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Show Friday, February THE OGDEN POST ' Reverence for God and worship of spective of demand or marketing Gud therefore becomes the natural act ditions. Conservation must come from with- of every normal human being, and the W. P. EPPERSON, Editor in the industry. Working on this discovery of His laws and Ilia plans Member Utah State Preae Aaaociation principle, the major producers have, for life and destiny is the duty of in a number of important fields, every tLoughtful man and woman. a Published each Friday by The Ogden adopted the In an era of confused thinking, of system of dePost Printing and Publishing com- velopment. Utilization, by which ab- groping, of pessimism, that religion solute control of all factors in the which is able to give inspiration and pany, 417 Eccles building. of. a field is vested in a guidance to men and women, and fordevelopment matter Oc- committee, has Entered as second-clas- s likewise proven suc- mulate that character, which, as tober 17, 1927, at the post office at cessful The trend of production is Washington said, is essential to good Ogden, Utah, under the Act of March toward a constantly higher percent- citizenship, is the greatest force for 3. 1879. good the world knows. This republic age of recovery. Real oil conservation, which will ad- is going to be saved or destroyed just Year. Price; $2.00 per Subscription just demand and supply and keep price one man at a time, and those who are levels constant, is as necessary to the able to inculcate in individual Ameri365 commonweal as to the orderly de- cans these cardinal beliefs and prinOil is ciples essential in a good father or velopment of the industry. EDITORIAL twentieth-centur- y gold; it is one of mother, a good neighbor and a good The Ogden Post con- pro-rat- Telephone the cornerstones of our mechanical American are potentially our greatest Crime, age. Every citizen should support the agents of civic safety and progress. effort of responsible producers to outthe law waste and develop our resources in an efficient and economical man Hardly a day passes when one does ner. on 'not read an editorial or article The record made by American rail crime conditions in the United State. Good A Business in improving service is a fine roads Many and varied are the reasons givtestimonial to the efficient and proen by those who interest themselves In gressive spirit of their managements. That an adequate tariff has not ex Since 1922, when intensive improvethe problem. Peace officers set forth to find it eluded criminals easy that tourist foreign producers from the ment programs went into effect, prog resa has been made in every phase of escape identification by moving from American market is demonstrated by from lowering accident one city to another. It is claimed by the record of imports in recent years. operation, record to increasing freight train criminals police officers that major Hundreds of millions of dollars speeds, outlawing car shortages and could be much more easily apprehendof passenger transportation. ed if there was a national bureau for worthhave goods, produced across the expediting the most noteworthy thing come into this country and Perhaps sea, statistics. criminal It of collection the about this record is that it was made sold. as been This is be. it should is for this reason that a bill, sponsorOur tariff principle is not to ex during a period of inadequate earn of Association International ed by the It takes a vast amount of public dude Police Chiefs hnd the Rockefeller fair foreign goods; it is to assure ings. and faith to the spirit for progress under such by competition offsetting one of considered as foundation, is conditions. of with labor cign advantage cheap great merit. This bill is before the an equalizing duty. During 1929, railroad earnings were congress of the United States, and than in other years, and came larger should it become a law much is exnearer to the point of fair return. New Gas Boiler However pected as to its working. Yet the net return was less than five this may be, one great problem seems A report comes from England of per cent, a figure that in other in ofto bo overlooked. Law enforcing a new type of boiler with a gas flame dustries would be considered far from ficials all over the country are to be which burns under water, thus apply adequate. commended for their efforts in appre- ing its heat directly to the prodi However, the main thing is that the hending criminals, but even after the tion of steam. railroads seem at last on the road to The