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Show ll i V utationa is not something to be wish'A ed op the motorist .overnight. automobile with the little cooperation pc:um4 ky public might reduce the number of THE INLAND POINTING CO. experiments and thereby improve the w. r. crpcrsoN, traffic situation in Salt Lake. In the meantime, wiggle in over c. a. eppezson. ammuu mm in the interest of science Salt there wnnl-tlMttw FAiW U Lake Tribune. ffate4 Ik Ad w4 at Utah, 111. KayaviUa, lUrck . 171. ELECTRICITY, HIE CIVILIZER . AltirlUif rataa H Bpptfeatlaa More than any other single agency, ia responsible for our modadvance tn electricity Subscription $2.00 a year ern social and industrial order. TELEPHONES There: ia almost no comparison beOffW Na. I tween the modern home and that of W, P. Kwinw, Ma. TS 60 years ago. Electric lights vacuum C. A. Enmn, N. 14 cleaners, stoves, almost endless labor GAS USED FOR DOTH II EATING saving devices, have transformed it Into a model of comfort and convenAND COOLING In- ience. The old drudgery of house work For several years past, the has disappeared and in . its place is In research been has tnyayed dustry work to determine the feasibility of new ease and efficiency. Before electric power was harnessas well as heatusing yas for cooliny - It is expected that ed, industry was largely a matter of purposes.ing within a short time the experiments strong arms and backs. The : prowill show practical possibilities of such ductiveness of a laborer was limited a combined house heating, cooling and to his physical power. The modem worker, in sontraat. ventilating system. The forerunner of this Is the gas with electric power at his beck and can do many times the amount refrigerator, which Is already In gen-' call,work 'and do it better and' with of eral use. - ' By means of gas heat, anaonia with- less effort. As a result of his tremendously inin the machine is converted into a gas which is cooled by water and ab-In creased productivity, he ishimable to command wages that give living this expanded, colled state, readily sorbs neat from the Interior of the conditions, pleasures and luxuries forrefrigerator. This best is then car; merly undreamed of. ried off by 'circujating water. Today electricity is making its way When a burning gas flame can cre- in a new field, that of agriculture. ate either intense heat or ice, and What it has done in the past 20 either cool or warm a house, we are vests for 'industry and the eity home, it is now doing for farming and the indeed living in the age of miracles. farm home. Electricity operated machines and devices replace laborious hand work and operate at a low cost SUGAR BEETS ENRICH . , with unparalleled efficiency, ' SOIL 0(ir Dcrlthi Heflrx . tiu - m . fi ' - - ' ..The growing. of sugar . beets enhave of its rapid growth. It is now entering an era of economic soundness and - ' atability. COMPULSORY CHAOS 'After almost twoyears operation, tha Massachusetts compulsory insurance law is in a chaotic condition, according to a Boston dispatch to the Baltimore Bun. Large insurance companies are threatening to refuse to write policies under tho compulsory law in that state, because of the tremendous losses The public is portesting incurred. against the rates proposed for 192 9; rates made necessary by the conditions. Unscrupulous physicians and attorneys have faked claims and obtained large and illegal settlements - from the insurance companies. Forty thousand claims have been made since the law went into effect, while but 80,000 injuries are recorded. The law, instead of reducing accidents, has, in some sections. of the state, increased them. Compulsory automobile liability insurance la apparently an Ingratiating theory that in practice is proving expensive and dangerous. - OF OUR TIME USED TO 1AY TAXES While, in the majority of businesses, the tax bill is one of the greatest single items of overhead, business men give far less thought and consideration to this expense than to other, and often smaller, expenditures which they control directly. According to an article in the Tax ' of Digest, - approximately our national Income now goes to pay the cost of government. Three years of our naago, in 1925, tional Income war usedyfor this And before the war taxes took but ; ; Governmental activities and maintenance in general are becoming steadily more expensive with little sign of In spite of - federal