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Show " .... ' 'I Thursday. Aogust 16. 1928 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH YUUUR BEEPED H.CB . V' ' , CRIATIST JtLY lN.HILLYf.OVERlAND HISTORY' I I Vr ': Th big forward march of Willys-Overlan- d continue! 1 Following the greatest aix months in Willy IS 20-ye- ar history, with sales exceeding the entire 1927 ' output, came July with far more sales than any pre vious July. 100 more Whippet and Willys-Knig- ht i cars were purchased than during July last year. i This success is not surprising. Whippet Fours and Sixes and the three great Willys-Knig- ht A t Sixes offer a degree of comfort, performance, safety and economy never previously .::::: 5m available at such extremely low prices. jf Orders now accepted for prompt delivery. & VJLIIJ v Come in. Let us arrange for an early demonstration so that you TmHn, usst () ttsi wr (wit may iudee for yourself the per-- miuu. 9 c m jw rw. formance ability of any ot these r7LXy.rrm' " modernly engineered cars. WILLYS-OVERLAN- D, Inc. TOLEDO, OHIO Cullen Hotel Fred J. Leonard, M Paul Purdue, Aae't Mgr. Meet Your Old Friends at the Cullen Cafe and Cafeteria 33 W. 2nd So. St. Salt Lake Cl7, Ttah. CULLEN GARAGE STV4 Writ 2ud So. STORAGE AND SERVICE Dr. C. L Evens, Optometrist EYES EXAMINED Cross ejes straightened. tilas.es fitted. 1 1 East 2nd South, SALT LAKE CITT. CTAB Pipe - Valves - Fittings FOR ANT PURPOSK SALT LAKE PIPE CO. 473 W. Sixth South St. . Salt Lske CitjT, Utah Rowland Hall Ulirh and grammar. Prepares for all colleges, beautifully located at JOS Flrat Ave., Salt La..)) Cliy. Catalog upon, request SERVICE GARAGE C. W. TIKKWEK KAY L. PECK UUI Lar,t hTMHAnl (Uwe . fl.ntf .1 U.rir rrU. 4th ho. and Main turret Halt Lake. Adjoining Kewhouse Hotel. Used Pipe, Fittings &Valves Newly threaded and coupled for all purposes. rVlonscy Iron and Metal Co. 100 So. 3rd Went - Salt Lake City, Utah. Bulbs. Seeds. Shrubs For Fall Planting-Wr- ite for Fr Catalog. PORTF.B-WALTO- COMPANX Salt Lake City. Utah. J. J. Coan Wrecking Co. 334 Went So. Temple 8t. Salt Lake City, Utah. Phono Wawitch t0S, , , New and uaed Building Material of all kind. Plumbing, Pipe, Painta and Hardware. Utah Mo Parts Co. Automobile Parts "We have It, Can get It or It Can't Be Got." Try us. Phone Was. 2287 and 2288. (21 So. Main St. - Salt Lake City, Utah. PICKLES ARROW BRAND For thone who want the beat UTAH PICKXE CO SALT LAKK CITT. SIXK HOSE can be mended with the new Re-K- nit Needle it repair, runner. In auch a way that they cannot be detected. Sent post-paid for 76c Ladle, make big money selling needle, and mending .Ilk hoae at home. Hoe. repaired for 36o and up. Ilose Repair Shop, 609 Templeton Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah Roof Cement Co. Tlrti UK. Salt lata City PlawWlSSl AUkindaoMtoof wortc. Repalra,CoaUnca.New Boofll K Berries- -" liTH" Brand Boot Oentent. . Agent., HrpresentatlTr. Wanted to sell na-tional advertiaed merchandise and manu-facturers' specialties. Every article a and money getter. Men, women and student, making big money. Spare or whole time. No competition. W. B. STANTON. (01 Templeton Bldg.. Salt Lake City, Utah. W. N. lit Salt Lab City, No. 33-19- ; '; Salt Lake City Directory MOXUM HOTEL 8AIT I.AKK CITY Vnlie tills your honm. Itoom $1.00 to a.00. I'rce Bua. I'uuiih built h miti Mute Street 11 in Iictul, Micr. C:RE&ftf WANTED It !ji a Bo1v1 firnMrm whn you rtHdo on Hliippln to the KKOOKLAV.N CKEAMFIiV CO., 268 Bo, W West St., Salt Lako City. Write for Sfaippiof Tagf. CoaiUat tut CeBKtcrtiwi Service McCune Schcol cf Music and Art Frrulty of Kmlnrnt Tonrhnra Leading Alusic School In lntermuunluhi Helton Mupln raniatlc Art Dancing iUO North Main bt. gnlt Lake City. I tub. CRISMON A NICHOLS ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS Office and Laboratory 229-23- 1 8. Went Temple Ht., Polt Lake City, Utah. P. O. Hni 16!6. Mailing envelopes and price, furnished on request. We Tench From Direct Sheet Music Correspondence course on HAWAIIAN STEEL GUITAR will be given In the future by 11) e UTAH CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC 61 S Templetoa fildg. SALT LAKE CITY Write for information. Also local teaching. "Btavty Unsm Umtmm.S thort who girt If cart" SUPERFLUOUS HAIR s Quickly and Forever jVtj X removed by y HvJ MULTIPLE PJECTROLYSIS (.. V. e In one-p)li- lh the nsnal time. Y V Also Mle. Wnrta and uther W I Kkln defects. Fully guaranteed- - Not at ell expensive FlCUi 1SD BCiLP T&EiTMRKTtt. CONSUl.TiTIOM FBK1. 