burner mixes the gas with the some sort of criminal is arrested and identified prosperity. Every thinkthere is yet the matter of conviction E roper amount of air to insure ing American will believe that they in the courts. The matter of court under water, with the result deserve it. Adequate, constantly improcedure and rules of evidence which that the hot gases, or products of proving railroad service has been a have been built up by our Judiciary combustion, are split into minute major and an essential factor in the are such that a great number of crim- bles, creating an Immense area of con great progress made in recent years inals who are known to be guilty es- tact between the gases and the fluid by all manner of businesses. ' cape conviction. This is true of jus- to be heated, and insuring a complete tice courts, of peace courts, police extraction of the heat from the flame A courts and district courts. Extraordinary economy and effiThe American Rifleman says that Down in Davis county within the ciency are claimed for a smaller boiler , some will that a of years ago the state law of Illigiven produce quantity past few days a justice of the peace, steam, over a boiler heated nois made the minimum sentence for an with to a technical after listening argua criminal convicted of a robbery or ment by a defense attorney, released outside flame. holdup while armed, ten years. In convicta persistant and many times 1927, the legislature reduced the minied bootlegger, when the evidence Power mum to one year. showed that the sheriff took the According to Ayers newspaper diThe result is that conliquor from the car and the pocketa rectory, there are some 13,000 smaller victed under the many gunmen law have changed of an offender. Other glaring abuses city dailies and country weekly news- served their sentences and are now of the law and the miscarriage of jus- papers in the United States, outnum- at while other gunmen, who liberty, tice is being noted from time to time bering all other newspapers published. went in the penitentiary before them in the embczslemcnt of public fund These are read by the ten-yewith a great majority minimum, are still cases in Salt Lake City. of Ameri- incarcerated. It is indeed discouraging to our can families. These newspapers are At first glance one wonders what peace officers when they make arrests nearly all owned individually by the possible excuse there is for allowing of criminals of whose guilt there can country editors and publishers and are such criminals to expiate their crimes be no question to see them turned loose read by the great middle class of peo with but a single years imprisonment. claimed that certainty, more than by the courts. It does seem that the ple comprising our workers and think It era from which our most successful severity of punishment, is the best judiciary would require a great deal of fixing in the interest of justice be- national leaders are picked. crime deterrent. Like the painters and artists, the fore one could bo assured that crimBut in Illinois certainty of punish? poets and musicians, the country edi- ment has been a joke, inals will be punished. for only a small tors of our country are mostly Indi- percentage of criminals arare vidualists. They do not live in the rested and convicted. It is ever possible Loses And skyscrapers of the big cities, but con- that the crime situation in Illinois restitute the great body political of our sults from too much His leniency with country and voice the consciousness criminals. A certain gentleman bet his friends of the nation that means American The legislature of Illinois has for he could drop a lighted cigarette into conservatism, family life and business some years been striving to pass a the gasoline tank of his car and that rtability. They are stronger than rigorous law that would the cigarette would simply be put out. wall Street, more powerful than conHis friends took him up and the test gress or the senate, and their voice is make it practically impossible for any citizen to own a gun for protecwas made. heard in the international naval con- good tion or sport, on the theory that this When he dropped the cigarette there ference and the court of the world. would curb crime. was no hesitation or delay he lost The fallacy of such a policy is evihis bet and his car, too. All he gain denced by the fact that Chicago crim ed were some painful burns, a lot of Religion inals have graduated out of the small excitement and an entirely new knowlarms stage and use bombs, machine Republic edge of the properties of .gasoline