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Show DAILY UNCLE JOSEPH IS SKIES FOR EUROPE TAKES TRIP for REST and SWEET SUMO Already Mad His Plans For Ths Joseph Pulitzer, Owner of The New York World, Celebrating his BirthNtxt Season Will Produce Some Some Revive of and ths day Cams to Un.tod States Forty Mw Operas Years Ago an Indigent Immigrant. Oid Ones. to-jg- - null for ivt and recuperatfr Funie have worked hard all during my illness, too. and two and a half hour a day I have been at the teleImphone, a practice which materially peded my progress toward absolute recovery. 1 now feel well enough to work again, and In fact 1 would have gone down to the performance of Tristan and Isolde" had not an attack of stomach trouble Intervened. Mr. Conned was amused at the number and complexion of numerous successors that had .been in Imagination recently appointed to take his place. ion. 1 SUNDAY SCHOOLS. KRIISN'O, Cal April 10. The fortieth annual California Sunday School convent inn waa formally Inaugurated this afternoon with a missionary conRyference. at which the Rev. A. der. suierlntendent of the Baptist Foreign Missionary Society of the Pacific toast, presided. Among the dieting, uisheil speakers on todays program are Bishop William M. Bell, of Berkeley, the Rev. Dwight E. Potter of Oakland tand Riv. Dr. Erwin S. Chapman, n ifViil of the California Thia evening a welcome nteenltig will be held, with an address liy Hun. A. M. Drew of Fresno and a by the Rev. J. E. Squires, respeiixe Several lresii'.ent of the asoclation. sell known Sunday school workers from oilier states will speak during the of the convention, Including three ila Mr J. W'oodhrtdge Barnes of Newark, X. J.. international elementary grades and A. H. Crons of Cleveland. Ohio. The attendance la unusually large and there Is every prospect t'lut the fortieth convention will go down in histojy as the greatest In the history of the association. CALIFORNIA sup-,-rlii- Anti-Saloo- MADE AN AMAZING MIXUP. 9 Gustr Assortment of Married Couples In Hungary. NEW YORK. April lii Joseph Pulit-t-- r. proprietor of the New York Wurl.l und one of the outstanding figures in the Journalism of the V tilted State, was sixty years old l inlay. It lacks but one of forty years since Mr. Pulitzer, then a raw Hungarian immigrant, first took up newspaper work, and the work and strain of the years that follow, have begun to tell upon the veteran editor. He has aged visibly In the past few years and frequently he finds it necessary to take an absolute rest front his labors. For ten years nr longer he has been a sufferer from nervous prostration, and added to this has been the more grievous calamity of failing eyesight. Mr. Pulitier has tieen In control of The World since 18S3. In his esrller years he had experienced all the hardships of life. When he arrived in the 1'nited States, after undergoing various trials In his native Hungary and in France and England, he was a poor young wanderer less than twenty years of age. He earned a living as best he could. When the civil war broke out he entered the artny of the I'nlon as a cavalryman In a Missouri regiment, served in it till peace was declared, returned to New York, and then, aa he himself has often told, worked at anything that turned up. getting Ills food In the cheapest eating houses and sleeping sometimes on p btm h in u public park. Finally he went back to Missouri, where, after working some time as r waiter, he found employment as a reporter for a Rt. Lout German newspaper and after a time was elected to the legislature. He still better known, and a short time later ventured Into the newspaper business on his own account. Hnvijig made some money nut of hi Rt. Louis iaper be came to New York once more and secured possession of The World. Into this he threw all his qualities of hustle" and energy. The result was that at fifty years of uge Mr. Pulitier had won the sueeesa which he desired, the fortune which routes with siici-k- s and the power which cotnes with fortune. - e RAFFLES COW TO BUY LEG. Ingenious Schema of a Man Disabled by a Train. If skin than years cork After being employed for 40 si valet to the mala companion of hla own wife, a man named Ruxlaka, once vsslthy, but now pennlleas and Imbecile, bas been received Into the municipal workhouse of the town of Agnm, In Hungary. Ruilska, left an orphan with a good deal of property, married in 186S Camilla Ostvtc, a linger. Returning from tha churcb, the bride introduced her husband to Dr. Theodor 8parcek, a lawyer. Sparcek brushed the bridegroom aide and walked on ahead, enjoying e a with the bride. In a little while he turned to the bridegroom and informed him that be (Dr. Sparcek) and the bride were going on a tete-a-tet- honeymoon trip. The