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Show Utalf Slat? Jlanntal OGDEN, UTAH Journal Publishing Ce. ...Publishers (Incorporated.) Published every evening except Sunday. Telephones. Business Office , Bell lud. Editorial Rooms ....Bell Ind. By By By By By ill I ring 9941 64 t MW ring rings rings TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. mall one year mall six months mail three months .' mall one month carrier one month 6M UO IJO JO JO to the CERTAINLY most important la the question of issuing 990.000 worth of School bonds, for the purpose of , erecting a new High school building. This la the moat equitable way to pay for n public building for much the greater part of the rnt Is paid by large property holders. and thus of limited means have no cause aha lever to complain for such an outlay. While kiss fact that the poor as well as the rich hsv the same school advantages, the larger property holder la th one who is really taxed in this case for the school , building. O.DEX PROJECT. has. turned down the smelter which it was fondly hoped by the Independents could be located there, says the White Pine (Kev.) News Ogden proper wanted and wants the smelter, but the farmers tneivabuuts have put objection in such form that there Is no hope for Ogden to get what It wants In this matter. Both the Ogden people and the Independent smelter advocates are aura and full to overflowing with understanding of the obstinacy that the average farmer can develop at the rate of about a million pounds pressure to the square Not only Inch on slight provocation. Lane and Salt the Ogden valley farmers are arrayed against the smelters, however. The opposition of the tillers of the soil la widespread. Here In this ramp, the possibilities of opposition on the part of the farmer waa taken Into consideration before tba first shovelful of earth was moved to make way for the foundations of reduction works, and with wisdom that looks better every day for the pocketboolu of those Interested In Cumberland Ely and Nevada Consolidated sufficient ground was secured around tha smelter site to make certain that the future could bring up no litigation because of alleged damage from smoke or other alleged nuisances in connection with smelter operations On the great tract of land which was thus secured, and where the facilities afforded for smelting operations are considered as good as nature could have provM. had the tank been net down to receive her best efforts, then la room for Increase without limit In the rise of the plants now being erected and no end of room for the erection of other plants where they would be safe from Interference or Interruption In operations.. Those smelting concerns which are finding It necessary that they leave Utah and California find It highly advantageous to look Whether Into the situation here. others come or not, we have the great smelting center of the West building rapidly here, but the more hands helping with tha work the better. Pay Ne Money te Carriers. We presume everybody will believe matter at Entered as second-clas- s the postofflce at Ogdrn, Uuh, under that the present school accommodaAct of Congress of March I, 1979. tions are entirely inadequate to meet the demand, and th only question Is B. A. BOWMAN.. ..General Manager. as to the cost, for people of limited mesne heetltate to Incur a liability NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. without fully considering the matter. Tou should receive your paper not Etr this purpose it la proposed by later than l:(i p. to. If not received CM will the and It hoard of education to Issue at that hour call Pb'me be sent to you by special messenger. worth of school bonds and the Pay ns money te carriers sr ether rate of taxation will be S3 cents on the collectors unlsss they present creden11.000. Now the rate of taxation will tial from the undersigned. Under ne eireumetances will earners bo on the. assessed value, which Is er col lectors be allowed te take Steps. nearly always very much below the All netieee of this kind must bo given actual value. te thie offioe direct er by letter, er in It will be readily aeen and underperson, er phone 604. one ring. stood that this very, nominal taxation JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. will not be felt by the very poorest By B. A. BOWMAN, General Manager, cltlxen of this section. If a man be actually worth 95,000 he will pay only 91.00 and In order for his tax to amount to even a few dollars the assessed OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY value of hie property must be at least 910,000 and even above this amount Speaking of poaalbllitleo, achat a Tbs Importance of this matter canrevival-lat- a splendid team of not be overestimated, and It Is