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Show link. feiiaiiiiiMmiwwMiiiittiftiiittMgiaaiiBatfMaiKafcaiafcMtafai t -- Friday, July THE OGDEN POST to write for magazines. Since a make the "office of time Mr. Waldo has. en. Mr paying one. Evidently he will not be that Coolidge many times, visiting him in in need of a pension, as a has been Northampton and on the occasions W. P. EPPERSON, Editor president, nor will he require an old when he came to New York City. age pension to get by. Member Utah State Press Association. Our friendship," Mr. Waldo said Beginning July 1 Calvin Coolidge, to Editor ft Publisher this week, was former president of the United States, based on Published each Friday by The Ogden Tost Printing and Publishing my finding in the former will address himself exclusively to 417 Ecclcs building. fastest acting mind I the president newspaper readers through a daily ever had contact with. He goes to the Entered as second-clas- s matter October 17, 1927, at the postoffice at of anything under discussion imthe McCure Newspaper Syndicate. core by mediately, and makes it perfectly Ogden, Utah, under the Act of Uarch 3, 1879. The former president is not a novice clear why he agrees or disagrees. at writing, since many of his articles was continually "The suggestion ..$2.00 per Year have appeared serially in magazines, Subscription I rice him that he should write to made but this is the first time that he has dispatches for the press. The for the daily press. His con- daily was written 365 reiterated that the country Telephone tract with the syndicate was signed point is approaching a period of economic June 20. EDITORIAL and social disquietude, and that he, would The former president will write on as the only living he chooses, but will ob- be listened to as no other man would subject any was $.52993. The price serve a deadline as assiduously as average price any Ogden Should in time of stress. He has finally today is $.33025. If the production is editorial writer. He has engaged the be to agree that he has something come More Roads thf.,c?" .services of Herman Beatty, formeriy to say to people troubled over loss of be must It $3,347,000. bureau of the '0f the The Ogden chamber of commerce 1 money or employment, or the threat men employed in the mines of BOcUtedWashington and for several years of either. press should make a special effort at this the state, a. well as those of partici- - nSght exKUtivi edito- - in the A. P. time to secure additional roads leadI industries. pntwg New York offices, who will be sta ing into the city. But two trunk line so far as the decline of silver in at x,jrihampt.n Mass, and The tionej time into lead this the city at roads is concerned we know precisely where who will be in daily contact with him. from the south and east, and but one we are. The way out is not so clear. Mr. Coo 'dire'. Articles, which will Remedy from the north. There will soon be We know the depression in the with national and i; ternatrnil available large amounts of federal market is that Optimism among the smaller newscaused by ihe lack of (affairs and with social and moral papers funds for road building and improve- mand, but we is a good business remedy for are not so certain about problems, wUl be sent by wire daily to in our country. ment, and plans should be perfected to ways and means for stimulating ds- jthe McClure offices, where they will depression is not confined to get in on these funds. Unemployment be dispatched to all newspapers sub- - this nation or to any one nation, but . ... A road which should receive atten- n,"L . . at hand ,scribing to the service. Most of the tion is the road from the vicinity of is to silver renewed as a 'artlcieB will probably be written at s more or less world-widgive dignity Peterson, in Weber canyon, to Hunts- medium of exchange. A late statement from the New Demanding ,The Beeches, the new Coolidge ville, where it intercepts the Ogden chamber of commerce deOrleans in is calculated silver do to home, but the former president will clares that industrial and business canyon road. This road, while pos- change ? civic loyalty, mi jwrjte them from wherever he may sible to get over, is not in condition i1 conditions have reached almost comitself, will not wtom silver to its happen to be. . to be classed as a major county high- former plete normality. level, but it will serve to proNo announcement as to the compenway. , This road is located in both mote consciousness of the importance The number of jobs is said to be insation Mr. Coolidge will receive was creasing in most of the regions called Morgan and Weber counties, and the of the white metal to western security. forthcoming. commissioners of these counties should civilized and wages are still above the Salt Lake Tribune, be encouraged to improve this road Richard H. Waldo, president of the