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Show Silent Sufferers. This world is fall of sorrow. The wail of the pain torn, the bitter story of the wrongs, the wounds with the great festering lips cry aloud to us for sympathy, but that great throng of silent safferers in the black shidoA- of a life sorrow, groan out their plaint to no ears tut their own. In the everyday walks of life we meet those tortured, toil burdened ones. We see a horse harnessed to a load too great for his strength, the impatient driver cracks his cruel whip or deals the struggling biute a stinging blow. Panting and reeking the horse endputs forth his last ounce of strength, goes forward along the Such sights are common, but less road and passes from our sightwe never witness them without a keen stab of pain in our heart of pity. 0! the thousands, and thousands of thousands of galled, crippled, harness sore, windbroken, and heartbroken horses which are tugging at the burdens of the world every day. It must seem to some of them that one more stride, one more pressure against that raw shoulder must be all his master will require of him. But ah! no. he feels the sting of the whip, hears the harsh, pitiless,1 oath clad command, and knows he must toil on. 1W, poor dumb sufferers; God pit vou. This is all very sad, but with the brute there comes an h:ur when his master must rest and can no long-e- r urge him on with the whip and voice, then all his miseries fade out of his brute mind and he eats his fodder and rests serene, but the silent sufferers of the human family are denied the forgetful- nsss enjoyed by the brute, but day by day, waking or sleeping, the worm dieth not and the fire is not quenched. The sorrow of a mother who proudly watched her noble son grow to manhood full of honor and purity, then he went wrong. liar friends knew and knew that she knew her ido'iz3d boy had tripped on the snares of the world, they cast swift glances of pity at her, knowing how her mother heart was wounded, and how the quivering, bleeding heartstrings were sobbing out the hopeless question, "Where is my wandering boy ? 0! where is my boy tonight 1" Too proud of har child, too loyal to him to make complaint, she suffers in silence. The wayward girl, with all her fond dreams of a lover faithful and true, a splendid wedding, a husband, a home, sweet babes to croon and lay their velvet fingers against her bosorn almost burst' ing with the! joy of it, all such dreams and hopes blasted and blighted forever, for she knows she is a lost and ruined woman, a toy for the base and bestial, a despised derelict on the swirling sea of despair. Does any one hear the dead foetid moans that rot the very fibers of her heart ? No. She knows only too well there are none to pity; the laugh of scorn, the heartless leer would be her only recompense, so she suffers to the bitter end in silence. Among these silent sufferers are ill mated men and women, fettered by a marriage tie that is like a rope of vipers binding some pure fouled women to. a brutal man, or a noble true, spiritual man to a faithless harridan, and what's to be c - FARMERS' CASH UNION. (Trade Mark.) Nothing, simply nothing, suffer in silence. Mention. Farmers. Years thunder in awesome suc- cession across the brim of the chalice, hairs become white in the snow line of the misty hills of time, but age, nor sorrow, nor toil, nor dissappoiutmeut can ev er overturn that cup of life's richest wine. But 0! the silent suffering of these sisters and lovers of Forbidden By the stern ethics of an apish unworthy men. cannot speak out the promptings of the soul but society, they must wait and hope, perhaps without a word f encouragement, sometimes with the cold comfort of a Sile Strong's "8-soi- ne day.'' time to meet requirements. in New Albany Mirror. Lohr's Store SEE US FOR BARGAINS. Men's and Ladies Cravinet Coats. We have bought these coats so we can save you from three to five dollars on each coat. Many articles too numerous to mention here that will make you money to buy now. Every class of SUMMER DRESS GOODS. er building materials. OXFORDS. All to close out at actual cost, $3.00 shoes for $2,35, S2.00 shoes to close out for $1.50, $1.50 shoes at $1.00. CALL AND SEE US. There is never a time that you can't save money in buying goods of us. Yours Truly, LOHR COMPANY, Tremonton, Utah. is I- are each and every one scientifically prepared for specific uses. Remember if it's a surface to be painted, enameled str.:ned, varnished or