hoped Roosevelt and 'Bryan would make and believed that tba peopl will hear, working In double harness. tlly support the board In their effort to Women can now wear glass dreeeee, erect a more building for If they cars to pay the price, but no the interest! of the children demand It, mere man need get the Idea that It will The present ascomm adatlniu are nut make it easier to aeo through them. sufficient and if the boys and girls have Wo read a lot about the "moral the best attention. It la necessary that awakening" of the people, yet. on ana- this nsw building be erected. The lysing horns conditions, we find that a present crowded condition of the High great many men are still dodging the school should not continue and the payment of their Just ovule. to is for the It only way prevent Well, It Is, after all, about the usual board to have authority to Issue these thing for men headed off In their rush bonds. THOSE PLACES OF for the pie counter to abuse the man PUBLIC RESORT. who did the heeding, though such abuse PHYSICIANS WHO DID counts for mighty little with the pub Ogden, Feb. 31. 1908. NOT CURE THEMSELVES. lie. Editor Utah State Journal! Tha Btata Journal ought to be proud If Trank Hitchcock can live up to the MR. WILLIAM PEPPER, In a most Utah of its fifty thousand dollars suit When advance advertising given him as the paper presented at a the time comes that a city can furnish ever recent meelny of the Philadelphia a court and a greatest political manager that Jury to convict a newsroped a delegate to a national conven- County Medical society, discussed the or anybody or anything, for trypaper, one wonbe the hell of world's tion, causes of death of eminent physicians ing to keep young people from temptaders He stated that Laennec fell a victim tion, for trying to direct young and unTh moot energetic department or to a dlseas the nature of which he tried feet along the path of safety, for trying to lift the social status onto a bureau of the Federal government la had taken pains to describe. Lands! higher level, then such a city ta hi a that of forestry. Th man at the head of It has certainly taken to heart the and Corvlaart died of diseased heart bad way. Even a of person would not "Woodman, injunction, apart that and Boyle sank under the ravages tree, and la determined that others the disease of which h had been the suppose that people go to a skating rink, or a public dance, or other places shall head H. moat successful Illustrator. Blr Ben of recreation to perform orgies and died According to a "feature" writer, the Jamln Brodla, th great surgeon, practice unprintable lewdneae in the senate has twenty-on- e multimillionaires of cancer of hie right shoulder Joint glare of the lights and under the public and eleven millionaires, and the house Dupuytrrn, the most famous Burgeon eye; but that they do go to those places eight ot the first and six of the last, of th last century, died of an empjr without a chaperone, and after being their combined wealth being 9391.500,-00with the whirl of the skating an opera- satiated It'a dollars to pumpkin seeds that (ms. Refusing to submit to rink, or tha dance hall, that they do go these guesses are not baaed on the tax tion. he said that he "would rather to restaurants and there drink wine, or books of the state theae gentlemen end hie life through God's hand than cocktails, and from thence to some represent that of a eurgeon." In more recent rooming house or place of assignation, times Mllkutlcx, who wrote on cancer and there are plenty of them handy Comptroller of the Currency Rldgely, enough, le a matter of public notoriety, In hie reply to George U. Coffin, re- of the stomach, himself fell a victim and If the State Journal, or any other proaches him for having been a wit' to this disease. Fowler of Brooklyn, newspaper. Is too cowardly to direct atneea for the defense on the trial of having written on appendicitis, died tention to the shame of it all, then John R. Walsh and elating on oath of this disease. On memorial tablet that newspaper should cease to exist. th (hat the practices of overloaning and But the people of Ogden are with overoertlflcatton were commonly In- of Dr. Jesse W. Lasear, who died of dulged In by other bankers Comp- yellow fever, are the. words, "With troller Rldgely'a former chief, Leslie U. more than the courage and devotion Shaw, while secretary of the treasury, of the soldier he risked his life to show made a similar statement In Walsh's how a fearful pestilence Is communidefense. cated end how Its ravages may be t, The of coal In the United prevented." Dr. GuillUln, the InvenStates Increased from 998.571,414 tons tor of the gulllltlne, had hlne own head In 1901 to 489.900.000 tons In 1907. It la a tremendous expansion of