average. to the point where it could be made McCure syndicate, has been trying to The American press can do much to a part of the state highway system. convince the former president that he maintain progress and prosperity. should write for newspapers ever Pemmimism in a time of depression If the road were properly improved, 'since he left the White House. As a is an admission of defeat. America it might be included in the state high Politics ... r. matter of fact, the question was first has the resources, both tangible and way system and maintained as a part R?8eXeltJ.govfrnor of broached in an interview in the White intangible, with which to meet and of that system by an art of the legis- New York, who is attending the con- House March 2, 1929, 15 minutes be-lature. solve all problems. Another road which has received ference of governors in Salt Lake this fore Mr. Coolidge' left the executive considerable attention from the cham- week, is authority for the statement offices for the last time. A ber of commerce is the proposed road that from twelve to fifteen workers That was Mr. Waldos first contact At from Ogden valley to Randolph in out of every hundred are out of work. with Coolidge. A week later the forRich county. Soon federal funds will It is presumed that the figures quoted mer president told Mr. Waldo that debe available to build roads over and by the governor are correct, but it newspapers were out of the question After long months of would be interesting to know how for the time bill has and had the tariff he the domain that finally liberation, and forest being, through public many workers were out of jobs under reserves, and Ogden should insist that normal conditions.. Certainly there consideration is received concerning are men out of work under most this road. With these roads and the comple- favorable conditions. . For several years the immigration tion of the improvements on the Mountain road in Davis county, the Death laws have prevented hordes of laborers entering the country and it seems Curve extension into Twenty-fourt-h with restricted immigration strange would have street, Ogden a road system to that enjoyed by Salt Lake and there should be such a large percentProvo. Each of these cities have cross age of unemployed. Governor Roosevelt suggests severroads radiating to the north, south, al remedies to bridge over this lack east and west. Time is opportune for securing of employment, and while some posthese roads federal money will soon sess merit, none will give but tembe available, and the legislature will porary relief, and will at the same convene within a few months. Why time add to the cost of production and not play constructive community pol- increased taxation. Fact is the industrial machinery of itics this fall, instead of destructive personal politics which has cursed Og- - the country has been expanded to the den and .Weber county for so many point where initiative and individual mmost disappeared. It has years ? Just remember that all public . cffort business is politics, and politics of a Kot place where millions must much higher order than the personal have a job or starve. The average man must depend on some great corporag brand. tion for a means of livelihood. The village harness maker, the tinner, the shoemaker, the blacksmith, the jobObject Lesson bing carpenter, and the independent worker belongs in ancient history. Visiting: Governors The governors of the states who are The man who produces a part of his while he works eight hours at meeting in conference in Salt Lake living or profession by raising a trade this week will have an example of hjs how the federal government is handi- pig or two, keeping a cow, a Hock of chickens, growing his own fruit and capping the mountain states. will be shown, or rather they vegetables, is to be found only in the They will see for themselves, how lean the small country towns, and not many mountain states are in taxable lands. there. Rukm D. Wardle They will come to understand that the theThere will be no movement back to country under present conditions. mountain states have within their With food products below the cost of boundaries from a half to of their area which is the production for he who produces them, landlord there is no incentive for the higher property of a who is exempted from taxation. When priced wage man to get out into the they see these lands and are told that country. Everyone knows that conditions are everything of value on, in and under these lands are denied to the people, bad, but how to remedy them perma- they will understand something of the ncntly is a real problem. Legislation problems which confronts the west is a most questionable remedy, i When they are told that the govern- remedy which may establish prece ment withholds the timber, the iron, dents worse in lasting effect than the the copper, the coal, the