d rightful might come, too, If he acted aa valet Tha huiband'a poor wits aeem to have been scattered forever by the announcement He was helpless, and accompanied hie wife on hue-han- her elope-oen- t In this manner all three lived ucventfully until 1885, when the oman died. Dr. Sparcek then lost no time in finding a new wife," bnt cemed disinclined to marry himself, under threat! of dismissal from his valetahlp, ths Imbecile waa obliged to Co through the marriage ceremony for the aecond time. Another 21 years paaied quietly, when suspicion waa aroused by Sparcek selling Ruilskaa Properties. The guilty lawyer then Bed with the second Mme. Ruilska, Moving bin unfortunate valet" absol- utely penniless. He Got Hie. "where yon beenT growled Mr. Tltewifld. Downtown," answered bis ie. What hep' you?" Oh, I met uoman that I havent seen for ten mro." Urn." She didnt look a T older, While however, yon rV. lwn co Eround down that aba know you, I pose?" snarled the churlish husband. "Oh, yes, she 7new in a minute. Recognised me oy my bonnet, you know. Then the subsided. ;nt D NOT NEGLECT A BAD COLD. Kevtv allow a cold to take Ite course. Too often, at this season of the year, i? course la towards pneumonia, uamberlaln's Cough Remedy will Promptly cure your cold and counteract any tendency in this direction. Twjre la nothing better for acute throat aa lung troubles. For sale by all wueviBta CUD THE FAMOUS JOURNALIST IS STILL HALE AND HEARTY. April 10. Heinrich SEW YORK. ronrhil. manager vt the Metropolitan nun House, sailedwasfornotEurope for,.. He said he going already work, but for rest, 1 have next season, includim4jt, ,ny plans for art-ng engagements of the celebrated the production of some new uperae. and the revivals of some old I have been at work upon them (.nesfrr the past few weeks. Even the casts fir the next year are in certain im 1 shall purtant caaea already made. UTAH STATE JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY. APRIL there la more than one way to a cat there ia certainly more one way In which to acquire n leg. The usual way ia to earn money and buy it, aaya the New York World. The way adopted by Julius Thorne, who lives at Glena Falla, la to let a cow raise herself and then raffle her off for a leg. Thorne wu hit by a railroad train about a year ago, and when the doctors cut off his left leg, a disease of the bone act in. The Injured man was taken home, where, while he lay on bis back waiting for the bone to heal, ha east about for some means whereby he could procure a cork leg. Being supplied with little In the way of the world's goods. Thorn waa forced to use his Ingenuity. From neighbor he bought for a couple of a sickly calf less than a month dollars ' old. This hs raised on skimmed milk provided by another neighbor who made hla own butter, and in time the calf got strong enough to be turned out to pasture. Orating around coat little, and while the calf waa growing and fattening Thorne made basketa that ha might have enough cash to winter the nlnmnl. By fall he had earned enough to more than do thia, and recently he atarted a raffle. All hie frienda took tickets, and when the drawing takes place Thorne will celebrate by wearing bla new cork leg. Belle Led to Burglars Capture. Nocturnal clock striking and too much of It baa enabled the Paris police to lay their handa upon a gang of burglars and their very, valuable booty. The Inhabitants of a house la the Faubourg du Temple quarter, complaining to the police that for some him put they bad heard an extraordinary amount of what sounded like electric bell ringing in the night time, that eeemed to come from noma In a certain direction, the police first verified the fact for themselves and then raided the rooms. Here they found two men busily engaged in testing a number of timepieces, of which they hud stolen 200 from a manufacturers warehouse, and were selling aa tested. CANT HAND TO BILLY HI FOR CHATTANOOGA IN GLAD RAGS TO DR. WELCOME BOY ORATOR. 10. 1907. NAMES V.lEY CANT HELP OUT, HE SAYS. ONE NIGHT ONLY THEM . GRATTAN liA, N1 April i(l All i'liaiiaunt.pii dm.ii,., i lls rjg, addr today and ul u-railway York T.-iu- t as. , station to pi-- . an enlltusustuto Wii! lam J. ,!ryi,. a the t ..f t hiat it- - .iimuul fliati.m,,ga Hryan buttqui I R.mir .if in,- - ihmm dlatli.Ruiahed IcsnltTx ,if ihsouthern D, 'hit'll in tinin honor of tin- X,brak.in. Tin- dinner will be a feast of sii , orat-.rfarina, k. Ta;.ir i.inl Frazier I'l'iigt-t--nia. McMillan and - h.-r- r uel-cun- n- - t?ii-'-- - nun-racy - - - . n M"--u- fox. ninny otln-- r uished south, Tiler will b,- pies.-n-distingt and respond to Governor B. B. funii-,.f Ahib.iiua ill nak on "No Gniitliet Hetw . i n Stilt,- - and Federa! Regulation of Kailroude"; Joint Temple Grave, edit.'