guns, armored cars, etc. . Wo will George in his farewell Washington, Perhaps the gentleman had read somewhere that liquid, gasoline will address, said that "religion and moral- probably read next of them using not ignite an exceedingly dangerous ity were "indispensable supports of airplanes and bombs to carry on their The unorthodox Walt profession. You cant have gasoline the republic. It is not more restrictions of the in an open vessel without also having whitman wrote: "I say that the real that we need, but greater the deadly dangerous gasoline vapor. and permanent grandeur of these certainty of arrest, conviction and And the glowing butt must first pass states must be their religion. Our civilization was established, our suitable punishment for through the vapor, which is ignited was founded, by men of government the smallest of snarksl by This incident should be a warning a religious cast of mind. If they were to all that gasoline ignites easily. not all personally religious, their mode According to a recently completed Great property damage results every of thought had been fashioned in a amount of taxes colsurvey, A religious church was lected the totalstate atmosphere. year from accidents with petroleum and federal govlocal, by almost the first structure erected by and its products and from their misernments in the United States during the both colonists, at use.' Reports to The National Board Plymouth and 1928 230 million dollars above of Fire Underwriters for the year Jamestown. It was an austere re- 1927. was The entire increase was due to 1923 indicated a total fire loss 'from ligion at Plymouth, a religion at Jamestown, but religion was rising state and local taxes, as federal this cause of over $15, 250,000. tax were lower than for You wouldn't play with dynamite. the most important ethical influence eithercollections 1927 1926. or Give gasoline the same degree of re- in both these cradles of American civUnless sanity and good business ilization, and in the Maryland of ford spect! are applied to the expendprinciples Baltimore and Charles Carroll of Caritures of local governments we will rollton. soon be among the most The Road No form of ethics other than taught people of the world. from the and at the fireside by pulpit Movement religious fathers and The benefits that would accrue to any serious hold on themothers has had A American peo-piof the nation from the construction of And in the decay of religious an adequate system of wo may find much of the exroads in every state are all but inof the loosening moral tics An experimental interconnection of planation calculable. and consequent growth of vice and electric transmission lines running of all farm- crime in this country. At present from New Orleans to Kansas City, a ers are barred from their marketReligion has been pretty much drop distance of nearly 700 miles, was sucplaces during from two to six months pod out of the scheme of things Amor cessfully operated for eight hours by of the year by unimproved roads irtin. The that used to a group of public utility companies family prayer which become in winter a succession be first on the day s program in many serving Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, of impassable mud holes. Improved American homes would be regarded Arkansas, Kansas and Missouri. More , roads would not only benefit the farmas a curiosity today. The discipline than towns and cities were linker, but many small towns" would re- maintained in the churches of half a ed 1,000 in tho experiment, and together ceive a larger amount of farm busi century ago would today be fnconcciv-abl- e. the entire system was o'perated as a ness. People do not talk much about single unit. A good secondary road system or think There was no interruption during about religion. would offer great attractions to the Yet what subject could be more im- the test period, and all the plants in pleasure seeker, by opening up new portant to thoughtful men than descountry and relieving congestion on tiny? There can be no intelligent main trunk highways, thereby reducwhich leaves out of conphilosophy ing accident hazards. sideration the thought of a Creator. It has been estimated that the av- Scientists may be able to prove erage farm family must pay $7.63 to that men evolvedyet from lower animals, a doctor for each home call, and that or even from the inert matter. But 13 per cent of farmers must pay $15. what mind can grasp the idea of anyPopular Music Poor roads are directly responsible without some thing starting superior for this comparatively high cost of force to