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Show rz. Friday, Aucrat THE OGDEN POST railroads; transcontinental services in aircraft provided with comfortable sleeping accommodations; communication for passengers as well as crew, and a service so comimprehensive that practically everyUnitthe in center industrial portant Probate and Guardianship ed States will be identified with this Notices newest agency of freight and passenpect ger transportation. Consult County Clerk or On the I'acific coast, the Pacific Air Signers for Further Information. Transport carries mail and passengers north ami south from Seattle to Los Notice Angeles, a distance of 1,100 miles, the d. second longest air mail .line in the Eststo of Ruduliih Lyon, dec country. During May this company flew every mile on time and new Creditor will rr "t schedules recently inaugurated shorten 16 day of the trip north by one hour and 4 o den. Uteh. on or beforn tho minutes, and the trip south by one Administratrix of the Estate hour and IS minutes. Southbound of Rudolph K. Lyon, a THATCHER AND YOUNG. planes arrive in Los Angeles in time to make night train connections for Atlarnry for Administratrix, 14 First National Rank DalSan Antonia, Phoenix, El Iaso, Building, las and southwest points, effcating a Imt of fint publication, July 12. 192S. saving of from 12 to 24 hours. Fares Date of last publication, August 9, 1BZS. have also been reduced on an average of 35 per cent. Notice Travel by air is no longer considered become we Os a gamble with death. Notice is hereby given by the Board better educated to its advantages, Commissioners of Ogden City, Utah, of rchcdules will be improved and rates of the intention of such Board of Comwill continue to go down. missioners to make the following deTo conscribed improvements, struct sanitary sewers of sufficient capacity, together with the necessary Connecticuts new automobile liabil- manholes, wyes, structures, and all ity insurance law has just gone into other things necessary to complete the effect. whole in a proper and workmanshipmanner and to connect the same to dividlike motorists law are this Under of ed into five classes. The first two the present sanitary sewer system beAvenue Lincoln on classes are those who pay the regular Ogden City, and Thirty-sixt- h rates of an insuraQce company, and tween Thirty-thir- d h Street between Thirty-fiftthose who, because of a good record, Streets, and CanLincoln Avenues, and Grant In rates. a reduction in are granted 171 A Station between addition, the state provides three addi- yon Road 58.43. 180 Station A 69.80 and tional classes, A. B. and C. In class Said sewers shall be constructed of A are the drivers who have minor acor concrete pipe, each of the vitrified cidents and infractions of driving to be submitted to conforegoing rules. Their insurance rate is increasbids and the contract to for ed 10 per cent. In class B the rate is tractors the lowest responsible for awarded be increased 25 per cent and includes of pipe to be selected the bid for type drivers having more serious accidents. Commissioners in of Board the Class C is for drivers involved in high- by 155. All work is No. District Sewer ly serious and flagrantly avoidable ac- to be done according to the plans, cidents and calls for a 50 per cent inspecifications and profiles on file in crease in the 'rate. the office of the City Engineer. The law does not compel a motorist the abuttors portion And to to take out insurance, but the state is of the costdefray and expense thereof by a empowered to revoke the licenses of local assessment upon the lots, blocks, any who fail to meet judgments, do or pieces of land or real estate to be not provide financial responsibility or affected or benefited by said improveare deemed unsafe drivers. A careful ments, situated within Blocks 1, 2, 3, check is to be kept on motor cars, and 4, Charlesworth Addition; Blocks and the Insurance companies must file 3, 6, 7, 8, and 9, FYanklin Place lists and charge the scale of rates de- Addition; Block 2, Emersons Main cided by law. Street Addition; Cross Subdivision; A This piece of legislation is of course part Lot 7, Block 66, Plat C; all ih new and untired. However, it avoids Ogden City Survey; Also a part of the main pitfalls of unconditional the Southeast One Quarter of Section compulsory insurance, which makes 21, Township 6 North, Range 1 West; the careful pay for the reckless and also a part of the Northeast One Quarhas caused such legal havoc in Massa- ter of Section 5, Township 5 North, chusetts. High hopes are