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Show DAILY STATE JOURNAL, ARE SUGAR KING CHRISTIAN IS UTAH EIGHTY-SI- PARTY CLAIM OTHER PRODUCTS SAID TO MORE PROFITABLE. THE CREDIT? WILL REPUBLICAN DANISH RULER. Claims That G. O. P. Peas, Tomatoes and Small Oldest of World's Monarcht Gathsrs Correspondent Claimed to Produce Better Legislation Is Responsible for His Family of Royaltios turns Per Acre. Financial Depression. Around Him. PAXOUITCH, Garfield Co., April 2, April 8. In the COPENHAGEN. State Journal: Just midst of a fiimlly gathering of kings 1904. To the Utah the to to let u line people know through and quwna dukes and duchesses, of of medium your paper that we are the say nothing of numerous royalties at the prospects of plenty of lesser degree, the venerable King rejoicing of the state., I supthis in water rulers part world's Christian, dean of all the of the g. p. adherents the roythat ather-in-law of pose European and well, for credit h this; they claim eighty-sixtwill his alty," celebrated today Prince need to claim credit for something. Crown Resides birthday. Frederick and Prince Valdemar, who Times are harder and money scarcer are residents of Copenhagen, the fam- than It was In the time of Grover call this Reily party Included King Christians Cleveland and yet they of the poliFew his of Greece, second son. King George publican prosperity. the deof attribute of that ticians party daughters, the Dowager Empress to the corrupCumberland of the times of Duchess pression Russia, the and Queen Alexandra of England, the tion of their organisation; some of latter being accompanied by King Ed- them are so imrtlsan as to say that ward and Princess Charles of Den- the prospects of the election in the coming fall with a fear that the Demmark. There have been reports of late that ocrats may win causes the financiers the old kings health is exceedingly to hoard up their money and to make rs Such narrow minded precarious, and some of the rumor-monge- money scarce. as to so see fall even that the g. o. p., by to far gone have people of has mental a from its state that, encouraged extrav-agunc- e, point legislation, senile from the poor of Into a taken state und fallen has he has view, The price of rich. are the to and These absolutely reports given decay. a -f- without foundation, os any person may every necessary of the laboring class testify who has had the pleasure of has been raised and the price of things which the honest toiler produces has in meeting him. Some months ago he was rather seri- many Instances been lowered. Will they come in again on the cry ously 111, but his splendid and marvelto enabled him ous physique pull of Republican good times?" As I unand all today, though derstand the foundation of our governright through not far from the ninetieth milestone of ment. it Is established upon these rocks 'of the people, for the people, and by life's Journay, is in the full enjoyment of excellent health. Those who the peopIe.j JOHN E. MYERS. see him dally in the grounds about FTedensborg or on his way to the riding school cannot "be but Impressed CATHOLIC PILGRIMAGE TO THE HOLY LAND by his soldierly bearing and still handsome face and figure. Far from being In a state of mental LONDON. April 8t A pilgrimage to collapse, as reported, the old king still the Holy Land, beaded by the Bishop looks after the affairs of his kingdom of Shrewsbury and the Bishop of with as keen and watchful an eye as Waterford, and Including over fifty ever he did. Rising at his customary priests and several hundred laymen, early hour he has a solitary break will leave England next week. The fast and after, a turn in the gardens pilgrimage Is claimed to be the first 8 o'clock invariably finds him perusing of modern times under exclusively Ro the newspapers. State business is the man Catholic auspices. A service will be held In Westminnext item on the program, and by 11 oclock the king wishes to be alone, ster cathedral Monday, the day prior With his lighted cigar he takes his to the departure of the pilgrims, when stand at the ground floor window of Archbishop Bourne will . solemnly the castle to watch the parade and re- bless the pilgrimage flag which will be lief of the soldiers on guard. He scru- taken by the pilgrims to the Holy tinises his guards with the skilled eye Land. of an old soldier and the smallest !r The Journey Is expected to occupy about six weeks. regularity cannot escape him. As before stated, there is not the slightest foundation for the reports NEMESIS OF THE TICKET SCALPERS that the king is "fast breaking up" and that his death may be looked for at any NEW YORK, April 8. A movement time. It is true, however, that In de on foot to reorganise the Railroad is ference to the wishes of his family, he Protective bureau, alpdnltgshrdluuu has shifted a part of the burdens of state to the shoulders of the crown Protective bureau, placing it on better foundation and making It a prince. In anticipation of the day, which cannot be far distant when his permanent institution. The bureau in own hand must release the reins of its war on