improvement. economies, the costa of state, county and city governments have so increased that the average citizen is than ever carrying a greater burden ' ONE-SIXT- H one-six- th one-eight- h, ela. th. , r pi, -- Shinto TempU Gateway$ The gateway of ni Shinto tempi, ot a tope, la rutted torll Property It is constructed of two uprights with three superimposed crosspiece. celebrated example Is the Great Torfl of the Shinto temple, op i Island. Inland sea, Japan. (. . or - -- 1 Mlye-jjm- . J, ' f Republicans,lereis the Picture ' " - 4 Which Group Will You 'Follow? Truth in Meats to Be Featured at Show HERBERT HOOVER feature of the live11 in show stock January that wi be be will women to of special interest Meats" in campaign Truth complete conducted by the U. S. Bureau of Markets and the Utah Agricultural White-loc- k, college, according to' Lester J. flf the show, following manager a meeting Monday with James K. Wallace, of the bureau, and Kenneth C. Ikeler, of the college. An extensive showing of prime and grade cut of ipeat will be placed on display with a liv4 animal provided to illustrate the positions of the varA distinctive r Candidate for President of the Unit, ed Statee. , , ; Republicans Who Are For ,i Ernest . f Bamberger FRANK O. LOWDEN Former Governor of Illinois. Twice an outstanding candidate for Preei- -' dent, and recognized leader of middle . f ' "west far mere. - . ' . r Republican leader in the senate; an , outstanding champion for Utah, her ' ' people sad he industries. ( , Dr.-Ca- rl : - - J. REUBEN CLARK, JR. J ' th Under-Socretary'- State and late of candidate for United States Senator. - STATE CONVENTION: DELEGATES if . ' - f J REED. SMOOT . - one-six- . r, - -- dinner-eabar- et , a Electricity has been more-thamere aid in performing necessary riches the soil. Experiments shown that land that yielded 26.9 functions. It has proven a great civbushels of wheat to the acre before ilizer as welL . sugar beets had been grown, yielded 43.1 bushels to the acre after their OIL INDUSTRY IIAS PROFITED ious cuts. , , , j introduction. Corresponding increases BY EXPERIENCE oats corn and in shown are barley, Condition's during 1928, as in pre' Aurora Borealis after rotation with sugar beets. ceding years, again show that stabilThe extensive rot system of the ity of the petroleum industry, in the fitormer, a Swedish scienbeet opens and aerates the soiL Beet on a future, hinges, tp great extenj, tist, has made a special study f tbt roots .frequently go down into ' the scientific conservation of our resourbefore. borealis and one of these demaurora ground from seven to eight feet. The ces, and intelligent cooperation beThe business man should realize onstrations which he observed was surface abundant growth under the tween producers. that of his working time beROD to 600 miles above the ieartU. enables the soil to .retain and utilize The United States is the dominant longs to the tax collector under exist- from moistura. and of of these raye of light shot out air Some amount a greater nation today in the petroleum world. ing conditions. Every sixth automoso fur that they were Illuminated by Moreover, the thorough cultivation re- W'e have the ' greatest production of bile, every sixth kilowatt of electricthe any quired by the beet crop pulverizeswhile country, and the most efficient ity, every sixth bushel of wheat pro- the light of the stm, which was far soil and rtfs the land of weeds, facilities. The next progressive step duced goes to the tax office. below the horizon at the time. Ills inthe fertilizer applied to the toil by producing distributing and marketing we to have If are we reduction, vestigations may result tn some addithe beet crop remains to benefit other is ' elimination ' of duplication that must have public interest that exam- tional Information about the nature ot crops. causes over population and resultant ines and Controls expenditures. ' A lax the atmosphere at points far above the waste. The conservation - measures public consciousness results in polit- earth. . CHANGE CONTEMPT FOR LAW adonted in the Oklahoma and Texas ical ' extravagance and waste that TO RESPECT fields are pointing the way. must leave Its mark on personal and During 1928 and 1927. 