! ,,t Atlanta Georgian and New and a a orator, will di- -. tixx rite Pros-peI.f Demo, Ia. y". lion. it. f. Manoi of Montgomery. Al.t. will have for hb aubj.i't Time Make Truth Triumph; Him. John T. ToiiihiiHon of ltirtning-tn- n - . u. et will etni-id- Tlte Aitterietin er - g f Crooodlls Captured Slava Trader. The trade In slaves has entirely cessed in Sokoto, but in Ranchi there was s recrudescence of It, due to famine, the people preferring to sen themselves ns slaves rather than starve children were drowned." Men A Comedy in lie-lo- w r iiuinu-fsctui- ofTo-da- y. peg-top- spindle-shanke- knock-knee- Clumbers Grant Mitchell Charles Lamb Roland II. Hill Rosalie Do Yaux Isabel Richards Prices.. $2, 1.50, $1, 75c, 50c, 25c UTAHNA THEATRE i- chi-cK- Direct ioa M'LUVAN CONMHHNE It. A. tiRANT.rOeaeral NEW SHOW SATURDAY tin-stat- e I cln-es- e AFTERNOON AT 2:30 1 DON'T MISS THIS by SEVEN In this country the banana la regarded mostly as a food product, but In the West Indies the natives find a use fur the entire tree, and well It serves Its many purposes. When the young coffee and cocoa plants need protection from the fierce rays of tho sun banana leaves give the desired shelter. Physicians and nurses use the tender, unopened leaves for dressings, and the old leaves are made into twine and boxes. In Malay the stalks and leaves are made Into a soap for. laundry pur poses, and n solution forma a valuable salt. From banana Juice and the akin of the fruit a preparation la made for blackening purposes and the Juice also makes a good indelible ink. On the under aide of a banana leaf a wax forms which is very valuable and is one of the export products of In some counthe island of Java. tries a dye stuff la produced from the ashes of the fruit and leaves and the banana fiber is used in making manlla hemp, from which rope and In manufactured. are cordage Switzerland a very fine hat braid la made from thia manlla hemp. From these example! it is readily seen what an important plane the banana holds in the world of commerce. nmu Buy Your Spring Suit Our new Spring and Summer goods are all draed for your selection and they are beauties too. Kvery imaginable tdiade and weave is in the collection, and they are brand new so come in at once and look them over. Greys and blues prevail, but we have innumerable other colors also, so that you will have no trouble finding something to please you. e Prices range from $20.00 up the days are six months long; ao are the nights. Just think what a blessing that would be to some of us. Why, if one of my creditors came to me and said: Berry, I want you to pay up that 810 you owe me, It wouldnt bother me in the least My dear fellow, I would reply, come around day after and 111 pay you, and then I wouldnt hear any more of him for twelve monlbs. and ALL GOOD Matinee Every Day this Week at 3:30 Until Friday. Change of Dill Saturdaynatime2:30 p. m. to-da- y read, ACTS TWO PERFORMANCES EVERY EVENING AT 7;30 AND 9:15 d Gee-whi- by Kellett Eugene Ormonde Jolm Flood Fred L. Tiden Fred Tyler Kate Griffith - elu-es- Three Acta A Splendid Company Including said Ifr. Simpson, editor of the American Gentleman, trousers are trousers and there are no new ideas possible in them. We've had the . The baggy trousers and the normal has now been attained and we're going to stick to it Knee breeches? Oh, my, no! Youll never see them In America not . even for evening dress. The trouble is that the modern city man Is too to wear and And It's not them with distinction. One Advantage of a Long Night only the city mans legs that are de"The Land of the Midnight Sun teriorating in grace and strength. It's a well known fact among tailors that was a subject assigned to Judge Ber Is physically inferior nr at a feast shortly before his last the man of to his grandfather. It's the extension sickness, aaya the Boston Herald. "The Land of the Midnight Bun! of transit facilities and elevator aerv-lothat la ruining him. Nowadays !( he exclaimed. "Ah, gentlemen, I find a man has any flesh It's under his that a most inspiring subject In the land of the midnight sun, I've waistband. You see, 99 chi-iHe- . Product of Entirs Tres Utilized West Indian Natives. Ten years ago, It la recalled, the entire Angus tribe sold themselves into slavery, hut when the famine la over they take the first opportunity to desert In the province ot Murl famine gave a great Impetus to the trade in children, who were sold for food. One grim incident la recorded: The canoes," says the report, "travel by night and are concealed by day. One, which wu discovered in a backwater, with 22 children on board, was pushed out Into midstream by the traders and apparently purposely capsized. The slave traders swam for the bank, but one wu held by the leg by a crocidile and captured; 12 d THE BUTTERFLY MANY U8E8 OF THE BANANA. si freemen. Spindle-Shanke- iiii-in- in-,-- ! fon-tituti"- and Adjutant Gruei-a- l llibb Graven of Alabama will pettk on "Tile fltlzeii Soldiery. Mr. Hryan liun been traveling almost constantly for several mouths. He to plan spend the latter half of the month in touring ti.e New England Staten, stopping ift Washington next Sunday to deliver an address under the nuspiees of tin- - Loyal legion on the anniversary of the death of Ir. sident Lincoln. This sp.tch will in- entirely but tin- - Nrhrnskan is preparing to make it one of the greatest efforts of his career, tin April IS he will begin his N.