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Show THE CITIZEN 12 but a great deal to do with human aspiration. Out of a forbidding faith and a lurid history, has come the figure of the angel at sunset. There is another temple block where the sunset hour spins a golden web of passion. In the great lift of Gothic arches above a sanctuary of the Living God, one knows the exultation of eternal silence. Ecstacy of color the lure of upward line the quiet breathing of harmony lay siege to the spird churches, and ituality of hold it incarnate illusive. Gradually this old prayer in a new world is flinging its mesh of spiritual aspiration about a city as beautiful as any in the world and as indifferent. Published in the Commonweal of New York City, in issue of January When credit is handled judiciously and when creditors prosecute rather than settle for a few cents on the dollar in fake failures, then we can clean the white collar bandit out of the business field. And when he goes, every person in the United States will save the several dollads he gives every year to commercial crooks by paying the higher prices which manufacturers must charge in order to recompense themselves for the $500,000,000 yearly loss through the crooked bust and other credit crimes. New West Trade. 19, 1927. Three things are necessary for a farm inventory: paper, pencil and the inclination. Look over farm machinery, old-worl- THE BUST GAME. WITH THE FARMERS. spreaders for Modern poultry equipment incubator, brooder, automatic waterers and feeders, grain sprouters, and warm chicken house enabled one enterprising Iowa farm wife to make a tidy sum of Christmas money last falWShe hatched 300 chicks in October and sold Christmas broilers at top notch prices. Because of its Unsavory reputation, chemists want to change the name of wood alcohol to methanol. Which recalls the old couplet about the rose with any other name, etc. corny CHARACTERS onii: e ai ... ts. V-l- CONFIDENCE W SC a CAPACITY CONVENIENCE COURTES! r1 Tf Cir wl CAPB too! or fraudulent bankruptcy, The crooked bust, has become the favorite activity of the commercial crook in the past few years. The simplicity of the crooked bust and the many factors favorable to its perpetrators are ample reasons for its popularity. The crooked bust game is not new. It has been practiced for years throughout the country; but not until a few years ago did the criminal fraternity as a class recognize it as a quick and easy road to riches. When they did, the burglar laid aside his jimmy, the con man discarded his gold brick, and the high and low of crookdom rushed into business in large numbers. It is estimated that dishonest business failures enriched our commercial criminal gentry to the extent of $250,000,000 in 1925; and in 1926 the toll was still stupendous but considerably less than the preceding years figure, thanks to the increased prosecution activity and more drastic legislation, which are slowly but surely curbing the evil. The scheme itself is simple, but the crooked bust has a great many variations which make it exceedingly difficult for the authorities to meet and overcome. Easy credit, keen business competition and cheap money combine with other factors to make it flourish, says J. H. Tregoe. A business is set up by the racketeers, who get tehir capital from their angel. They place In charge of the business their front, a suave fellow, a counterfeit business man. They purchase large amounts of merchandise on credit, sell it to fences for from 30 to 50 per cent of its value, and then go broke, leaving the creditors to try and get their money. The crooked bust is a complicated machine, notwithstanding its simplicity of operation. In it are many kinds of human cogs which add much to the heavy problems of prosecution. There are stories that tell of failure forced upon honest business men. Commercial crooks learn that a small manufacturer is having a hard time making ends meet. The crooks place orders for large quantities of merchandise. The manufacturer produces the goods; and when the time comes for We delivery the fake buyers say, dont want em.' And the firm is stuck. about sour soils and lime. One combined harvester and four men can thresh more wheat in a Kansas field today than 200 men could have done a century ago. not fed sufficiently or properly is like a tin lizzie trying to climb a hill with only an inch of gas in her tank. Use the silo and the feed grinder to give her a balanced ration and give her enough feed. A dairy cow A heated waterer in winter for the fall pigs paid a good profit in recent tests made by the Iowa experiment Rudyard Kipling has started for Brazil and we hope that this doesnt mean he is going to write a poem on South America. There is a lot of talk about radio legislation nowadays, and we cant understand why some forward looking statesman doesnt introduce a bill either in Congress or his state legis- lature, to eliminate static. Think how much pleasanter a time old Atlas would have had holding the world on his shoulders, if he had only possessed a radio. Sound and Progreso The Coniine National Bnl Main St. and 2nd Sooik ign xo VS ite jdito hers Jnent Lovinger Disinfectant Company station. Start plans now to get spring chicks hatched early this spring. Sanitary sheet steel brooder houses with lighting, ventilation and heating are now on the market. vJIta LEE LOVINGER, President and General Manager incubator thermostat in working order? Test it out before starting the incubator. It may mean the difference between success and failure in hatching. Is your INSECTICIDE, DISINFECTANTS . and JANITORIAL SUPPLIES American farmers on tractors are producing rice cheaper than barefooted Chinese coolies who work for 12 cents a day. LIQUID AND JELLY SOAPS 319 SO. Wisconsin farmers own 108,000 silos, more than the total number in use in the next two highest states, New York and Pennsylvania. Most of them fill with their own ensilage cutters. club farm boys and girls in Chickasaw county, Iowa, kept and summarized accounts of their fathers business last year. Similar movements in California, Texas, Pennsylvania, and other states are under way. Thirty-tw- o WEST TEMPLE SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH TELEPHONE WASATCH 2314 4-- H Millions of bath fixtures, lavatories and sinks were purchased by the American consumer last year in the fight against dirt and disease. To be exact, 1,195,142 baths, lavatories, and 1,363,657 sinks were required in 1926 to fill the orders received. Everybody is sold on longer life and less sickness. Vie Specialize in Bingham Sightseeing Regular stages leave the Semloh Hotel, 2nd South and State Stre Salt Lake City, every two hours. Special cars to Bingham any & for any number of people; personally conducted always. If you cannot purchase tickets for this trip at your call Wasatch 1069 and a car will call for you at ever-progressi- ng ft Schol hotel( Hotel without extra charge. M operate under the supervision of the Public Utilities Commi Utah and we carry full insurance protection for all our passeng We Stt. '.own ! I wi (the I?1 t- One way to avoid paying high prices for clover and seed this spring is to lime the ground and sow alfalfa. See your local dealer and county agent 1 Bingham Stage Line Co. - th - Vn ptUr |