held by ex- Range 1 West, Salt take Meridian, .or perts for its success, both in prevent- United States Survey; tofronting streets the ing accidents and in the secondary abutting on, or adjacent and avenues above named and to the duty of indemnifying the injured. entire depth back therefrom, not exceeding, however, 330 feet. Menace The grand total cost of said improvements is estimated at $10,200.00, The estimated cost per front or lineal No person can escape being af- foot of abutting property for said imfected by the cost of government. It provements is $1.80. All protests or objections to such imis reflected in employment conditions, the purchasing power of wages, indus- provement or to the carrying out of trial activity, and perhaps most im- such intention must be presented in of abutportant, the cost of the necessities writing signed by the owners tothe same, describing and luxuries of life. property ting number of the with abutting gether When the individual is d be filed with the City the whole community suffers. And front feetonand or before the 19th day of Recorder when a business is the cost August, 1929. must be passed on to the ultimate The Board of Commissioners at its consumer, who pays all overhead. first regular meeting thereafter, There are localities in the United the 20th day of August, 1929, States where vast acreage of land has will consider the proposed levy and been returned to the state or coun- hear and consider such protests or obof taxes. jections to said improvement as shall ty, seized for Industries are driven away. The un- have been made. employment problem appears. The By order of the Board of Commisinevitable result is stagnation. sioners of Ogden City, Utah. R. A. MOYES, At the present time the small town is offered an unrivalled opportunity (Seal) City Recorder. to progress and prosper, because of Dated July 25th, 1929. the trend of manufacturers away from First publication July 26th, 1929. the great centers of population. And Last publication August 16th, 1929. the industrial cities of the future will Published in The Ogden Post. be those which, along with the jjatural Sewer District No. 155. rural advantages, have a reasonable tax rate and economical government. ty says that gas is not only the best of fuels, but the only one which can be dejiended upon for a ateady, The Ogden Post low-pric- radio-te!o-pho- ed W. T. EFI'ERSON, Editor supply. Member Utah State Press Association In an eastern state gas heating InMcmbvr National Editorial creased DO per cent in 1028 and CO per Association. rent in the first half of 1020. This naprogress is reflected all over the and Published esrb Friday by The its with efficiency tion, Oas, Post Printing and Publishing eronnrny, has the approval of the 2428 Kiescl avenue. American home owner. mutter OcEntered as second-clas- s tober 17, 1927, at the post office at Ogden, Utah, under the Act of March 3. Metal Mining Is Necessary to 1871). Jrice: Subscription 2.00 EDITORIAL Prison Reform and Its Results For many years past, prison reform has been one of the pet subjects of idealists and theorists who are much more interested in criminals than they are in honest and industrious citizens. This class of idealists is more interested in making it easier for the crim inal and thug than they are in promoting the happiness and well being of those who must toil to live and contribute by way of taxation to the rare of the criminal. Just now we have a concrete example of the mistakes we have been making in allowing the prison reformer to have so much to do with our prisons and the rules and regulations which govern them. The riots and insurrections that have been staged at Auburn and at Clinton during the past week, where guards and attendants have been killed and wounded by pampered thugs and murders, reveals the silliness of prison reform. Many are the cause set forth for the wave of crime which has swept over this land during the past ten years, but in the opinion of many so-call-ed ed people people who have hod more or less to do with criminals for a life time the primary cause is the pampering and soft handling of the criminal class. A killer, a thug, and a blackjackcr knows but one line of treatment, and that is the treatment of force. Moving pictures, high brow lectures, floral offerings and sobbing sympathy have no more influence with him than a prayer book with a South Sea cannibal. Right here in Utah there Is clamor for a million dollars with which to build a palatial penitentiary, on a thousand-acr- e farm, where an effort is to be made to make farmers out of criminals. In the first place, there is no need for a million-dollpenitentiary; and in the next place a criminal can never be made to pay for his keep ar as a farmer. 