finished in any way, there's We can. .Acme Ouaiitv Mnd to ht tne purpose. .tell you what to use, how much t use the cost. Ask us. Pipe and fixtures, Lavatory and Bath Rocm supplies, U. S. Separators and Gasoline Engines. Si Come and see our Miniature Water System. Respectfully, DAVID HOLSGREN. he Inter- - Mountain Four State Fair here will) a view to purchas iug a home. Wc need just, nich men and Tremonton should give them a Conditions hearty welcome. Mr. Arthur Johnson of Salley, S. C, came into town a fe.v days ago to re cuperate from a t,ieg of typhoid fever which left him in a very emaciated con dition. lie is an old acquaintance of Dr. WblUock and will be under his care for some time. Mr. Johnson expects to remain here a year. It looks as if the Short I.im wai ib-l- n a paying business In sec all the teams there1 delivering grain into the cars. It It making the station agent earn his wages these hot days if ha doesn't during the remainder of the year. Sept. 6 $15,000 valley at that time was one vast field of sagebrush. Less I h su one tenth of the present area of laud was t hen cultivated. Theta gentleman reported to their eastern friends the future possibilities of this valley and they are now delighted J to see that in most respects the development has been beyond their expectations. They now find nearly ".O.IOa:res of ap p'.e.trees. more than 6.0U0 acres of sugar and nearly 40.000 acres of oats, alfalfa, wheat, and pMatoea where only the sage brush was visible those few years ago. CALIFORNIA EXCURSIONS Yia Oregon Short Line further details. ! DO OS) Discomfiting a Critic. There is a story of Irving nnd of W. K. Henley, who had been treating his renders to some adverse criticism on the great actor's Macbeth. At their first meeting afterward Irving fixed the critic with his "glittering eye " "I notice," he said, "that you do not approve of my conception of Macbeth. Tell me now, for I should l interested to hear It. how you would play Mae beth If you were called upon to pre sent the character on the stage. What Is youi conception?" It Is recorded that Henley was speechless. In Prettily ms, 0 Purses. One of the Largest Exhibitions in the West. Continuous free special attractions afternoons and evenings GRAND DISPLAY OF FIREWORKS EVERV EVENING. Spectacular Eruption of Mauna Loa, the Hawaian Volcano. Grandest Sight Ever Seen in Utah. ness to keep all one needs for bis own use even if the pi ice does appear to be high. 8, 9, 10, II, 1909, At 0 gden, Utah. year for the aeason that there are more machines engaged in the business, conse qaent'y the farmers are turning it into money as fast as possible. We presume some of them will have to bur before next harvest. Some did that last vear, and paid nearly a quarter more per bash el than they sold for. It is good busi ets, CASH UNION K. City. Colorado, where hi-- fithr resides and was looking up the frops and other b FARMERS' KGR. II. Murphy of Iowa was a pltMftBt caller at The Times office Wednesday. He had jint come from Canon Prof, SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY or FARMERS' CASH UNION, Trpmnnton Utah. Here is a snap, 40, 50 and 60 cent frequent dates S. L agents for belts go at 25 cents each. LADIES' This . PAINTS, ENAMELS, STAINS AND VARNISHES full line of Farm Machinery, Tools and Miscellaneous Supplies, Lumber, Cement, Doers, Windows and oth- Daily for ticketi one way via Portland, for other routes. See LADIES" BELTS. Prices right. A . F.L.Taylor, It 12-oun- So men and women and brutes suffer in silence, The What They Saw Ten Years Ago and Wi are very air is vibrant with the pain and misery of it. What They See This Week. not sure that it will do any good to talk about it, but it may Mr. John Koch and Mr. Jacob Winze be a little consolation to some silent sufferer to know that someone else knows that the heart of the world is achinfr. ler in company with Mr. II L. Sehmutz The best thing of all is to realize that lie knows. lie who and Mr. L. 11. Get made their tlrst trip Avas wounded for our transgressions ;ind bruised for our in1 Utah about tea years ago, before the His If He mouth. opened not iquities, yet your sorrow is towns of Tremonton and Garland had beyond earthly help, lay it at his feet, for "surely he hath broii started In fact nearly the whole borne our griefs." 