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Show Friday, October THE OGDEN POST Engineer Discusses Our National Forests THE OGDENEditorPOST W. I. EPPERSON, Member Utah State Press Association. J. P. Marlin, regional engineer for the forest service, with headquarters Published each Friday by The Ogden Tost Printing and Publishing in Ogden, tells benefits derived from 417 Ecclee building. national forests, and states that conditions of water flow one of chief matter October 17, 1927, at the postoffice at aims. He has released the following Entered as second-clas- s naper on "Water Power and the Na Ogden, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879. tional Forests": One of the two primary purposes ... 32.00 per Year i, Subscription Price., egaWwaei Telephone 365 EDITORIAL Arizona Fails as an Obstructionist Apparently Arizona has about reached the end of her rope in opposing the Boulder dam. The United States supreme court will allow the Arizona attorney general to have his say before that court, but work on the dam wilt go on! It has been suggested that the only course remaining for Hunt and his obstructionists is to Join with Mexico and demand all the water Forwhich flows in the Colorado. tunately Utah saw that she was being used to pull chestnuts out of the the fire for Arizona and Colorado river pact. At that time Utah never suspected Arizona would attack the division of water north of Lees Ferry as she has in her complaint filed in the United States supreme court. ed Gas Heat for Modern Airports It is announced that gas will be the heating medium at the recently com- Ohio, airport. This Iileted Columbus, of the most airports in the world, and gas was chosen be cause of the absence of smoke and the small amount of human attention necessary to maintain the desired temperature. A multitude of manufacturing industries and hundreds of thousands of modern homes have adopted gas for similar reasons. Gas brings, new standards of efficiency, economy, comfort and cleanliness to the heating up-to-d- problem, Atlanta Banker Says It Is Courage That Is Needed - Eugene R. Black of the federal reserve board of Atlanta, Georgia, in a speech before the Investment Bankers' association, in convention at New Orleans, told the delegates that: t "I believe we need in American business, courage. Confidence is not all that is required. Confidence bespeaks timidity, and there is not so much timidity in America as fear in America. 'T do not agree with those men who are saying that all that is needed in I . America is a return of confidence. believe other things are needed in America and in the world. "I believe first we have got to be just. I believe we have to pay our debts. To do thnt I know we have to economize. We have admittedly a recession in business. It is farther back than that. We have been living in an automobile and radio era. We cannot pay our debts and continue in that atmosphere. I.et us not fool ourselves. We cannot have any permanent prosperity when there is a load of debt around our necks. The mortgage on the home the peace of the fireside. If the mortgages on cur farms in America were paid there would be no farm 13-mo- de-atro- ys problem. Tf American feated by one point last Saturday, the Trojans of Howard Jones still loom as contenders for the national title. No one has the temerity to suggest that the Aggies can come close to the famnua thundering herd in the coming game, but Coach Dirk Romney and his players expect to make a real football game out of the affair. The Aggies traveled to tas Angeles two years ago, and scored two touchdowns as against six for Southern California. At that the game waa an excellent one for the spectators, and the Aggies showed enough offensive and defensive strength to win the plaudits of the sports followers on the coast. The fine showing made two yeara ago is largely the reason for the return this year. Coach Dick Romney would much preferred to have the Trojans run up on Washington state. As a it is he expects Coach Jones to have his men in a very vicious mood next big-scor- Saturday to prevent any other upsets this season. A close score with Aggies would be very much of an upset and consequently the Utah delegations will have to play superior football to make any kind of showing. The Aggies are in good physical condition for the game. Gillespie will be ready for action, Ralph Kinraid, tackle, will be availRemund and able, and John Yranes, center, will be in better condition than they were last week against Colorado. Delmar Wilkins, tackle, is the