produc- chopped off. A number of distinguishtion and Is attracting the attention of ed physicians have been great Buffer-er- a j flrora the gout. the large sad growing class that beSydenham said: lieves something must be done to limit "More wise men than fools are victhe constantly Increasing output to tims of this affection." Angina pectoris prevent future generations from freem-ln- g haa claimed lta share of the medical to death. When all th forests are cut dowa and all the coal la burned profession, and In this group may be It will be a cold world. mentioned the names of Blr James T. Blr Charles Bell and John with Blmpeon, Australians are experintn-ntln- g are cited IllustraHunter. Instances e caravonlca-troot. as la known what ton the strain of which has been lm tive of Oler's statement that tha proproved te such an extent that the per fession offers many examples of good cents of line secured Is greatly In work thoroughly and conscientiously excess of that derived from the famcarried out by men with aneurism of cotton. A large quantous the Dr. Thomas King Chambers aorta. Is to seed be of caravonlca the ity planted la Africa' this year, and those first had an aneurism In the left popliback of the movement think they see teal artery, eleven years later one lu in lta suceeaa emancipation from the Hi right leg cured by pressure, and cotdomination of American-grow- n aneurisms of the cartoid arterfinally ton. ies Richard Bright died of the conGreat Britlan In 1907 built more sequences of extensive and longships than all the rest of the world ossification of the aortic valtogether. The total tonnage produced standing ves the of heart the exit for blood beby foreign countries was 1.111,711 as against 1.759,901 tons turned out of ing reduced to a mere chink. Robert shipyards of Great Britlan and her Liston died of an aneurism of the colonies 99.990 tons being credited to aorta, which must have existed for the latter. The United State rates second In point of production, haring rears and been fostered by the great 491.140 tana to her credit, Germany physical exertions which characterised coming next with 919.584 tone. These his recreation as well as his work. figures In order to be regarded with Another group la given. Including complacency by Americana, must be those having suffered from apoplexy, ' taken to Indicate that we are too much and still another and larger group la 'abeorbed in other occupations to give classified under the heading of shipbuilding the attention It deserves - ed up-to-d- 00 half-witt- i JOURNAL. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 21, TURNED DOWN THAT WELFARE OF CHILDREN SMELTER DEMAND IT, 180.-0- rnr STATE DAILY UTAH PAGE FOUR. ed 0. ( TO THE 190S. I OF 06DEN CITY On Monday, Feb. 34th. an election is called by the Board of Education for the purpose of voting whether or not you will give us authority to sell S90.009.b9 worth of school bonds with which to erect a new High school building. In order that you may understand the exact conditions pertaining to this matter wa have decided to submit to you the following facte: The present high school la entirely Th building was not Inadequate. originally planned for, nor adapted ta High school work. The present efficiency of the work ta greatly Impaired oa account of tha lack of room for the increased number of students By next September there will be another Increase of about two hundred students When this large number enter the High school there will positively be no room for them. Room la especially needed for laboratories, business department, manual training, domestic science, gymnasium, etc. These departments are. at present, very poorly equipped becaua there is no room for their accomodation and growth, and for the stores of apparatus If we desire to keep our boys and Stria at home and properly fit them for the increased activities and sterner competitions of life, we must meet this demand aa soon as poslbl by the establishment of Manual Training and Domestic Science departments In the High school. This ta an Impossibility under the present conditions. The proposed Issue of 990,000.00 bonds to run twenty years at four per cent will necessitate an annual Increase of 99.100.00 to the general tax of Ogden cly. This Increase on the present city valuation of 911.9:5.000.00 (1907) amounts to .of one mill on a dollar. Each and every registered voter who paid. In 1907, a tax on either personal or real property (not poll tax) Is entitled to vote at the coming election. Any person looking at bla tax notice will be abl to estimate his Increased amount of yearly taxes If the bonds arc voted. Thus, at tha rate of of one mill on a dollar, on an Individual whose assessed valuation la 91.000, the total and actual Increase of tax