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Show I v " - ................ y .h. I v;; i, - , l- J t 1 ii inn .! i.i ii " in 1,,-jf- , ,"' ' Trgawy.' '3,- - hmuiimi i. !' "'" mmmmmmm" , , ..i,'iiini."jiiiin ii v"t;".' i!)w'r;fT7?yy uj,,,,..,! "m'J1"' i ';.,'' '; 1aT't-iiJ- ': iijlmi4ii - i'-K- ,L jtl..': ...I'.-ts,,.,,,,- , ,""'HI"t " '" """" """" " "iri"1 " era turned out 515,000 motor vehicles, valued at $485,000,000. This Information came today from Alfred ' Reeves, general manager of the Automobile Chamber of Com-merce, who added that this output came from 450 concerns. He said that there are 1,500,000 cars register in the various states; that here arv 15,000 automobile dealers in the ooun- - try, 13,630 garages and 680 supply houses. ; NEARLY-HAL- A BILLION ; IN CARS WAS INVESTED i Cin;a(;o, Dc. 27. In the year draw-in- ? to a close, American mauufactur- - THE DIAMOND BARl DUNSMORE & CO., Proprietors Telephone 100 - Wc Handle 8-y- eaf old "KENTUCKY DEW" All kinds of Eastern Bottled Beers The highest grades of Domestic and Imported Cigars '' ''' American Beauty Beer on Draught TELEPHONE 259 The Union Bar tiCONTRATTO & VIETTl, Props. 1 WHERE THEY ALL MEET G O O D SMO K E S rjatStftttiectg to a Mr. Dresser: ' WE GIVE OUR CUSTOMERS SUCH GOOD CLOTHES THAT THEY GLADLY PAY US THE PRICE WE ASK. WE DO NOT KEEP CHEAP, POOR FITTING CLOTH-IN- G MADE OUT OF POOR CLOTH. . WE HAVE BUILT UP OUR BUSINESS BY MAKING A PROFIT, BUT WE MAKE ONLY A FAIR PROFIT. HOLDING UP A CUSTOMER WOULD MOT PAY US. WE WOULD RATHER HOLD UP THE QUALITY OF OUR CLOTHING, FOR THIS IS WHAT HOLDS UP OUR BUSINESS. Agency Carhartt Overalls and Jumpers o I lays' ,..J,,..,.,- - . i i jj j( . : i IN HIGHLAND BOY 1 I p IS T" finest line Groceries, 1 Fruits, Vegetables and everything in the line of gen-- I eral merchandise at our up-to- - I I date store. I f j Mjjaapunf hi i, Mliii y'nmnHr11"""'1 I I Call us up and order what you wish, our I wagons deliver to all parts of the camp. f rhone I I ' " 1 Quality Groceries - - Give us a Trial i .AHH0BHCEraTi The Salt Lake City Brewing Co. - presents its latest offering in a hi:v Jn class beer to be known as RegeJ Lager 1 This Peer of all Beers is a light beer ! of the Pilsner type. A glass of this beef wil1 convince you that it is civ tircly different from ail other beers. s, , iff i M IBi-- l 11 has a flavor and qualIty that U quItC ' ' lift! ', " '' Unusual and Delightful. No expetise ij'iL 'f''d. has been spared to make this the finest !flISfi. bccf ver brcwle3 Order a case from ''0' your. local dealer and be convinced. : 'W0 Citizens' Coal and Supply Co. Local Dealers lor BINGHAM 30i THE SALT LAKE CITY BSEW1X3 COMPANY ' '$0$M " SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH : ?AUt . Also brewers of famous. AMERICAN BEAUTY BHER SUMMARY OF WAR. NEWS Russians repulsed assaults by Germans from Sochaczew to the Vistula, Petrograd said. Berlin announced that in a tierce battle the Germans succeded in cross- - lng both branches of the Bzura. The FYench official reports, while claiming progress at sev- - eral points, admitted that counter attacks by the Germans had checked the allies In other places, especially in the Argonne. . , It was conceded by the Ger-- mans that 4h allies had regain- - ed lost ground at Rlchebourg, northwest of La Bassee, but it was said that in other fighting In that region the Germans took 800 prisoners and exterminated the Ninth Battalion of French Chasseurs.' " The French Chamber of Depu-- ties met in Paris for the first tlnie since early in August, and Premier Vlvlani declared that France and her allies would not sheathe arms until France's lost provinces had been regained. Belgium avenged and Prussian militarism crushed. talks" ON TMR.EFT A COMPETENCE AT SIXTY. "Sow little, reap little." Franklin. The close of the year is a very ap-propriate time for the Individual to do Just what' the business man does take' account of stock and see where be stands financially. , The flight oftlme, as marked by the approach of another year, must bring home to the thoughtful man a reali-zation ef the fact that his beet earn-ing years cannot last indefinitely, it impresses upon him the necessity of so planning his course that when the time comes for him to lay down the active work of hi life, his capital, or "accumulated day's work," may h sufficient to take up the burden of his support and enable him to spend bis declining years In comfort and inde-pendence. K. C. Thompson, in a recent Issue of an investment magazine, maintains that any man of moderate income, if he will only exercise proper self-denia- l, can at 90 possess sufficient means to live on the income without having to work. . .e writer believes that in these mi 4 of high wages and large profits, a well as high cost of living, the hrifty man has such overflowing op-- . uortunlif. as. the. world nevr offered before. The difficulty, as he seea it, is that n!n emeu in every ten do not save money. In his judgment few men, even when earning what are consid-ered small wages, should fail at 60 to own at least $20,000. The Invest-ment of thie at 3 per cent, which can be effected with safety, would yield $1,000 a year. A man of 30, earning $3,000 annually, ought so to regulate expenses that at 60 he will have at least $60,000. Some of the means through' which such results may be achieved consist simply in keeping outgo below income and thus saving part of one's earn-ings The question to ask la whether with a given salary or wage one has the right to a certain style and stand-ard of living. If the style is not war ranted by the wage it, la the part of prudence and courage to cut the coat according to the cloth. What look like necessities may havt to be sur-rendered. But such sacrifices in the years of earning obviate severer and more humiliating sacrifices in the years when earning power has ended. To bring about the happy consum-mation mentioned, it is assumed that a man's income is constant, and not drained by sicknesses In bis family ot times of unemployment. But even if you cannot do as well as the figures quoted, there is truth enough In the Idea to emphasize the unrealized power of thrift and saving to protect old age, from poverty. T. D. Mac-Grego- There was an increase in 1913 of the number of insane people in Ire-land from 24,889 to 25.009. These fij ures do not include wanderers at larg or residents in private dwellings. REBELLION IN PHILIPPINES. Washington, Dec. 27. Official u of a native uprising in Ma-nila, reported in press dispatches, was still lacking at the war department tonight, forty-eig- hours after a mes-sage of inquiry had ben sent. The report Indicated that the up-rising had been promptly suppressed and was of such a minor character that officials of the itiHular bureau did not Justify the sending of any mes-sage asking for particulars. It Is as-sumed the delay Is due to the absence from Manila of Governor General Har-rison, who is on an Inspection tour among outlying inlands of the group. 489,733 WOUNDED CARED FOR BY FRENCH HOSPITALS rariH,M)ec. 27. Almost 500,000 wounded soldiers wore treated in FYei-c- hospitals betwen Sept. 15 and , Nov. HO. The figures were submitted i today to the army committee of the Chamber of Doputies by the chairman of the committfe. M. Troussaint, who gave the prori.se number as 4x3,733. Of this total 2.48 por cent died. |