only regular who probably won't be able to play. Coach Romney expects to take a large squad to California and to use more nlayers than he did two years ago. He has better reserves this season, and the California climate demands a change of men for a full game. At least two lines and two backfields will see action against the Trogans, with additional substitutes if it proves necessary. ' in Co-capt- Free Dental Service Benefits Child Health By G. T. 32. n This Season Will be Bad On Stored Grains "This is the season when the farmer is likely to experience unusual damage to stored grains, flour, beans and peas," warns Dr. Vasco M. Tanner, professor of zoology and entomology at Brigham Young university. There are a number of methods of control of these insects, the worst of which include the Mediterranean flour moth, the rice weevil, wheat weevil and meal beetle, among others. For instruction as to current methods of treatment, Dr. Tanner advises the farmer to call on his local county agricul tural agent or agricultural inspector. These methods are now being given a thorough testing by Dr. Tanner at his laboratories. An attempt is being made to determine the extent of the damage which these insects cause in the west, and new and more effective methods of control are to be tried out. Dr. Tanner invites people to send him specimens of insects which are found doing any damagq to these stored crops. . fu-tu- re - ff de-man- de ry - Our Home Town! well-edite- one-thir- one-hal- de-iwa- lk wp-r,"t- . Zl SAI0 upon you, if nerved which this action b brought? 5!5rw,w thirty days after wtilled Ktien; .d '1'j according to the d.mnd which has Uen filed Mi III u one-thi- theft kb,? XEBEKEa, Utah.0" Add" aaassaaL.." before buying See Unde Sams Loan Office Railroad Watches Diamonds One-ha- lf Off the Regular Price. 278 25th St., Ogden, Utah E; J1. knn SPSfttFK VIADUCT L Market & Groceteria 185 Twenty-fourt- h Four Exceptional of the Viaduct Street Features Market Our own Cooked Hama; oar Pure Pork Sausage; our Quality Hamberger, and our Cora Fattened Chickens. Used COAL RANGES Terms! CHfLD-S2??TIA- I. UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. temm iiome,7s always writhin ' talking e distance.?. for news of Tele-phon- family and friends. Sample day rates when yen wiV talk with anyone at the other telephone: Kansas City Dallas - - ! T IE IL IE PM-CDH- B - !'" During past four years Weber County government has been administered by Republicans. In that time your taxes have been reduced by - $100,265.69 A"- j I , Thb action b brought the traet of land deserbrd tru w in the Plaintiff and the d ! nt known aa Pearl M. Pearl Mari. Wt Wil,?' asm. partitioned between . " aaid defendant. Pearl Mar., u- "Wf Zl September 11. mo. WiW 4. QUILL Republican County Economy the rd vitki, Cob uh! " involved. n.& i?.11 ni, PEARL, abo known aa PEARL M. WEST, abo known aa PEARL MARIE WEST WIL 80N, M. S. WIL80N; CHARLES W. PEN-ROSLUICETTIA PENROSE, alto known aa LUCETTA PENROSE: WILLIAM STOKER, abo known aa WM. STOKER: ELIZA STOKER; CHRISTINA PRINTZ; CHRIS-TIA- N PRINZ. abo known aa CHRIST PRINZ ; EMMA JANE PRINZ; EMMA J. MOYES abo known at EMMA J. PRINTZ. abo known aa EMMA JANE PRINZ; JESSIE BERRY, abo known aa JES8IE D. BERRY; D. H., alan known aa D. H. WISE; A. H. WISE, ko known aa H. H. WISE abo known aa ALMA II. WISE ; A. C. DUNBAR, abo known aa ABEL C. DUNBAR: SUSAN W. DUNBAR. abo known aa SUSAN W. DUNBAR, a1 known aa 8USIE W. DUNBAR: MARTHA JEMO ELMER CHILD, abo known JJ JJjkRTHA JANE CHILD, abo known aa MARTHAJANE ELMER CHILD, abo known CHILDS; ESTHER SOUTH- WICK, abo known as ESTER SOUTHWICK WARREN C. CHILD, WA REN G. CHILDS; WARREN G. CHILD, abo known aa WARREN Gw CHILD. JR., alio W- ,G CHILD: ROSETTA CHILD owTSr KMAW, abo known aa ROSEETTA CHILD SHAW; SUSAN CHILD DUNBAR. alw known a. SUSIE CHILD DUNBAR; SIMON CHILD .CIL,D : CLARENCE CHILD known WILLIAM liP1 CHILD: RETA CHILD- MEKTLE CHILD; LIZZIE CHllJt C2iL?5 aa ELIZABETH CHILD; ?ICLEY: WARREN LEE rwnn A-- CHILD; CLARENCE E. CLARENCE CHILD; nmrVA A CHILD WEST; THEODORE T. ,Uo known as THEODORE 8HAW; JESSIE A. CHILD; DYBs JULIA A. DYE; HEBER F. CHILD; HENRY H. CHILD; RACHEL R.?.WNIN0- - HANNAH M. RUSSELL; AUSTIN W. CHILD and NELLIE CHILD, and WINIFRED S. WEST. Abo all other persona unknown, claiming a Ji th. thP t Of the 35,000,000 horsepower of potential water power estimated to be available in the United States M per cent or 24.000.000 is in 11 western states Which contain the 83 per cent of the area of national land. Of the potential water forest power n these