'Utah should learn something from these prison riots and from the crimes committed by paroled and pardoned prisoners. A criminal should be made to pay his debt for the crime he has committed, and the only way he can be made to pay to feel that he has paid is by hard labor. Utah needs roads to the marvelous acenery in her untrod wilderness, to the natural bridges, to her countless canyons, to her incxcessablc mountain fastehesses, to her lakes and forests, and the convicts who are loafing and majoring in a school of lawlessness, that is to say in penitentiary and jails, should be put to this work. But for these silly sentimentalists sentimentalists who made the sheriff of Salt take county take his chain gang from road work in Salt take county, there might be road camps all along the watermark" from the point of the mountain south of Salt take City to Weber canyon, building a scenic boulevard, and on Antelope island building an auto roadway to connect the islands from l'romintory loint tu the mouth of the Jordan river. However, we know that such a plan is not workable, and why it is not workable. Were our criminals engaged in community work they could not be making overalls and work shirts in competition with women who have to toil to live, and with farmers who have to grow crops to rear and educate their families and pny taxes for the support of the criminals who must be petted and pampered. But why preach? The million-dol-lpenitentiary will be built, and the criminal will spend his vacation within its palatial walls planning future campaigns of crime; and tho sentimentalist will be made happy and will take to tho criminal flowera which he cannot appreciate, books which he will not read, and make his lot more happy and comfortable than that of the man who cuts his or her lawn or she who washes their dirty clothes. of Intention to-w- it; Motorists Classified Reason for American Tariff The gospel of an American tariff that seeks fair competition at home for American manufacturers, as op- posed to an exclusion pdicy, was presented by American delegates to the fifth general congress of the International chamber of commerce in Am- sterdam. All that Americas tariff policy con- templates, according to Julius II. of Barnes, American the organization, is "an adequate protection of American living standards and an equalization which gives our manufacturers and agricultural producers the opportunity to sell in our home markets without the handicap of destructive competition from abroad." In denying the "exclusion" argument, he added that since 1921 imports had shown an increase of 100 per cent with a substantial growth in exports. "It is of far more service to the world to preserve American standards as a goal for other peoples than to permit these standards to be reduced through opening up our markets to an unrestricted current of goods produced by cheaper labor. Our mlem is to employ the tar-iff as a factor for the adjustment of differences here and abroad until the rest of the world can measurably catch up with us and consequently reduce the margin of security which our protective 'tariff affords. vice-preside- nt Fire Consciousness Needed The Taxation All the fire prevention work in the world on the part of private organi zations and public authorities cannot attain its object until the public earns the lessons of safety and develops a "fire consciousness." Fire menaces every home, every business, every life. It spreads an unending red path of destruction and waste across the nation. The gospel of fire prevention must e preached continually to the pco-l- c. It is well known that old wir-ninferior building construction, carelessly handled matches and cigarettes, oil soaked rags and such obvious risks are responsible for a vast 'art of our yearly fire loss. Yet conflagrations resulting from these causes persist and, in some localities, ncrcase. The last two years have seen a reduction in fire waste. It is too soon o tell whether this is the result of a tetter public understanding of the iroblem or not At any rate, we still mve the unenviable record of destroy-n- g more property and lives by flame than any other civilized nation. The solution is in the hands of the Local Governmental Efficiency Aa usual and despite the fact that the Ogden Post submitted a low bid for the publication of the county legal notices, the board of county