water power, conditions sought to be improved. Like all public matters the labor the oil, the gas, the hydro-carboand everything of prospective value situation has been made a political from the settler on any of these lands issue to be handled in a manner which insure the most votes. It offers they will understand how fortunate will are the people of their states who own a ripe field for both the honest think and the demagogue in politics and everything on, in and under the lands er of their states, and all these natural will be worked to full measure. From i now until after the next presidential resources are subject to taxation. Yes, it is well that the eastern gov election there will be no surplus of ernors have come among us. It is labor reported in the political indusfortunate they may see and know our trial field. decided THE OGDEN POST Have as-12,2- Press Is the e. the nsta and house the president It is generally agreed that. 1ei,bi!Lls1 wst from a masterpiece, in view of the that could be hoped for been passed by and signed by 900,000 oil ranges, 158,000 ranges, and 900,000 coal r i 1 wood ranges. In addition, gas has come wtito favor in the few years I lt house-heatin- g political present tangled demands modern American homeSr-ofor .further Meritorious f labor and protection to agriculture their cleanliness, efficiency which have developed since the tariff this bill economy. of 1922 would not end if President said fails of enactment, would sign Hoover, in signifying he NOT THE DISPLAY tariff for legislative it. Agitation continue revision would necessarily would before the country. Nothing recovery business contribute to retard more than this continued agitation. inThe bill will act as a stabilizing with fluence. It at least does away new the not or uncertainty. Whether indusAmerican will protect tariff to tries without adding appreciablyseen. be to remains of living the cost Tod: t bout I fittk l$A j.vn Itiltri ke Mb.. Uoith The Universal OtfWf IB Lib Fuel Leest the universal fuel At the beginning of 1930 nearly 50 per cent of nil families in theUnited States used gas for cooking. The Gas has become Un Rise N sta-tirt- k. disclose that while 7,700,000 families use coal or wood, 875,000 electricity and 6,500,000 oil, a total of 13,700,000 employ gas. During 1929 the American public purchased 1,130,000 new gas ranges, - ten-ye- 4 iter The men must notice very poor sense dresses. mj she kid1 In the But It isnt her display of sense the men notice, mj dear be the Ljdfi bo. I Arte band. SPEND THE FOURTH AT ar Lonn Farr Park Labor Situation and y Free Band Concert and an Program of Fun and Music! All-Da- Last There Is a Kg Time in Store for All! Tariff! so-call- ed i ANNOUNCEMENT! ; I . '! Coolidge Will Talk Every Day ent Utah stands to lose $3,000,000 by When Calvin- Coolidge was presicontinued depression of the silver market on the basis of last years pro- dent of the United States he had very duction, according to a statement little to say for publication and not just issued by A. G. Mackenzie, sec- much to congress. Now, this is all to retary of the Utah chapter of the change, and from this date he will American Mining congress. The de have more to say through the columns duction is simple and explains itself. of the daily newspapers than any of Last year Utah produced a' total our former presidents. of 17,749,000 ounces of silver. The Mr. Coolidge has not been slow to - I hosts their I tempi ton C I ven Iflowe: then Pthe ud Ion Celebrate the 4th of July in OGDEN CANYON Ride the Street Cars to one of its many beauty spots or resorts and spend a truly Glorious Fourth. Auto traffic will be heavy be ... IF. Mi On bach I wda home ami blow nd G I In. tii F I Ladvi Mn. 0 C. Mn. I Chan Moir Mn. Mn. 52 U) Rulon D. Wardle, the new station attendant, invites his friends to visit and inspect this newest and most modem of Associated Stations Ki Vdo I t Bid Uke Mi in tod tau toes ha ton Mia toui MOUNTAIN OIL CO. Bert Nelson, 28th and Monroe. Heber Jacobs, 26th and Jackson. Mervin Crezee, 20th and Washington. Slim Wilson, 17th and Washington. STATIONS AT Warehouse Station, 22nd ft Wall Ave. Massengale Service, 6th ft Washington Newell Childs, Riverdale Rd. at Grant. Morgan Service Station, Morgan, Ut Ware Bros Garage, Layton, Utah. A- -l Service Garage, Clearfield, Utah. P. M. Grow, Huntsville, Utah. Pittman Stand, Clearfield, Utah. LETS GET ASSOCIATED WITH INDIA safe and sane!" BUY A PASS AND SAVE! UTAH RAPID TRANSIT CO. 1 Mn. I I :,s LeSoj Sunni Hr. This is the eighth of the Mountain Oil Co. Associated Gas Stations operating in Ogden first-hande- d. Cost of Depression i ku liu nt Ex-Presid- i' Bond hs ns conditions M V town I mdC aid non-reside- Utah IStnir! loyal 'I for three-fourt- imeri I Ogden double-crossin- An by the Ifnncti THE OPENING OF A A Ord iMondi MOTOR OILS AND GREASES LETS ALL GET ASSOCIATED! |