1SAMRL STEVKNSON. K. n. Phone 'Was. 7601. 0:t Trmnleton Ttldg. It So. Temple St., Halt Lake city. Columbian Optical Co. 3i7 So. Main, Salt Lake City Utah Opposite Postoffiea Unseg tirflArtificial DnpliCTtrifl J E. M Eyei Scientific Ey Examinations Send qb your broken glass for repairs. Work returned same day. Little Hotel 167 Main Street SALT LAKE CITT Rooms, Sing's WHtaont Bath, per day, tl to fl .H Rooms, Double Without Bath, per dar, fl..riO Booms, Single With B.Mb, per day, 11.60 to li.(U Rooms, Double With Bath, per day ,13.00 to U.50 All Depot Street Cars Pass the Hotel KEARNS BLDC GARAGE Opposite Little Hotel. FIREPROOF. Business Training Pays Last year we placed more than 1000 in good positions. We can place you when competent. When will you be ready? Srad r Sueuu Catalog Behnke-Walk- er Business College Ilth and Salmon Streets Portland, Oregon g Tff.TTT--,Tr- -1 To Read More- - Is to Learn More All Books at Publisher's Prices Wall send them CO.D. if you say so. DESERET BOOK COMPANY 44 East Santa Temple St. F.O.BexlTO3 - Salt iJkVe CHy turer. distributor, worker, and eon umer have been called la council to-gether, not tor a single occasion, but for continuous work. These efforts bare been successful beyond any ex-pectation. Tbey bare been accom-plished without interference or regu-lation by the government They have secured progress In the Industries, remedy for abuses, elimination of waste, reduction of cost in production and distribution, lower prices to the consumer, and more stable employ-ment and profit. While the problem POINTS FROM HOOVER SPEECH 4 It shall be an honest campaign; every penny will be publicly ac-counted for. Having earned my living with my own hands I cannot have other than the greatest sympathy with the aspirations of those who toil. Our purpose Is to build In this nation a human society, not an economic system. Appointive office, both North, South, East and West, must be based solely on merit, character, and reputation Mn the community in which the appointee la to serve. Participation of women In poli-tics means higher standards. Our workers can buy two and often three times more bread and butter than any wage earner In Europe. By blood and conviction I stand for religious tolerance both In act and In spirit Our foreign policy has one pri-mary object, and that Is peace. Government should not engsge In business In competition with its citizens. varies with every different commodity and with every different part of our great country, I should wish to apply the same method to agriculture so that the leaders of every phase ot each group can advise and organize on poli-cies and constructive measures. I am convinced this form of action, as it has done iu other Industries, can benefit farmer, distributor and con-sumer. Greater Opportunities "The working out of agricultural re-lief constitutes the most important ob-ligation of the next Administration. I stand pledged to these proposals. The object of our policies Is to establish for our farmers an Income equal to those of other occupations; for the farmer's wife the same comforts la her home as women in other groups; for the farm boys and girls the same opportunities in life as other boys and girls. So far as my own abilities may be of service, I dedicate them to help secure prosperity and contentment la that industry where I and my fore-fathers were born and nearly all my family still obtain their livelihood. "The Republican Party has ever been the exponent of protection to all our people from competition with lower standards of living abroad. We bave always fought for tariffs designed to establish this protection from import-ed goods. We also have enacted re-strictions upon Immigration for the protection of labor from the Inflow of workers faster than we can absorb them without breaking down our wage levels. "The Republican principle ot an ef-fective control of Imported goods and of Immigration has contributed greatly to the prosperity of our country. There Is no selfishness In this defense of our standards ot living. Other countries gain nothing If the high standards of America are sunk and if we are pre-vented from building a civilization which sets the level of hope for the entire world. A general reduction In the tariff would admit a flood ot goods from abroad. It would injure every home. It would fill our streets with Idle workers. It would destroy the returns to our dairymen, our fruit, flax, and livestock growers, and our other farmers." Prohibition On the subject