-England speech-makinin onne.'ticut, following with a tour of Massachusetts. Hhoil,. Island. ermont, New Hampshire and Maine. llth LILLIAN RUSSELL YuiiK. April it). -- In a to l hr r of the New t trade. Dr. Wiley. oMei.il cheiM't .f the lVariii,'iit of Agriculture, ' 'it, to certain questions coverof certain style ing Hi, 1 have no of authority to fix names inudc of milk which does not haie tlte standard qua nit y of fat. Milk who,- - fat fall th,- required amount is regarded a skimin. ! milk or adulterated, whether It U entirely skimmed or not. When milk Horn which the cream lia been partly it moved ia Used In making it, jf course, doe not represent the standard t As recognized as such. to tin suugestii'ii that 'hII cheese nut up to tin- standard lie hrainled a sklmni-- d milk chei-ne- . it would lie misbranding. a containing Sn cent of milk fat is not skimmed milk cheese uny more than It is a full cream cheese. 1 think that you mistake the meaning of the term. Skimmed milk la skinnneil milk, even If all the fat lias not l- n used. The monn-ii- t any porill,- milk is removed the residue tion becomes skimmed milk. In the standard lor elieese you will see that skim ined milk cheese would Iv the proper designii ion for the article of which you xtik. You will notice that the word "iit-aior full crt-aiia not used in the standard for elieese. since are misleading. I think those no objection can Im- - rali-- to the of from skimmed milk, and It is doubtless better In Home climates than that made from unskimmed milk, Lmt it should not he represented as cheese without some qualifying word. Then- - Ik iio doubt in my mind that tlie national law a well a aw, Intends that the eiisloiuer shall he nntilli-whether made "f skimnud milk or not. km .1 THURSDAY. APRIL Joseph Brooks Presents Tennessee Town Proposes to Give The Offic Cftcunt of Ths Dcpart-nan- t of Nebraskan Greatest Time of his Lifo Agi'Cu'trc Dec'ines to Interfere W.h bo Wined and Dined Sly Has no Authority to Fix Tho Many Orators on Tho Program. Name cf Choose Made of Milk. Art Values. . Mr. Joshby (in front of fake art doTwenty-fou- r atore) llars and fifty cents fer that there picture an its marked down from one hundred an' twenty-fiv- e dollars at that! I wonder what makes it ao dear? Mrs. Joshby Why, dont yew see that there other sign on It that ? Mr. Joshby us That's what puzslei me; I could easy More Laurels for the Hen. understand them askin that much fer A Chicago man has discovered that It if it wux painted by some armless white of egg la a sure care for cancer wonder. Puck. when applied directly. If thia la true; the American hen ia a greater beneSuccessful Faith Tsa. factor to the human race thaa has A faith tea wu held at Bwanage, been supposed." England, In connection with a temperorance mission No provisions were DO NOT BE INFLUENCED. dered, hut thou attending were to Never hesitate to say no to your have faith and trust that the necessary Capacity of New York Hotels. If ho offers you a substitute for On some extraordinary occasions, food would be sent In. So generous dealer Chamberlains Cough Remedy. It hss nearly 2,000 people have been dined wu the supply that'not only waa there no equal on ths market for Ite prompt and reetauranta addsimultaneously In the enough for tea, but a supper wu cures of coughs, colds, croup and ed later In the evening, and the scrip- whooping cough, and you make no banquet halla of the Belmont At the Hotel Aster, 920 banqueters were en- tural basketfuls were left over for dis- mistake in buying this medicine. For sale by all druggists. tribution among the poor. tertained In one room. WE Grand Opera House I VOW CHEESE Intermountain Tailoring Co. 172 TWENTY-FIFT- H STREET "hand-painted- SUGGEST I J. B. DOOLY, President. 5 JOSEPH S. PEERY, Vice-Pr- ea RALPH E. HOAO. Cashier. A. Y. MdNTOSH, Asst Cashier. I S The UTAH NATIONAL BANK I I OF OGDEN UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY Interest Paid on Savinas Accounts and Time Deposits S I j JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY THAT YOU TRY A |