scalpers has saved the railroads many hundreds of thousands of government dollars. Several brokers have been Wong de Chin have purchased the convicted and sent to the penitentiary, Imperial restaurant on Twenty-fift- h injunctions have been secured in sevstreet and will conduct it in absolutely eral cities restraining illegal traffic in style. Patronage of ladles transportation and the issuing of and gentlemen Is solicited. tickets has been made safer. WONG ft CHIN. vastly first-cla- It, Doesnt, : ss pfDiNMIDGRANQf Cost Anything TRE BEST CROP? X notable anniversary of the BEETS FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1901 BY NOTED DESCRIPTION LISH WRITER. BE TO GET OUR PRICES ON LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATH AND BUILDING MATERIALS OF ALL KIND3, AND ENG- Fruits It Has Made the Japanese the Most Patriotic Race in the World. Japan la a country of religious d Intermedia Points, dally... To Save Yourself Money Atlantic No. con- Oregon Lumber t Lno-do- rYES' SHAfiMAN S S?g COAL- Lindquist - 1 5c Ribbon Drcxel Building Philadelphia, Pa. 812 8us: Saturday, April 9tti ' Rgsrdlng your Radium treatment and your wonderful remedy, Radios." Avenue. As BKXTON, General Acent pwtment, Balt iikeCity. Hi !. C. A. HENBY, Ticket Agent, Ogden. O. B. GIIBOX, Agent, Ogden. TIME CARD No. 9 No. 7 in Effcet Nov. 22, 19flJ Depart for North of Ogden. Pocatello and Butte Express, dally i:i5i.m Fast Mail for tello toUy and Poca- Portland, U:55i.m Cache Valley Express, dally 7:15p.m. Arrive from North Ogdsn. No. 8 Fast Mall from Portland and Butte, dally 7:44a.m No. 12 Cache Valley Ex10:50am press, dally No. 10 Pocatello Express, No. 11 No. Nq. No. No. No. 5:14 p.m. dally of South for Ogden, Depart 8 From Portland, Butte and Pocatello, for Salt 7:14am. Lake City 4 Local to Salt Lake 1:14am City 12 Cache Valley to Salt 10:45am Lake City 2 Limited for Salt Lake 8:45pm City, daily 10 From Portland and for Salt Pocatello Lake City, dally 5:55pm Arrive from South of Ogdsn. Butte and Pocatello No. 9 from Salt Express Intermand Lake City ediate points, dally. ...12:45am No. 3 Atlantic Express from Salt Lake City and intermediate 7:00am points, dally No. 7 Pocatello and Port- - . from land Express No. 1 Salt Lake City, dally. 11 :Mam Fast Mail from Salt Lake City, daily No. 11 Cache Valley Express from 8alt Lake City, daily , 1:04pm. 4:55 p tr?aw TIME CARD, No. Not No. 8 2 4 In effect Nov. ft I01 DEPART. Mall and Express... Oveland United Omaha, Council City Denver, Kansas and East, dally Atlantic Expres tor Denver, Omaha, Council Bluffa Kansas City and all points dally arrive 2 . a Fast Mail Ticket C. A. HENRY. H. CORSE Tmvtflng City Disease . v. I, 'Address Stats . - Kama The Leader Millinery Prop. Washington 2351 rM Through Blesnt ng No. 101 Kindly send ms free of cost Information ONLY MRS. E. C. LYON, vS1 daily ..u-- s Pacific Express frora Council Bluff. Oman. Denver, Kansas CW and east, dally No. 1 OveUndLimltedfrmn Omaha. Council Bluna Kansas City. and all points ean, J;WpiB. dally ..is n, a RADIOS CO. 20c UBl from point No. FREE OFFER! No. FREE OFFERI That Tvas 30c and 35c mm. per yard 1 Ml- Denver. Pueblo. alt Ake city VUir aU east Well-Know- FREE OFFER!. p aclfie u, ATS TVrprfm fm,, No. 6 Pacific Limited EWt Lake City, Denver and all IVovo. points east, dally No. Mall RADIUM HU arrive.' gv2uPubl0 630-- Hats that Tbere from $1.00 to $3.00, That was 20c and 25c nefo. per yard Pacific X AND Ribbon No. Y C. J. A. lnU east, daily. 1.. : Cor-telyo- ,:Ui ! Limited Lake fusion, and within its borders BuddhCo Utah & and ism, Confucianism, Shintoism 143 24th Street Phone 561 Christianity all struggle for supremacy. It possesses, however, a bond of moral unity In Bushido, the knightly code of Japanese chivalry, which has existed. for hundreds of years. "Bushido Is the , Soul of Japan, n says Alfred Stead, a writer in the I WILL SAVE YOU MONEY Monthly Review, "productive of and animating all forms and ex pres slons of Japanese religions. Whatever Railroad or Steamship Tickets be the diversity of sect a common To All Parts of the World meeting ground Is found in Bushido, since it is simply the fundamental vitality, untrammeled by dogma, from which all the moral parts of religion, as distinct from the belief in the divine, HIALY HOUSE. OFF. DEPOT Phone 161 Z has sprung." The same writer goes on to cite the following description of Backed by the American Ticket Bushido from the pen of Professor Broker's Association Inazo KItobe, a well known Japanese scholar: "Bushido is the code of moral principles which the knights were required or instructed to observe. It is not a written code; at best it consists of a few maxims handed down from mouth to mouth or coming from the GOOD, CLEAN COAL-A- NY pen of some well known warrior or KIND PBOMPT-Lsavant More frequently it is a code DELIVERED. unwritten and unuttered, possessing all the more the powerful sanction of Sole Agents for the veritable deed, and of a law written on the fleshly tablets of the heart Anthracite Coal It was founded, not on the creation of one brain, however able, nor on the life of a single personage, however reSHURTUFF COAL CO. nowned. It was an organic outgrowth . i of decades and centuries of military 2041 AND 2407 OFFICES career. It perhaps, fills the same po AVENUE. 