760 murders observers all hold that general prosperity, Authoritative ? Poet inDcep Crave mewere recorded in one American uneconomic production of petroleum ISO were ShakesiHMtres Of grave tn the little gang these, tropolis. is Injurious to the industry, as well rewas dug 17 fee! at Stratford church killings. Yet not a single manmuras in the end adversely affecting the a Plain Senator Jatl the of for gang of below the chancel. ; the any sponsible puvemeiit consumer, to whom a steady, low After the. delegation ;htl given the ders was punished, and in 104 of the priced supply of high grade oil prodsenator a list of what was demanded cases no arrests whatever were made. ucts is a basio necessity. he remarked pleasantly: Til do my In the BJtme city, since 1922, a Simply Unhusked Rice The industry has profit- beat. I senator not. "beer war has taken 875 lives, ed by petroleum from Is nnhusked rlri. -- whether Still, Faddy its experience and mistakes in addition to the deaths of 160 gang. the comparatively short period Utopia." trowing or gathered sters by the police.. This would seem during to be a record, but other American IlllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllOlIlllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll cities are not far behind. Practically baa every great center of population its frequent gang war casualties and its unexplained murders. - The pitiful inadequacy of the means used to prevent" these outrages is apparent. We 'even paaa law which in practice permit only tho criminal to bear arms. Professional reformers maka mar-tyr- a of the principles in sensational cases, and, assisted by pardon, parole and commutation of sentence laws, help them to get another chance." In the majority of instance, these chances" come to the thief or tho murderer as golden opportunities to continue his criminal career. Through legal technicalities cases ar dragged out over interminable i periods of time, often resulting in the circumvention of justice, And. after convictions, punishment is delayed through the avenue of appeals." Crima repression will come when an awakened and active public conscious- ness causes changes in our legal routine that will permit the free, unhampered machinery of justice to function, and not until then. Wo do not - need more laws, but less, Through our own incompetence, we have given the modern criminal a contempt for law and authority and When this contempt is society. - DAVID J. WILSON GEORGE S. BARKER changed to respect, we will have solv' For District Attorney ed our crime problem. For District Judge t David J. Wilson, Republican Candite Fledged to a fair and impartial WIGGLE AND WOBBLE . t for1 District Attorney, is well ministration of the law, guaranteeing Salt Lake motorists are once more known as a fearless, able, fair and equal and exact Justice to all, regard-honevisibly impressed with tho fact that public prosecutor. He ia re- - less of station in life, race, party, or city traffic regulation is still afflict-e-d ported as one whose position on la creed, George S. Barker ia a candidate with its chief ill experimentation. enforcement is well known and nn- - to succeed himself to the office of Some months ago' Salt Lake experiIlis record as County At- - Judge of the Second Judicial Court, questioned. mented with tho theory of parallel Weber of torney County has not been By reason ot his training and de-1 parking. For some reason, the for to and efficiency perience, he is well qualified for the loyalty parturo failed miserably and the pubin the performance of the duties of position. . His popularity lic was returned to diagonal parking. upon the that office. That record is a suffi- - bench ia reflected by the fact that Motorists who had reached the condent platform. Born on a Utah farm on three different occasions the nom-for- ty clusion that we were almost secure years ago of sturdy pioneer par- - inating conventions; composed of against experiments, having tried most ho is endowed with a strong egates from . three Counties, have departure, were surprised Tues- eonatitution and firm character, and nominated him by acclamation. Born - every when the public safety departday, by dint of his own efforts has made in Ogden, August 27, 1SS2, Judge Bar-h- is ment," without a word of warning, way. After receiving an A. B, ker comes of a highly respected ordered cars parked parallel with the at the B. Y. University at Pro- - ily, numbered among the first set-vcurb on Main street. Officials of the he was an instructor at the Weber tiers of Weber County. With the public safety department