would be thirty-tw- o cents, and other valuations would b taxed their pro rets proportion of thirty-tw- o cents These bonds mature at the end of twenty years We believe that at tha end of that time th valuation will be greatly increased so that It will b much lean burdensome to pay them off then, or to refund them; and meanwhile our children will have had fha 93-1- 00 93-1- as you, all good people everywhere with you, and If you permit any pettifogger to bulldoae you Into silence In the presence of such a manifest duty and obligation to the bright young people whose blinded feet are in a fearful slippery path, your paper, among Institutions that give clyu-acte- r to public opinion, le what a spineless cataplllar la compared to a race hors. ' CITIZEN. That was a mighty blast blown on the alarm tocsin by Senator La However, lest many be frightened Into throwing fits, It may ba mentioned that the suns sort of blasts, about the peril of our government, have been periodically blown by able blowers ever since we had a government benefit of other way to raise the There for a new High necessary amount shooL The laws of Utah allow only one mills annually on tha city and one-ha- lf valuation for school sites and new buildings Three times this amount should be expended todxy In order to furnish proper accomodations for the pupils coming Into grammar schools alone. These conditions will ever prevent our being able te obtain, by tax levy or other means than bonding, the necessary amount of money to build a new High school. Again, If thee bonds are not voted w shall be able to build, with available means to some ona but a small addition school. This would not relievo the other crowded schools nor would It in the Most reltev the High school, whereas tf a modem High school la built, the present High school buildgrade ing will make an admirable school, situated la the right plus so aa to relieve those much crowded schools vis: the Madison, Dee. Grant. Central and Lewis This plan will giv ns a new High school, costing upwards of 9100,000.99 complete; and at the same ttm transfer to the grade school department an excellent and much needed building worth, conserve- -, lively speaking, 950,000.00, thus set-tuboth questions for some time to come. The law makes It mandatory upon us tha servants of the people, to provide a plac for every student that may desire to enter the public schools of this city. We have made use of every old building annex, basement, hall and office room for school purposes Again, the legislature of Utah haa made it mandatory that wo establish kindergartens and buy aU school books and supplies This Involves a large outlay without any provision being made financially for their maintenance. We feel It our duty to call attention to thee facts; and this plan la the only one that wlU meet the situation. Wa leave the matter to you, the taxpayers of Ogden, as to whether we shall provide suitable and sanitary accomodations for all th children dr be compelled te resort to the using of unsuitable rooms or lessening the hours of tuition In the future. R. S. JOYCE, H. W. GWILUAM, U. S. BROWNING, T. H. CARR. 1 ABAEL FARR. Members of Board of Education. . becoming HAT This is ens cf th latest in soft hats an sea-isla- . nd L ait j, 7 If thie hat isnt just we have plenty f styles No just as right, 1 good to lock matter what assured it et hat yN daeido upon, you can root ia the that can b had ia town if yeu get it hers Exclusive Agcnta HAWES and DUNLAP HATS FRED M. NYE COMPANY 2413 Washington Avenue A Small Fire IS QUICKLY KINDLED WITH OUR DRY WOOD. ' WE ALSO BELL LOHER AND SAW DUST. Vhoolwright'i Soy; Mill - J. E. DOOLY, President. JOSEPH S. PEERY, Vke-F- W RALPH E. HOAd, Cashier. A. V. MclNTOSH. Asst Caikhr. The UTAH NATIONAL BA1 I I UNITED OF OGDEN STATES DEPOSITARY a . Interest Paid on Savinas Accounts and Time Deposits TmffF(DW ' . Special Prices Ladies amd Misses Spring SMris ai Hal Pries 350 IBeamltiU WMIte Sample liM Wrists at $L25 M11 h graceful line and contour. Wouldn't yeu look . Will Be Open Tomorrow Until 7 oclock P. 250' 350 vsry Net Industrial centers In Great Britain. It la a voluminous document, full of Interesting facts, which hardly supBOTH PHONES 147. port the contention that tha lower wages In England art made good by 25th and Quincy. tha cheaper rate of living in that country when compare with, that In the United States Compositors In printing For envelopes letterheads establishments receive In England from cards dodgers etc. call up The Jocnd 21 to IS ehlllinga per week. Job rooms Both phonee 114. ty-fo- ur OdDIP out-pu- HERES A ns' Fol-lett- e. The London board of trade has Just made a report of an Inquiry Into the matter of wages rent and food in nine a modera school education. Is no M. |