commissioners, awarded the contract to the daily evening newspaper which always stands for the best interest of Ogden." The bid of The Fost on the county ordinances was approximately of the price of its evening competitor. The legal status of a county ordinance is the same when published once in a weekly paper or seven times in a daily paper. It will be interesting for Weber county Democrats to know that their commissioner. It. A. Norris, has the same ideas of economy in the expenditure of public funds ns have Frank W. Stratford and Harvey I Randall his It required twenty-nin- e days to make the award after the bids were '"A'HWc.tm adequate mineral resources. The executive, engineering and the industry of chemical branches have reached new high standards of Prices arc efficiency and economy. of relation and the stabilized being supply to demund adjusted. It is a mistake to pass harsh and restrictive mining laws. They result in curtailment of mining development, employment and prosperity. Mining is the basis of new wealth and should be aided in its evolution. ar one-eigh- t An increase in mining artivity in the United States is a good sign of national progress. It is an old saying, and a true one, that no country has even been great that has lacked Telephone 305 th over-taxe- d, g, Remarkable Statement A order of the Boardof City, Utah, this the sioners of Ogden 1929 25th day of July, & A. MOYES, (SIGNED) City Recoruer. First publication July 26th, 1929. Last publication August 16th, in The Ogden Post. X rJJ-Publishe- non-payme- Notice is hereby given that Ogden following City proposes to make the Constroct improvement, public 154 pavement in Paving District No.thereincidental with work to-w- it: 9 As a matter of faa h ridiculous to tax a n.an for his property in other ' word, man for building a houe to J p. improves the community I many people, and is pense to the owne r. Uu, 05111 k u I lots of fool things, Ml MONEY TO LOAN Easy Riayunt, Ioo, ,t sust. 400 to l&lO.Go. PEOPLES FINANCE av, THRIFT CO 2144 WashingtiiB Attsm together to, according to plans, specifications AUTO REPAIRING and profiles on file in the office of the are Attenti.it Mr. Autotati bids sealed And City Engineer. Is yoxr car ready for Spriti. re.. invited for said work and will be Rekaalod whor th. .rk I. ceived at the office of the City WALT JAMES AUTO IttPJAsIv. corder in the City Hall at Ogden, list Kiescl Arenas Utah, until ten oclock A. M. on the 6th. day of August, 1929. Instructions to bidders, plans and specifications for said improvement can be RADIO VARIED' seen and examined at the office ol the City Engineer in the City Hall of At no place In Ogden will said City. find a wider selection in radii The right is reserved to reject any and all bids and to waive any defect. : FREED By order of the Board of Commissioners of Ogden City, Utah, this the 11th day of July, 1929. SILVER R. A. MOYES, (Signed) City Recorder. C. W. IVERS0X Published in The Ogden Post. Paving District No. 154. 2586 Washington phone 17 First publication, July 12th, 1929. Last publication, August 2nd, 1929. I I APEX Notice to Banks and Bond Buyers BIDS will be received at Ogden City by the Board of Commissioners of said City, on Tuesday the 6th day of August, 1929, at the hour of 10 oclock a. m. of said day, for the, purchase of special serial bonds, payable from a special fund, in the principal sum of $75,000.00, or less, and bearing interest in accordance with coupons to be attached, at not more than six per cent per annum, payable semiannually, pursuant to a proposed or finance of said City, the terms and provisions of which are more particularly set forth in a contract heretofore entered into between Ogden City, the Board of Education of Ogden City, the Board of Education of Weber County and Weber College, reference to which contract is hereby made for further information. The funds derived from said Bonds are to be expended in the establishment and erec-to- n of a Stadium, etc., which the contracting parties above named propose to establish and construct. Said contract is on file with the City Recorder. The City Commissioners of Ogden City hereby reserves the right to reject any and all bids. DATED August 1st, 1929. R. A. MOYES, (SEAL) City Recorder of Ogden City. j VIADUCT j Market & Groceteria 183-- 5 Stmt Twenty-fourt- h A Cash and Carry Mark at Cash and Carry Pricw far Cash aad Carry People Money To Loan on WATCHES, DIAMONDS,! REVOLVERS, RIFLES, GUNS, KODAKS, ETC. Uncle Sams iLoan Office 278 25th St. Ogden, Utaklj Have Your Car Greased by our high pressure system