start it? Standard Songs necessary medical attention. And what man, knowing the human The farmer, as one of our greatest can believe that men spirit, 15 only taxpayers, and a representative of our an assemblage of chemicals, are thrown Kadio most basic industry, is entitled to Scarfs together and allowed to dissolve with usable roads. out meaning or purpose? Who can fail to recognize the spark of Divinity Records in man himself? Who can believe that 5 for the flame of life is a more product of Odds combustion which physical can be Player Rolls The responsible oil producers of the snuffed out like a brief candle? Who 5 for United States are working against can contemplate the command man great odds in their effort to conserve has attained over physical objects, and Glen Bros. Music petroleum resources by using them the victories of the human spirit over without waste. self, and space and matter, and still Company Irresponsible have gone on pro- believe that men have only the desducing as much oil as possible, irre tiny of weeds and stones? and Criminals, Courts Spirit and Faith Required Tariff com-usti- on Faulty System ( of the Country ar homo-ownin- g, tax-payi- ng 1 Bet Car anti-revolv- er and the 1 half-trut- h. law-abidi- ng law-breake- rs. Rising Taxes . light-heart- ed - Farm tax-burden- ed e. ce farm-to-mnrk- two-thir- et Demonstration Interconnection the huge chain were in constant munication with each other. com- means that power Such a hook-u- p in the smallest hamdistributed i.n be let or the largest city and that inlimited as to locadustry reed not teboundaries adjacent tion by territorial to city power plant. A demonstration of this .kind shows future possibilities for decentralization of both industrial and population congestion. Speeding Up the World Probably the principal contribution Government Needs ' Mechanics in District The United States civil service commission announces the following open examinations: General competitive mechanic, U. S. Indian service; third class steam engineman, U. S. Indian service, and surgeons assistant, U. S. veteans bureau. These examinations are to fill vacancies in the 13th U. S. civil service district, comprising Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. Further information and applicat- 28. 19.tn S Patrolmen, each $60.00. Section 2. In order to preserve th, peace, safety and general welfare of said City, it is ordainpd that this dinance shall become effective in mediately upon passage, such sahri, to be payable from February s 1930, at the ratei above fixed. PASSED AND ADOPTED by a. Board of Commissioners of OgiU City, Utah, this 28th day of Febrn A. D 1930, and approved by the Mayor of said City on such date and ordered published in The Ogden Port a newspaper of general circulation h such city. of the telephone to the industrial age ion blanks may be obtained from A. has been its speeding up of business R. Ward, secretary of the United ATTEST: and social contacts. States civil service board at the post J. LITTLEFIELD, In this day, with wires carrying our office in this city. Recorder ifro-eeto the seconds in few a mesHagoi ORA BUNDY Mayor. a ry store around the comer, or to a SEAL is almost The great European capital, itworld witha to imagine impossible Decalog out its telephones. The time when made be could only contacts human as Translated from the Mexican magby letter or word of mouth eeems Greece. of as the golden age far away azine, The Child. I will not be responsible for any The vast and complex ramifications to the structure the The child contracted by the Union Coil social has I. debts and Industrial right our of could not exist today without tele- love of his masters and the care and Co. FRANK MOORE phone communication. attention of his home and of his February 7, . First publication school in order to realize normally his Last publication February 28, 1930. The whole unfolding. Log-RolliII. The child has the right of hap Alias Summons How many of our elected officials piness, all that may cause pain or use their influence to promote legis- gloom should be restrained, and IN THK DISTRICT COURT OF WEBEK COUNTY. STATE OF UTAH lation that seems best for the nation his in play, assist should small everything as a whole, rather than for a JAMES 8. LOWE, plaintiff: tv THX and song, etc., for the amusement locality? REALTY AND RENTAL COMPANY, a The answer is: Few. One could unfolding of his abilities. poration. D. IL ADAMS, GEORGE THOXA1 a child has O. J. STILWELL. W. S. MCKANNEN, WILon right ones The them count III. fingers. hungry probably LIAM H. MEAL. GORDON