western states, 01 is on the national forests. OfPer cent the power now generated in these 11 western states, is generated in plants lands in part or all. In utilizing forest addition, of the other developments and mnny other sites of potential power are located so close to the forest and derive so ! the BUPpl' ,Vter forests that receive the same watershed protection as those located within the forests. All the large streams of the west ln the fwrta. The Columbia with its tributaries in northwest the Sacramento, and the the' San Jiiaquin in California, the Hum n ev.adB thp Rcir nd other A. C. to Meet streams flowing into Great Salt take links. JJ? SnSJv".!h' sthf tributaries of First IIolo: "I feel just like a the Mississippi on the eastren Rockv Utah Aggies meet one of the greatmountain slopes and the Ri0 Grande est football teams in the country next naughty flapper today." on the south, all receive of Second Hobo: "How come, Willie?" W8tCr Saturday. October 18, when they tacUPply from "he forest First Hobo: A brakeman made me anTs. kle the University of Southern Cali-- j home from a ride last night" In opder that the foraia at Los Angeles, Though remaining unde Southern California Saturday k be-5- of-f-fd By MAR1.KN E. PEW any right, title, eaute, lB 0f real property described in verm to plaintiffs owr.erah? upon pbintifr. till THE STATE OF LTAiI T0 FEND ANTS: You are hereby twenty days afi., servio? . - Editor of "Editor end Publisher" There are in the United States some 15,000 incorporated communities and, of the number, some 1500 are of sufficient size to sustain one or more Those of us who daily newspaper. consistently study the affairs of Journalism sometimes overlook the prime fact that the major function of the newspaper is local as distinguishei from state, national or foreign. The contents of the average newspaper, both for editoria and advertising, is approximately local to d general. So the American daily is, and primarily should be. an instrument of local interest and concern. We may feel ourselves citizens of the world, give allegiance to the nation as the fatherland, but the home town we justly regard with something of the affection due a mother. She provides the roofs and clothes that shelter us, food to sustain life, work for our hands to do. Local institutions so intimately concern human welfare that they become near and dear to normal men and women. The street where we make a home and find our neighbor friends, the shops where we select the fruits of our toil, the schools where our children first lisp the rule of conduct, churches where we bare our soul in the Divine Presence, places of entertainment and refinement, the city hall, the courthouse, the policeman on the beat these are features of the town which become so intermingled with our daily lives that they are as of our bone and tissue. Civic pride normally starts at home. The rhain which we rail Americanism is forged of city, town and hamlet two-thir- for creating the national forests by the president or by congress is to secure favorable conditions of water flow for the use and necessities of the people of the United States, and all the regulations promulgated by the secretary of agriculture to the use and occupancy ofrelating these lands and the utilization of the natural resources contained within them have had for their foundation the two primary purposes. The plan of the secretary and of the forest service has been to permit the use of the natural resources of the forests up to the limit of their capacity without impairing their values, and further, to make the highest order of use the predominant one. One of the principal uses involves the occupancy of the lands by hydraulic works for domestic water supply, for irrigation and for power. The works for domestic supply as a rule consist of small dams in a stream or at the outlet of a spring with pipe lines laid to carry the water to cities or towns the point of use but in many cases they also include- high concrete dams for storing the excess run-oduring the spring for utilization during other portions of the , year velopment. when the normal flow is insufficient Nature supplied these resources of to meet the constantly-growin- g the forests water, timber and forage many years ago and she supIrrigation works on the forests plied them in a natural way. She also provided, as usually consist of dams for the proper the water during parts of thestoring natural protection needed, to the resources year when not needed for irrigation in the but, what nature can do, man