of prohibition, Mr. Hoover repeated his recent declara-tion: "I do not favor repeal of the 18th Amendment. I stand tor efficient ut the common ground en which we may mobilise th sound forces of agri- cultural reconstruction. Our platform lays a solid basis upon which to build. It offers an affirmative program. Tariff and Waterways "An adequate tariff is the foundation of farm relief. Our consumers increase faster than our producers. The market must be protected. For-eign products raised under lower standards of living are today compet-ing In our home markets. I would use my office and Influence to give the farmer the full beneflt ot our historic tariff policy. "A large portion ot the spread be-tween what the farmer receives for his products and what the ultimate consumer pays is due to Increased transportation charges. Increase in railway rates has been one of the pen-alties of the war. These increases have been added to the cost to the farmer of reaching seaboard and for-- elgn markets and result therefore in reduction of his prices. The farmers of foreign countries have thus been In-directly aided in their competition with the American farmer. Nature has endowed us with a great system of Inland waterways. Their modern-ization will comprise a most substan-tial contribution to midwest farm re-lief and to the development of twenty of our Interior states. This moderniza-atlo- n Includes not only the great Mis-sissippi system, with its Joining of the Great Lakes and of the heart of mid-west agriculture to the Gulf, but also a shipway from tbe Great Lakes to the Atlantic. These improvements would mean so large an Increment In farm-ers' prices as to warrant their con-struction many times over. There is no more vital method of farm relief. "But we must not stop here. "An outstanding proposal of the Par-ty program Is the whole-hearte- d pledge to undertake tbe reorganization of the marketing system upon sounder and more economical lines. We bave already contributed greatly to this purpose by the acts supporting farm the establishment of In-termediate credit banks, the regula-tion of stockyards, public exchanges and the expansion of the Department of Agriculture. Tbe platform proposes REPUBLICAN RECORD Our problems of the past seven years have been problems of re-construction; our problems of the future are problems of construction. They are problems of progress. During these years our popula-tion has Increased eight percent. Yet our national Income has In-creased 45 percent. The number of families has Increased 2,300,000 and we have built 3,500,000 new and better homes. We have equipped 9,000,000 more homes with electricity, and through It drudgery has been lifted from the lives of women. The barriers of time and distance have been swept away and life made freer and larger by the Installation of 6,000,-03- 0 more telephones, 7,000,000 radio sets and the service of an additional 14,000,000 automobiles. By rigorous economy, federal ex-penses have been reduced two bil-lions annually. The national debt has been reduced six and a half billions. Taxes have been reduced four successive times. We have doubled savings deposits and near-ly doubled life Insurance. President Coolidge has not only given a memorable administration, he has left an imprint of rectitude and statesmanship on our country. to go much farther. It pledges the creation of a Federal Farm Board of representative farmers to be clothed with authority and resources with which not only to still further aid farmers' and pools and to assist generally In solution of farm problems but especially to build up with federal finance, farmer-owne- d and farmer-controlle- d stabilization cor-porations to protect the farmer from tbe depressions and demoralization of seasonal gluts and periodical sur-pluses. HOOVER MEETS FARtaraQBLEEl Urges Expenditure of Hundreds of Millions on a Workable Program FAVORS HIGHER TARIFF WALL Farmers Must Control and Adminis-ter Federal Farm Aid, Says Candidate. HOOVER ON FARM RELIEF; An adequate tariff Is the founda-tion of farm relief. Working out agricultural relief Is the most Important obligation of the next Administration. The object of our policies Is to establish for our farmers an Income equal to those of other occupations. Farming Is and must continue an Individualistic business of small units and Independent ownership. If the farmers' position Is to be ' Improved by larger operations It ' must be done not on the farm, but In the field of distribution. - Our platform lays a solid