1 the time to freshen up the home by doing . , r or the odd jobs 01 painting you nave oecn planning, the buggy, the furniture, for the floors and woodwork, for every paint purpose, we have the right Finish. W& Two carloads of new Oat and Barley Bags and a ca of Calcutta Wheat Bags will be here in ample A sweet young maid meets the man of all the rest, her choice. They keep tryst, they walk, they talk. One day he tells her the old, old story, tells her she is all the world to him. She pours out in full measures the rich strong wine of her virgin love, mixes it with the cherished words of her king of men and it tills to the brim the jeweled goblet of her heart. Time passes, they are estranged, each climbs the beetling crags of life's mountain by varying paths, up, up toward the eternal heights where God's warm kiss will banish every tear and His glad welcome turn every silent sorrow to a song of rapture. But all the way along, over the plain The gruincrop Is beiug harvested and and up the mountain, tumbling often, wounded sorely, still that full measure of love in the true woman's heart is undis- threshed more rapidly than usual this turbed and undiminished. and finishes tor Every Home Use Jyf - done? Points . Melon Day, Friday, Sept. 10th. Come eat our melons. Excursion tickets north of Ogden sold Sept. 3d to 11th good returning until September 14th. Reduced rates from all points. General admission 25 cents. NOT AN UNPARDONABLE ERROK. Military Title Led to Purser's Unfortunate Assignment of Berths. "As entered the stateroom to me on one of the coastwise steamers on my last trip south, 1 was startled to find the lower berth littered with feminine apparel," said a com"I mercial traveler. immediately sought out the purser of the boat and told him he must have made some mistake in allotting the rooms, as the persons he had put In mine was undoubtedly a woman, if i might judge? by her belongings. "'Well! well!" he exclaimed, much excited. "There must be some mistake. Let's look at the passenger list." "Examination of the list showed my name and that of 'Ma.i. White' as the The occupants of the same room. purser and I went to the stateroom, Hid there In the doorway stood a mild eyed young woman. When the purser asked her If that was her room she glanced ;it him CMUallj and replied that it was. "'nut,' objected the officer, 'I have assigned this room to Maj. White. Have the pleasure of speaking to his wife?' "'No, air,' was the prompt reply; T am Maj. White Maj. White of the Salvation Ann) I ' Judge Has Something to Learn. is no such tiling ns unskilled labor." says the fttdfl "I tuc Washington Juvenile court. Kvhiently the Jeurncrl judfct' never caw a city man In the country trying to chop wood. 'Yatalt Extravagance in Styles. If directoire gowns really become fashionable, it is hoped that other extravagances of the same period will not also bs revived. The beautiful Mmp. Tallien, who led the fashions at the time of the French directory, Is said to have appeared with rings on her tdes. Her silk stockings were made with divisions like the fingers of gloves, and she wore sandals studded with jewels. M:ne. Tallien was, however, sensible enough to discard the fashionable tlaxcn wig and to wear her own black hair unpowderod. Natural coiffures did not long remain simple, though. 1'nder the empire they became so elaborate that the ladies of the court had to have their hair dressed the night before Napoleon's coronation, and were then propped upright in their chairs in order to sleep without damaging their headdresses. Slogans tab FREE Mach i. tie runs lighter than any other. tab FREE lasts longer than any other. t'-FRE- E beautiful than other. any is more FREE has leas vibration than any other. tab FREE is easier to operate than any other. FREE McCALL PATTERNS Celebrated f r style, perfect fit, simplicity1 and reliability nearly 40 year. Sold in nearly every city and town in tbi United States and CanaJa, or by mail rtircU. More sold than any other make. Send fur free catalogue. Met ALL'S MAGAZINE More subscriber! than any other fashion magazine million a month. Invaluable. latest stylet, patterns, dressmaking, millinery, plain scwinif, fancy nccdirwork, liairdrt-ssinjretiquette, 0BM sturiet, etc. Onlv BO cents a rear (worth double). Including a free patUm, Subscribe today, or send for sample copy. UilSIU HM I. INDUCEMENTS to A cents. PoMil brines premium catalogue and MW cash prueortcrs. Address HIE MrfUL CO.. ??S to 2W W. 37th St.. NEW YOUii makes a more perfect stitch than any other. tab FREE the hest of all bined in one. is com- FREE SEWING MACHINE CO. :: CHICAGO ILLINOIS rOB BALI BY Garland Mercantile Co., Garland, Utah. E |