armstrong, a member of the commission. It was pointed out by Mr. Armstrong and other members of the commission that Governor Dcrn has taken a firm stand on this question and the belief was expressed that the commisr sion should give him its support, a brief discussion the motion passed with no dissenting voice. George M. Bacon, state engineer and secretary of the commission, report-2- d that investigation of Colorado river data was progressing substantially, according to schedule. The reports m the industrial requirements on the water of the river and on the stream flow are ready, he said, and a full report probably will be completed for the September meeting of the commission. Mr. Bacon also made a report on the status of the Echo reservoir project, saying the calling for bids had been delayed temporarily ' by a few minor formalities which should be straightened out soon. An appropriation of $1700 made by the commission last month for the continuance of the measurement station at Lees Ferry contingent upon similar appropriations being made by each of the other six states of the Colorado river basin, was made again Tuesday contingent upon a similar appropriation by each of three other states. The other three states they had no funds available or such an appropriation. Report of E. O. Larson, engineer in charge of investigation in the Salt Lake basin project, on the work of investigation of the Rush lake and Moon lake projects was read by Mr. Bacon. A committee of three was appointed to select a geologist to make an investigation of the Moon lake preset In carrying out the intention of a motion passed at a former meeting, W. R. Wallace, chairman of the commission, appointed W. W. Armstrong and John G. M. Barnes as additional members of the commissions power committee. That committee now is 'omposed of Professor Peterson, W. O. Creer, J. It. Murdock, W. W. Armstrong and J. G. M. Barnes. 1927 1 Your Satisfaction Our Success 1715 Washington Ave. IliT: 2668 Grant Ave., Ogden, Utah. Phone 418 You Will Be Welcome KIMQNO" HOUSE ese Goods Telephone fl298 WILDWOOD CAMP GROUNDS SEASON AND TIIANS at Reasqna All street ears stop on grounds. to spend very. The ideal place i vacation, SARAH YAYLOR, lYop. lhone 127 LUNCH CLOTHS NOVELTIES CHINAWARE MENS AND INDIES FURNISHINGS 301-30- OGDEN CANYON P.O.Box KIOjro pounds. Confectionery, nd Service Station. y , IPORTERS CABINf (Furnished and Unfurnished) Week or Month. ,, Groceries, Meats and Pr Lunches snd Soft Drink : 61-J- -l 5 24th Street Ogden, Utah |