'WASHINGTON sltion in the history of ethics that the English constitution does In political TELEPHONE 18-OR 18-AJAX. history; yet it has nothing to compare with the Magna Charts or the habeas Ogden, April 7, 1904. corpus act True, early in the seven POLITICAL AND 80CIAL teenth century military statutes (Buke SCIENTISTS IN SESSION Hatto) were promulgated; but their thirteen short articles were taken up UNDERTAKER PHILADELPHIA Pa., April 8. The mostly with marriages, castles, EMBALMER and Ameriof annual the and didactic etc., eighth meeting leagues, regulations Open All Night. Telephone can Academy of Political and Social were but merely touched upon. 3620 Washington Ave. Ogden, Utah. Science began here today. "We cannot therefore, point out any This years meeting is devoted to ad- definite time and place, and say, Here dresses upon the topic of the govern- is its fountain head. Only as it atment in its relation to industry, and tains consciousness in the feudal age, more than the usual number of dis- its origin in respect to time, it may be tinguished Americans will make ad- Identified with feudalism. But feudal dresses at the several sessions. ism Itself is woven of many Jhreada, RADIOS RADI08 RADI08 The session this evening will be de- and Bushido shares Its intimate navoted to the annual address, which ture. n Stupendous Offer Made by a will be delivered by George B. The essential principal enunciated by secretary of commerce and Bushido are few and simple. ForePhila. Firm. labor, on the subject "Some Agencies most on the list is rectitude, or Justice, for the Extinction of our Domestic which is ranked as the highest of all RADIOS RADI08 and Foreign Trade. Other promi- virtues. Filial piety and duty are RADIOS nent speakers to be heard during the mentioned next. Thirdly we come to meeting, which will continue through courage, to benevolence and piety. Thousand of Persona in all 8eetione of tomorrow, are James M. Beck, former Bushl no nasake the tenderness of a the Country Have Been Healed by assistant attorney-genera- l: Frank P. warrior has always been considered of immigra- superior to ordinary tenderness Sargent, commissioner or This Wonderful Discovery. tion; Professor F. A. Cleveland of mercy, since it Implies mercy with a New York university, and William B. due regard for justice also. Politeness Every educated person has heard of Ridgely, controller of the currency. and respect for the feelings of others are insisted upon by all the followers Radium, Its wonderful powers and Early seed potatoes. Skeen ft Co, healing qualities have occupied page at SS2 Twenty-fourt- h (Continued on Page 7.) street ter page in the' metropolitan publications. Almost everybody knows that It is the greatest remedy that God has ever given to suffering humanity. Disease germs of every description flee before it they cannot stand the contact We have such faith In our proposition that we guarantee absolutely to cure you. What is mors we will give you a written contract to that effect This offer has never been duplicated. Fill out the blank below and mark the malady from which you are suffering and receive by return mall information that will be worth hundreds of dollars to you. Ask any banking firm regarding our responsibility. STREET LakTSBxitn4 . Upointe east0 THEREBY Re- To the Utah State Journal: In on of your contemporaries there appeared last FTiday an editorial entitled, "Ad vice to Beet Growers," which read k good deal like an advertisement fof beet contracts. We don't know Just what direct lnj terest the editor of the publication referred to may have in saying that the growing of sugar beets is "more profitable than any other crop," that the records show it, that "there is no . getting away from the fact" etc. We do know that there are othei crops grown in Utah that are equally profitable, and some much more so, notably the growing of peas. We have In mind a crop grown by K. C, Bennett, of 8,000 pounds to the acre, for which he received two cents tier pound or $160 an acre in cash In July and had the land In use again that season for late crops. In fact, the average income from the growing of peas in this section Is from $80 to $100 per acre, and the labor of growing and harvesting this crop is only a fractional part of that of handling beets.' While what we have said about peas is worthy of note, it is also a fact that tomatoes are a very profitable crop probably more so than beets a yield of ten to twelve tons is not unusual and the price, $8 per ton, gives the grower of the famous love apple" an income of $80 to $100 per acre. In treating this subject it would also be well for our farmer friends to investigate the profits in the growing of small fruits and berries. Our country Is admirably adapted to these and the profits per acre are so large that "Mr. Beet would have to be solid sugar to be In the race with them at alL WdewMh! If h cannot supply W |