are frank Academy in Ogden. His law studies of three years spent as a to aay that the revival of an old were pursued at the University of exception missionary in Australia, and his failure is but an experiment, which is at Berkeley, where he at- - sence from the State while studying exactly what It was the last time we tamed high honors, including the edi- - law in Washington, D. O, he has been tried it. This announcement neither orship of the California Law Review a continuous resident of this country, nor the action. explains justifies and the degree of Doctor of Juris- - After completing his law work at We are unable1 to ssy what line of lie is a past District Sec- - Georgetown University, where he prudence, reasoning has been followed to beof the Kiwania Service Club ceived the degree of L L B.; he lieve that the experiment will be any and has held various executive posi- - was admitted to tho bar at Washing-tion- s. more successful than it was before IIo has held and now holds ton, D. C before the Supreme Court and the motoring public may take various positions of pub- - and Court of Appeals. Returning heart, because there is he trust. Ilia party service i out- - to Utah he took g. up the there is still another change He has been Republican tice of law at Ogden, and in around the 'corner. What it is just County Chairman and Chairman' of 1915 was elected Judge f the Munior when it will eome, no doubt, is a of the cipal Court of Ogden, and pomT!xi official-circl- es, zs deep, dark. secret-i- n Utah has always in 1317 by an overwhelming majority, with which the public has no conbeen an ardent Republican worker. He In 1918 he resumed his practice? forro-wa- s cern. As it is, just park your car elected County Attorney of We- - ing a which continued un-bpartnership with the curb until some othparallel a County jn. til January, 1320, when Governor Ma- wJonty er experiment is devised. in 19.. He has, bey 1.0, and him to fill the nnex-bee- n tho. general practice, niredappointed in. engaged term Howell: resigned, of j IlKwitfi Judge a Ihatrthi to" ppm "chief of law for nine years in Ogden, and Judge Barker is a owner and Mtisfactory to the people of the property traffic regulation in Salt Lake is the mber of the State, as well as taxpayer? and vitally and He District. itselfSecond has Judidal None regulation of our offi- the American lar Association. Every- - interested in the affairs of materially the Com-I- 3 cials seem to know what they-- want, I made and will make a splendid Diss abundantly munity. In f908 he married Florence reconifd is it else. Our unites something tr!c Tabmt0Tm the dutie they now have a splendid ulation of traffic is a running record! of eight children. , lt0rne3r iIISi unlet-family it is to tho beginning of the I a Mary Jacobs, of next experiment. When we are through t , Ogden, and they now have four chil- -' with experiments, we may begin to dren. , . . get down to regulation, but not bo-- 1 4 POLITICAL ADVXRTISEMENT. purpose. - Two young bloods were sitting .. J show. They wer Impressed by the beauty of a a,"? hatred rhortu girt . Isn't ,he olngr aald one. She la, other. 'And they tell me she coni! from Italy." "Genoa asked the fl one. Not yet,' replied the other -w I hope to, ahortly." Vancouver tnce. , The middle comparatively dal body. IS Seldes lu tbe Sat Gilbert thing, write the day Of all the deer" stories related arday Evening Fust FromLmd XIV of hunters i,y the vastthearmy those pf eome with Just of Oorlolaous to irg from to chase to bsve any targe group wanted their for If you compensate chase the Jo the trouble the experience of C.L. FouF of people, yoifdlreeted yourself unwashed ' sen, who got his buck in Rfk valley, sweaty rabble, the great a seems to be the most thrilling. The bourgeola of those time wa. a dweller town a name Foul sen hit his buck, a Indicate, the him with in the hind leg, then dropped citizen, and what' Is more, tr"was a shot to the body. As he approach- usually a free citizen. ed the animal it jumped and ran again, and he once more brought It down with a shot. I Crocodile Tear . Jfe approached thd buck, which was Madfignscgrii surplus rmcodltee ere from below, and chen on a side-hil-l, animal the to be skinned for1 bookbinding and but a few yards away Foul-seto be used n shoe leather. Their faf got to its feet and charged him. maand small rheumatism a behind of treatment threw himself in the 1 ' antler as the buck, tree Just diseases. other hogany down and hoofs pointed, plunged of the bottom only to fall dead st' the ' ' hill. Deer seemed unusually plentiful, several hunter going out late Saturday ' afternoon and Sunday bagging their prize in Just a few hour after leaving their home. four-pointe- ' Hopeful - Dweller. Bourgeois a Toutn dominant K Deer 'Hunter Gets Thrills With Buck i E Republicans . (?) 