can agricultural valleys adjacent to the easily undo. A hundred years ago xoresti. nature wag in absolute in Power works consist of dams for the regions of the forests command of the west, in order that more equalized but in the early part of this period torage flow can be secured than that pro- there was a great influx of civilized vided under natural conditions, dams people into the region, of necessity, for diverting the water from the the resources of the forests were tapitniinM, conduits or ditches, pipe lines ped. They were not tapped as nature or flumes for carrying the water to would tap, but in a wasteful withthe power houses, buildings to house out regard to the forces thatway produced the machinery which transforms the and protected them before. energy contained in the moving water Nature is exacting, but its way is nto electric energy, and transmission not so very curious or surprising if lines which conduct the electric en-n- and when understood. It furnishes to cities or towns the the water supply. The greater the of point Ull6i precipitation, the greater the need for the forest cover and the greater the no WM n,Sli0ir ?89,ithere attempt intermountain region to cover furnished, and. adversely the produce electric energy from moving less the precipitation, the less the tT' obtacles were in the cover is needed and the less it is proay. Machinery and had vided. To accomplish in some meaiwt yet been perfectedequipment to a degree sure what is accomplished in a natthat would satisfactorily meet the ural way, man must replace what he conditions. During the 90s takes- with something similar or prothe most important of the problems vide a means for giving nature the bearing upon the aituation were solv- chance. The forest service is pered, and in that decade and the subse- mitting the use and removal of the requent one many power works were sources and is attempting to make completed and placed in operation, thb" replacements or give nature the using one of the most important re- chance chiefly, through organized sources of the forests in a very import- methods of preventing, detecting and ant way. extinguishing forest fires, by permitOne of the first plants built in the ting the cutting and removal of the west was on what subsequently 0 timber supply in a rotation plan which ank in a canyn south requires sufficient stands to remain worlt w started for natural reseeding, and by pert5jfJteV 1JW1, but was not completed mitting only the amount of grazing until 1898. Simultaneously with its that the vegetation cover will carry completion another plant was built in and remain in proper quantity and the Mine canyon and others in west-er- a quality year after year. In Colorado and in various section out these protection measures carrying the forof the west. est service is following a definite plan .It I not difficult to visualize tho based upon the two primary Pioneer scenes In the early days of congress so wisely named inpurposes the act intermountain region or elsewhere establishing the national forests. in the west, when the artificial ligh was secured from kerosene and lamps their predecessors, the candle, the torch and even the fireplace, and when the source of power was confined to the sinews of man and beast; and to realize that our enjoyment now is largely due to a combination of the T&!!.A M,N,NG M1LIJXG COMPAQ OK DELINQUENT ASSESSMENT brains of the electrical man and some Notice hereby given that the aaaeaament of the natural resources of the near levied byb the Tampapu Minins Milling by mountains. m Company. August 9, of f All occupancy of the forest lands ernt per ahar. haa not Iwen1930. paid on the rertifiratea. and further notice b here- for the production of electrical en,fcBt ,f awewment. together ergy was covered in the early days with the eoata of advert Uimr. b not paid by the regulations of the secretary of i Oh 20" ,S;i0- I1 etoek ld certifiMiee will be agriculture. Some of the applications r!l.nLfOI.)C ky, at pubi ie auction, and enough of for permits to use the lands for this wW to th hwrtbutar purpose date back to the beginning of to W the aaid aaaemrnt and eoata. Said the century. th o Wm Z, Te'd Prior to 1920, when the federal ii L'reT. liort tional Hank water power act was passed by con- October 20. Building. at S oViock . on 1930. gress, all permits for the develonmcnt e of power on the forests were issued efi si by the secretary of agriculture. Upon the passage of this act the wa Placed in the hands ofjurisdiction the feder-a- l 02 I 2 power commission with the pro- 