basis upon which we can build. It offers an affirmative program. Nature has endowed us with a great system of Inland waterways. Their modernization will comprise substantial contribution to mid-west farm relief and development of 20 Interior states. There is no more vital method of farm relief. PALO ALTO, Calif. Herbert Hoo-ver met the farm question fairly and squarely In his Address of Acceptance at the Stadium of Stanford University. Nearly one-thir- d of his address was devoted to this subject, which Hoover termed "the most urgent economic problem In our nation today." He de-clared bluntly that farm relief must not be delayed by any monetary con-siderations, urging that "a nation which is spending ninety billions a year can well afford an expenditure of a few hundred millions for a workable program that will give to one-thir- of Its population their fair share of the national prosperity." Tbe candidate pledged himself to a farm-ai- d plan m which farmers shall themselves control and administer the federal financial assistance which be proposes to put into effect "The most urgent economic problem in our nation today is in agriculture," he said. "It must be solved if we are it to bring prosperity and contentment . to one-thir- d of our people directly and to all ot our people indirectly. We have pledged ourselves to a solution. "In my mind most agricultural dis-cussions go wrong because of two false premises. The first Is that agri-culture is one Industry. It is a dozen distinct industries incapable ot tbe same organization. The second false premise Is that rehabilitation will be complete when it has reached a point comparable with pre-wa- Agriculture was not upon a satisfactory basis be-- , fore the war. The abandoned farms of the northeast bear their own testi-mony. Generally there was but little profit In midwest agriculture for many years except that derived from the slow Increases in farm land values. Even of more Importance Is the great advance in standards of living of all occupations since the war. Some branches of agriculture have greatly recovered, but taken as a whole It Is not keeping pace with the onward march in other industries. Cause and Effect "There are many causes for failure of agriculture to win Its full share ot national prosperity. The after-wa- r de-flation of prices not only brought great direct losses to the farmer, but he was often left indebted In inflated dol-lars to be paid in deflated dollars. Prices are often demoralized through gluts in our markets during the har-vest season. Local taxes have been In- - enforcement ot laws enacted thereun-der. Our country has deliberately un-dertaken a great social and economic experiment, noble In motive and in purpose. It must be worked out constructively." And he added the following comment: "Common sense compels us to re-alize that grave abuses have occurred abuses which must be remedied. In-vestigation can alone determine the wise method of correcting them. Crime and disobedience of law cannot be permitted to break down the Con-stitution and laws of the United States. "Modification of the enforcement laws which would permit that which tbe Constitution forbids This the American people will not countenance. Change in the Con-stitution can and must be brought about only by the straightforward methods provided in the Constitution Itself. There are those who do not believe in the purposes of several pro-visions of the Constitution. No one denies their right to seek to amend It Tbey are not subject to criticism for asserting that right. But the Re-publican Party does deny the right of anyone to seek to destroy the pur-poses of the Constitution by indirec-tion. "Whoever is elected president takes an oath not only to faithfully execute the office of the President, but that oath provides still further that be will, to the best of his ability, pre-serve, protect and defend the Con-stitution of tbe United States. I should be untrue to these great tra-ditions, untrne to my oatb ot office, were I to declare otherwise " Will Cost Money "Objection has been made that this program, as laid down by the Party Platform, may require that several hundred millions of dollars of capital be advanced by the Federal Govern-ment without obligation upon th In-dividual farmer. With that objection I bave little patience. A nation which is spending ninety billions a year can well afford an expenditure of a few hundred millions for a workable pro-gram that will give to one-thir- d of its population their fair share