GRANT In an article in the American Mer- to be fed; the naked to be clothed, NICHOLAS GRANT, u Dirceton and Xn to shoes have to of barefooted The Legislaon the and Twilight cury tees of THE REALTY AND RENTAL of the a corporation: WALTER H. WAX tures, Hoffman Nickerson illustrates defend his feet against the peril C HAULS BLACKWELL, JAMES MAN. how politicians go about their busi- ground. W1L ANNE BLACKWELL, BLACKWELL, One of the worst legislative ness. SAMUEL B IV. The abnormal child, tho or- LIAM BLACKWELL, to vices has always been that known as MARY BLACKWELL, the unksovi phan, the abandoned have a right law of HANNAH BLACKWELL at heirs with sheltered says Mr. Nickerson. be protected and and all other persona unknown, claiming ur In simple times an individual build- especial as much as interest, procuring right, title, estate, lien or internet la thr ing a house has said to another, If possible the amelioration of his hard- rral property described in the complaint al you will help me roll my logs, I will ships. Teiee to plaintiffs ownership or any (ltd title thereto, Defendants. In legislative help you roll yours. V. The sick child has a right to upon plaintiff means that this Legislator skillful assistance, the rachitic and practice The SUtt of Utah to said Defendant A would agree to vote for an appropconstitution strengthened, You ere hereby summoned to nppeer with, riation to benefit the constituency of enfeebled his twenty days after service of this eummm and mouth his and especially Legislator B if in return B would vote upon you, if served within the County h under observation. which thie action in brought: otherwiee with for money to be spent in the district sight always be to VI. The child has the right thirty days otter eervico; end defend the ibn represented by A, and so on down receive the stim- entitled action ; and in ease of your feilut to a vocation, taught line. the eo to do, judgment will be rendered agiiM Mr. Nickerson was once a member ulus and support of his natural apti- you according to tho demand of tho complain, or a pr trade, art which has been filed with the Clerk of el of the assembly of New York state, tude in learning Court. and so knows what he is talking about. fession. be to child has The the VIL This action is brought for the purpose d right a to Modern legislation, great extent, a decree of tho court quirting tkh Is merely a matter of trades. As a protected aaginst exploitation, princi- scouring to the following dsKribcd tnck in plaintiff will whatever of riel ertate: result, the nation as a whole suffers pally of hard labor, orhis his or rest his schooling, from a vast amount of unnecessary impede Lots 1 to I. inclusive, Block I, Bdlmi Piece Addition to Ogden City. conflicting, unenforceable or other- play. Abo e part of tho Northwet quarter d VIII. The child has the right to wise inadvisable legislation. The pubSL Township 9 North, Bongo 1 Wet Section in to firstreceive every be the in help bill lic must pay the taxes, for logof the Salt Lake Meridian: beginning at occasion of public calamity. rolling politics .comes high. point SIS feet West from tho Northwest e IX. The delinquent child has the ner of River Pork Addition to Ogden CMr West lft feet, along tho Net right to be judged before a special runningof thenee L. H. Male Approves Sosa aaid quarter .action ; court of justice, constituted of teach- lino 522.7 feet; thence Eaat 125 feet; thenee Mart ers or lawyers, expert in infantile 522.7 feet to tho place of beginning, contaa lesa. L. II. Male, of the state board o:! psychology, and when confined, to oe ing lie scree, more or seW. R. SKEEN. will which in a reformatory health, approved of five sites for placed Plaintiffs Attorn. his cure future. concertain under P. O. address, 2875 Kieml avenue, Ogdrt, dumping grounds, have to has child X. The a Utah. right ditions, as announced by City ComPublication dates, February 21, 28; Maid missioner W. J. Rackham. The five his spiritual liberty respected. No im7, 14, 2L be should doctrine sect or places inspected were: West Ogden, dogma, Wall avenue at the Ogden river, posed upon him. His father and his Twenty-thir- d Summons street at the Weber master should be guides in the unriver, north brow of the city cemetery, folding of his conscience, elaborate and Monroe avenue at the Ogden his ideas, investigate and confirm his No. 11911 river. Mr. Male officially approved knowledge of the unbounded world COURT OF W1 the use of the dumping grounds, pro- of truth. Hie personality of the IN THE DISTRICT COUNTY, IN AND FOR THE STATE Of reshould the