34 Mary A. Littlrfu-I8.000 f Z5.00 visions that the various departments (118.00 Paid.) having jurisdiction over the various classes of federal lands would act as representatives of the commission ?;hf1re beir jurisdiction was involved Under this provision the forest serv-acting as representative n the 97? where forest lands were ex-wti- ng During the ten years ef free dental service to children by the McDowell County Dental clinic the number of private dentists has increased 271, while the population has increased This is due to the fact only that tho service to the children has educated the people to the need of dental service and has increased the prartice of private dentists. Defects have been corrected and the necessity of good, healthy mouths has been stressed. The source of many diseases, such as heart trouble, arthritis and tutorculosis has been removed, It has been shown that retardation has been materially reduced by the correction of dental defects. This clinic is the only one in the world to be established by an act o legislature and is supported by a tax levy on the people. The reduction in disease, the speeding of the children through the grades and the restoration to health of hundreds of pupils have fully justified the expenditure. Only two and a half cents out of every dollar paid by the citizens in taxes goes for the support of the clinic, am this is more than made up by the reduction in the number of school rooms and teachers ordinnrily necessary to take care of the great number of retarded children. The Journal of the American Dental association, July, business had a secondary reserve, as the banka of America have, there would be very little business problems. "I believe we have got to do a second thing. I believe we have got to assert our character in America. 1 am afraid that in the past two years some of us have forgotten that a good name is rather to be desired than 1930. great riches and public favor rather than gold and silver. It is not con- fidence we need in America. It is certainty wo need in America." . Mr. Black enunciated a new gospel a gospel at variance with Wall street traditions. The accepted plan has been to break down confidence and reap a harvest by so doing; restore confidence and reap a harvest by so doing-iother words play both ends against the middle and profit both ways. The country needs more Blacks in the banking business. EPI.ING, D. D. S. water power can be preserved for future development and use, the government has withdrawn from al! forms of entry incompatible with the power development all federal lands estimated to have feasible power potentialities. Such withdrawals do not mean that the lands involved cannot he used for other purposes, but they do mean that at the time of withdrawal and until it can be shown the areas should be utilized for other purposes which are of a higher order, the uxe of power must be considered paramount Also, they do not mean that a dual use cannot be made of the area, hut any other use must give way to the higher use of power, if the dual use becomes inconsistent with the primary use for power. Hotels and cottages, for example, may be permitted within the areas withdrawn, but when the power development occurs, if the earlier use interferes with the power development, the hotels and cottages must be removed from within the boundaries of the development. Often power and irrigation can be combined in the use as exemplified by some of the projects of the bureau of reclamation. Also, often power use can be combined with recreation by limiting the maximum and minimum heights of the water level in the reservoirs and confining the recreation development to areas above tho maximum water level This dual use Publbhed in The Ogden Poet is exemplified by developments at some of the lakes within the forests. Dual use by railroads or Summons highways is oftentimes permissible and necessary. The location of the transportat- IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE SECJUDICIAL DISTRICT, IN AND FOR ion lines is not necessarily as fixed ONDWfeBER COUNTY. STATE OF UTAH as the location of power works and can be determined so that it will not FRED LAWRENCE WEST, abo known aa interfere seriously with the power de- FRED WEST, Plaintiff, velopcd 17 from the previous Democratic administration. r uction of expenditures, the Not content with the county government has built for you i 50.6 Miles of Hard Surfaced Pavement Vote The Republican Ticket Straight Republican County Committee GEO. D. SHUPE, Secretary (Paid Advertisement) |