'Who Are For William HT m ; r' Representing every county In Utah, who made the nomination of Erpeet Bamberger unanimous. ; : - Ring Charles R. Mabey Oscar Carlson Joseph J. Cannon : CoL Ed. Loose 1 1 r " " so-call- ed 1 - Repu blican Judicial jfeandidates Second Judidal District - " ad-da- st - - del-enta- Colonel Ed.TLoo8e of Provo, former Governor Charles R. Mabey, Oscar Carlson,' Joseph J. Cannon, all of Salt Lake, and a few other sore-headisgruntled ' Republicans are - working for the election of WiUiam H. King, the Democratic candidate for 'United States senator by fighting Ernest Bamberger, the Republican candidate for that high office. The. principles and issues for. which the Republicans and Democrats stand have not changed unless it be the ' stand taken by Governor Smith on the liquor question since these men were working , to elect, or be elected on, the Republican ticket. They have allowcd pcrsonal prejudice and intolerance to supersede their belief in the, principles which they once taught and are using any means in their power to gain their ends. We are of the opinion that the ,' people of Utah who have had to fight against intolerance themselves will be too big to aUow these men to influence - d, -- . them in any way. ' Against this opposition are arraigned Senator Reed Smoot, one of the RepubUcan leaders of the senate Herbert Hoover, the Republican "candidate : for president; ' Frank O. Lowden; former governor of Illinois,1 twice an outstanding candidate for the Republican nomination for president, having had the strong support of farmers In every section .of the nation for that high office; J. Reuben Clark, Jr., secretary of state and a candidate for the office of lUnited States senator before the convention which nomi- nated Ernest Bamberger. ; Here is what Senator iieed Smoot says: 1 do hope Utah sends Ernest Bamberger to - the U. S. senate to assist me in maintaining Repub' ' lican principles. Here is what Herbert Hoover says: It is most necessary that the Republican administration be supported by an active majority in the United States senate. Election of Mr. Ernest Bamberger to the senate will be of great aid to the . Republican party and a credit to the state of Utah. Here is what Frank O. Lowden says: I know Ernest Bamberger well. 1 believe, f too, that he is in favpr of legislation which will put agriculture on a plane of equality with other industries. He would make a fine senator, and I sincerely hope that the good people of Utah will elect him to that high office. 1 1 as-sist- ant . . . 1 . -- . 1 Hereis what J. Reuben ClarkJr says: I take this opportunity to express again the Ope that the Republican voters Of Utah" ge, - necessity of electing a lull Republican ticket, national and state. Repub-Bcair control of the senate may depend upon er .r Mr. Bamberger is sent from Utah. Jr. Lius consideration cannot be too urged uPn the attention of all Republicanstrongly voters. Per- - somtily I am voting a straight ticket, and I urge; other Republicans to vote likewise ; " o, nt . ed prac-standm- er . . d , s . . is:222nimimnDMniiniinnninn V 71 lilltiHUmiiilliili . nu:!:;iiiii . .. Fred5ich Pav3 county Republican chairman, says: e attack on Ernest Bamberger, Republican every-indicati- on ' , x re-reta- ry non-nalan- -- " fam-degr- ee - i 5 United States nd?te by Charles R. Mabey, Joseph J. Cannon, senator, Oscar Carlson and MJionel La. Loose is unfair, unwarranted and un-- ar as .the .Davis county delegates to the Hue Republican state convention are concerned. Personally endorse, not only the candidacy Urnberger, but each and every candidate on the Repubhean ticket, and urge their election. ?fpu,blican vote in Davis county this . thC argeSt ever cast in ths hizicry of plrty -- ' the rr7JfPTlnuS these men should at least convince the worthiness of Emcat Eambcrger; doubf hLlnn SJ??tion the people of Utah are, without ahead be of personal .prejudiceputfalse Princpfc3 cf their party at that! prejudice political ADveevre- JEN T. f th - |