of the na-tion's prosperity. Nor does this pro-posal put the government into busi-ness except so far as It Is called upon to furnish initial capital with whioh to build up the farmer to the control of his own destinies. "This program adapts itself to the va-riable problems of agriculture not only today but which will arise in the fu-ture. I do not believe that any single human being or any group of human beings can determine in advance all questions that will arise in so vast and complicated an industry over a term of years. Tbe first step is to create an effective agency directly for these purposes and to glve it authority and resources. These are solemn pledges and they will be fulfilled by the Re-- publican Party. It is a definite plan of relief. It needs only the detailed elab-oration of legislation and appropria-tions to put it into force. "During my term as Secretary of Commerce I have steadily endeavored to build up a system of between the government and business. Under these actions all elements Interested in the problem ot a particular Industry such as manufac- - creased to provide the improved roads and schools. Tbe tariff on some prod-ucts is proving inadequate to protect him from imports from abroad. The Increases in transportation rates since the war has greatly affected the price which he receives for bis products. Over six million farmers in times of surplus engage In destructive competi-tion with one another in sale of their product, often depressing prices below those levtls that could be maintained. "The whole tendency of our civiliza-tion during the last 60 years has been toward an increase In the size ot the units of production In order to secure lower costs and a more orderly ad-justment of the flow of commodities to the demand. But the organization of agriculture into larger units must not be by enlarged farms. The farmer has shown be can increase the skill of his Industry without large operations. He Is today producing 20 per cent more than eight years ago with about the same acreage and personneL Farming is and must continue to be to individualistic business ot small units and independent ownership. The farm is more than a business; it is a state of living. We do not wish it con-verted into a mass production ma-chine. Therefore, if the farmers' posi-tion is to be improved by larger opera-tions it must be done not on the farm but in tbe field of distribution. Agri-culture has partially advanced in this direction through and pools. But the traditional is often not a complete solution. "Differences of opinion as to both causes and remedy bave retarded the completion of a constructive program of relief. It is our plain duty to search Got Off Lightly When Elfrlda Shryrock, d daughter of Leonard Shryrock. of Compton, Cal., opened the door of her father's cnr while It was traveling forty-nin- e miles on hour, she was thrown to the pavement and rolled sixty feet. Droufiht to a hospltnl. tliff child proved to have suffered no y other than numerous bruises and cuts. Not Much Demand Now for Handmade Basket The art of the osier, which Is bas-ket making, Is one of the oldest of the handicrafts and was once a very Important Industry of England, but the statement is made . that it will soon be exterminated unless some en-couragement is given to the workers. German and Jupnnese baskets are displacing the product of the other countries where the art flourished first. A great deal of Inbor is re-quired to cultivate the willows afid prepare them for wicker work. The willows nre cut with n short curved knife in the early months of the jvar. They nre then soaked In running wa-ter for six months. This Is known ns pitting the willows, nnd It Is ne-cessary to take off the bark to pro-duce white willows. The finished willows are then dried and straight-ened, when they are ready for the hamper makers and cane workers ut the factories. Signs in the Sky A glorified "magic lantern," said to be capable of projecting photographs and signs on to the clouds, Is the latest contribution to the science of advertising. The device, still In Its laboratory form, consists of a powerful search-light mounted behind a series of lenses ' and a slide holder. The whole appa-ratus resembles a cannon and Is able to project Images for a distance of five miles on a cloud bunk. The image Is visible for miles around, while a revolving screen In front of the muzzle of the projector can be used to produce color-changin- g effects. Man, equally, bus intuition. He calls It a hunch. |