and by exper- Old Established Cleaners ienced men. nigh Shell Gas and Motor Oil Phone 377 Gwilliam Super-Servic- Quality Work. Reliable. e Superior Cleaning Station Southeast Corner 23rd Street and Grant Avenue Co. 2470 Grant Ave. E. G. Hampton, Prop. nt Notice to Contractors Crime furnishes a means of for thousands of persons in he United States. The crime wave has been variously attributed to the war, automobiles, the increased freedom of the "younger generation," im- roved standards of living, prohibition and ownership of fire arms. Reformers attack first one issue and hen another in their effort to the blame for crimes ranging place from dodging payment of taxes to thievery and murder. The sale and ownership of revolvers and pistols has come in for more than its share of persecution. It is true that revolvers are used in the commission of crime, but so are auto. mobiles, hammers, clubs, knives, shotguns, machine guns, poison, bricks, gas, rope and endless other commodities, all innocent in themd" We may sometimes feel sort of put out with the French people that they dont appreciate what we did to help them in the World war, but yet at the Rainbow division celebration in Baltimore on July 15, the sight of thnt gallant and famous old warrior, General Gourand with one leg and one arm gone as a war sacrifice, a living flag" from the French people, seeing him standing there at the very moment the French Premier was making his eloquent and four-da- y plea in the chamber of deputies, insisting and winning out, that they should pay their just debt to this country, these things make us forget everything of a harsh we ever had against that feeling , great Notice is hereby given that Ogden City proposes to. make the following Con public improvement, struct sewer in Sewer District No. 155, together with work incidental thereto, according to plans, specifications and profiles on file in the office of the City Engineer. And sealed bids are invited for said work and will be received at the office of the City Recorder in the City Hall at Ogden, Utah, until ten oclock A. M. on the 21st day of August, 1929. Instructions to bidders, plans and specifications for said improvement can be seen and examined at the office of the City Engineer in the City Hall of said City. The right is reserved to reject any to-w- it: O ION SAVINGS Its selves. The United States has no cleaner sport, and probably none which develops a greater degree of skill, than shooting at targets with small arms. possible to keep pistols V R anil revolvers from the man who crime for a living( which it is not), he would simply resort to one ox any number of other weapons which would serve his purpose as well. ws Air Transportation Growing: A Great Feeling to realize that you have money in the bank and that it is working for you. Its a still more glorious feeling to be able to draw out your money when you need it for an unexpected emergency. saw-ed-o- ff fol-lo- d Notice to Contractors to-w- it, Causes of Crime "live-ihoo- of defects. and all bids and to waive anyCommis-- over-taxe- You Dont Have to Park Your Streetcar-The best solution of your parking problem is found in the street car. Ride down town, do your shopping without the worry of whether you will find your car tagged tot overtime parking, and return home speedily, safely and economically. EL ES Deposit ever so little a week and watch it grow. 4c Interest on Savings Deposits! SbftBBSSSSl The airplane is the first mode of transportation to recognize no physical or geographical barrier to its ultimate use. The foundation of aviation has been aid through years of hazardous experimenting. Some $500,000,000 has gone into its various branches during A the last two years. It is probably necessary to look only a few years to see airplane Henry L. Doherty, the oil magnet, post offices, with the mnil being pick- -' Relieves tint gas will be the house ed up, sorted and in much discharged heating fuel of the future. Mr. Dohcr. the same fashion as is r.ow dono by opened. It only required seven days to make the earth and all that is therein. Truly the members of our bonrd of county commissioners are models o efficiency. nc to Creditors Nation per Year. ' frid for-wa- rd Bide the Street Cars on a Pass. Save Time and Money! Utah Rapid Transit Co. OgdenStmeB A. P. BIGELOW, President L. BECKER, Vice Pres. V. N. FARR, Cashier E. M. TOWER, Vice Trcs. A. R. DAWSON, Assr Cashier D. E. DAVIS, Vice IYcs. O. J. ST1LWELL, Trust Offi' J BARKER, Aast Trust Officer One Ccn ?fctyingcn J a Wyears Under 1 itiiuious r- - u,- - r j |