child was vided the garbage merit 4 greatest immediately UTAH covered, that no wet garbage was spect of father and educator. Utah Mortgage Co., n corporation, plaintiff dumped, and no fires allowed.1 Mr. DAVIS COUNTY HEALTH UNIT. vs. Rackham says that he expects to have S. Carman, and his unknown wife J. to the rule requiring residents sepwidow, designated herein by the name arate wet from dry garbage enforced, Jana Dot Carman, and if ha ha deed, hb known heirs, devisees, executors or admilfc and will instruct garbage wagon each of whan, meb b herein dsdr drivers not to pick up garbage which AN ORDINANCE AMENDING tratore, nated by the name of JOHN DOE, and ar has not been segregated. 648 OF SESSION 1 of whom, female, b deahrnated by the PASSED of MARY ROWE; WEBER COUNTY, AN ORDINANCE OF KNOW YOUR BIRTIISTONE? AND ADOPTED ON THE 28TH Municipal - Corporation ; OGDEN CITY, Municipal Corporation; and AL80 oil d DAY OF JANUARY, A. D., 1930, 'persona unknown, claiming any right, tkh For laundresses, the soapstone. TO SALARIES. lien or interest In the teal property 4 RELATING estate, For architects, the cornerstone. BE IT ORDAINED by the Board of cribed in the complaint advene to th pisb For cooks, the puddingstone. ownership! or. any cloud upon Plaintiff! Commissioners of Ogden City, Utah: tiffs title thereto. Defendants. For taxi drivers, the milestone. 648 of Section 1. That THE STATE ' OF UTAH TO SAID For soldiers, the bloodstone. ordinance of an City, PENDANTS: Utah, Ogden For grouches, the bluestone. You era hereby summoned to appear witth passed and adopted on the 28th day For Irishmen, the blarneystone. to A. twenty days after service of thb sons of 1930, D., January,relating For borrowers, the touchstone. if served within the County upon you, is be same and the salaries, hereby For pedestrians, the pavingstone. which thb action b brought; otherwise yide amended to read as follows: For stockbrokers, the curbstone. thirty days after service, end defend th aba Section 48: The officers and mem- entitled action; and in cate of your fatten For shoemakers, the cobblestone. will be rendered againit 1 bers of the Police Department of Og- to do judgment For burglars, the keystone. to the demand of the comphN according salden receive City shall monthly For tourists, the Yellowstone. which hae been filed with the Clerk of w aries, payable at such times as the Court. For beauties, the peachstone. Thb action b brought to recover a J4r Commission may determine, as folFor wanderers, the rollingstone. ment quieting Plaintiffa title to the bn lows: For editors, the grindstone. diwcribed in said complaint, which b 4 , Chief of Police, $210.00; Captain of cribed ae Lota IB and For plasterers, the limestone. 20. Block I Wood For salesmen, the gallstone Detectives, $200.00; Police Sergeants, ice Addition to Ogden City, Utah, (beef1 Lot 1. Block 4, Santa 04 each $175,000; Traffic Sergeants, each part of original For lovers, the moonstone. Survey, of Ogden City Survey), aituatad Paeach For steeplejacks, the clingstone. $160.00; Detectives, $150.00; the North Half of the Southwest Quarts For packers, the rhinestone. trolmen, each $145.00; Superintend- Section S3, Township North, Benge 1 YA ' ent of Bureau of Identification, $165.-0- Salt Lake Meridian, U. 8. Survey. For printers, the imposing stone. W. H. REEDER. fiU SerFor doctors, the tombstone. Desk Secretary, $155.00; ' Plaintiffs Atton For prizefighters, the sandstone. P. Address : 224 David geants, each $155.00; Chauffeurs, belq ,BuU For dull wits, the oilstone. each $145.00; Traffic Officers, each Ogden. Utah. Publication Dates: February 7, 14; 8L For reformers, the peepstone. $145.00; Assistant jailer, , $140.00; March 7, 1930. For politicians, any old stone. Police Woman, $115.00; Merchants' Mexican Childs of Rights Notice 19-30- Practice of ng COS-PAN- LAO-WEL- log-rollin- g, eon Donna ad M decora! eoaap: ire Ca: ryn Qt mary icyle, on, M Alias An Ordinance SUB-SECTIO- N sub-secti- on - 0; . a . Market & Gfoceteria 183-- 5 Street Twenty-fourt- h A Cash and Carry Market at Cash and Carry Prices for Cash and Carry Peopla. When your car comes off our washrack and is polished it looks like a new car. Drive Your Car in Today For a Job Like This! la Money To Loan on - WATCHES, DIAMONDS REVOLVERS, GUNS, RIFLES, KODAKS, 85 $1.00 $1.00 in Dumping Grounds all-ye- ar Working Against Mrs. twelve row at th.-n- ds 5d Mrs. her bi niny Sizteei - -- SATURDAY Fri - ETC. Phone 604 for Particulars 2441 Kiesel Avenue Entrance on Kiesel . . . Exit on Grant Uncle Sams Loan Office 278 25th St. Ogden, Ut Where |