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Show TUB MOUSING 8 EXAMINER TELEPHONES EDITORIAL ROOMS. ..... .Na. two rings BUSINESS OFFICE InOcpancMnt 'Phans Ball 'Phone, ana ring Phan, M NiM Ns. M s s cemetery. A Uahy hoy was bora to Dr. and Mrs. W. W. B row u lug st their street, yeshome, 561 terday afternoon. CTAH, MONDAY CHARACTER ITS AND THE LEAGUE SPRINGS BOWLERS Th. fuBrral f Mrs. Hannah Ross TU held at the South Hooper meet-int IS o'clock yesterday. noon, fcu.l was largely attended. Bishop Farkf of South Hooper presided The jM and rhoir rendered several seleril-juthere were a number of speakers, all of whom eulogized th life ol the deceased. Interment was In the Huuper OGDEN, inaa and woman, or by the hates! 1 passion, by the must criminal though;-less ness? To wUl arc they coming.'! What await them? Shall they find thl earth a place of joy, of inspiration. of hope, f grarioiis unfolding, or shall they find it A moral mihfo-tune- , a cruel disappoint meut, the bllnn alley of aimless animalism. Instead ol the mount nf vision croiuiauding tight Is uur of other level to be birthright xlipplng away from us, or re we foreclosing upn It by a manhood and womanhiKid which la itself is a religion, in l:eif the very breath STILL SERMON BV WM. T. BROWN OF of Immortality upon our faces, i' AND SCRIBES APACHES UNITARIAN CHURCH. light above our heads? FIRST IN LEAGUE RACES. Every soul 1 a dual being.' There are iso of us. Inere is the man that Is, snd the possible nun. In those fuCommercial League Has Better of Every Soul ia a Dual BeingThtre is ture years, under the far horizon of and tha Man That is, tht Date But to Slight Argument our life, when youth is gone and Man. Poaaibla Week. Paet Change During age is past, this dual self will still remain. 1 cannot but think that the real riches of a human eoul must lie li was no good fortune, while t somewhat In I Ur relaliooehip whicj STANDING OF TEAMS. in Yale university, to the two parts of that dual nature susundergiailuttU tu nr the Ini Bctn Kappa nratiuo, de- tain to each other. What will mr City League, of possible self think of my actual self.. W. U Pc. livered before i he student body Team Weut worth lllgglnsoa. To uvj M hat will the man I hoped to be think Ilf 5 .666 Tbon: Apaches a .Hilt the picture which I saw that day in of the man I actually lie came? 7 Stars tmliora ball was uue never 10 be 7 .41: 5 Satellites Here Is the Innermost tragedy, or 5 f alntafl Only men of the hlghe:.; epic, of human life in this unfading i .tlti i barseter and men who have achieved ot soul, of self, of manhood and Mime real distinction In the world--haCommercial League. This marvelous unfolding of made genuine moral aud apirlt-ua- l the uncounted ages, which we cell evoW. L. Pc. Train .777 7 2 conirlbuthm to their age. are Si'ribua lution, and about which science has to deliver Lhe Fhi Beta Knppk told ua so much, and so little, haa Its Nve .. . 8 it .6C6 a 4 k .8jt uruliuu. Mr. Higgtnxn la highest fruition, so far as we ran lev, 7 .41! suck a n.an. No maa now Jiv- hi character, In the feeling of hope, 5 Columbia Clulw In 4 k New .123 Weenie ing ...England better represents In the eense of worth. In Joy and faith V J casco .Sill the highest Ideals aad aoblest traits and truth. But as you think of men 3 of American manhood than be. H-- J in the mass, you cannot escape the The relative positions of the bowlers belongs to thar group of men who feeling that Ilfs will not have for ear i in both the city and the commercial created the Gulden Age of American n equally worthy fulfillment leas ues have changed but little dur- letters. He waa the lniimais friend that for God only knows how ing the past week. A number of the and kindred spirit of LsngfeUow, Lowmany, it baa an fulfillment at all In Kmersun, Whlitirr. Bryan. this world. players have increased their averages, ell. but' not sufficient to make any partic- Holmes, George William Curtis. Wen-M- i Science telle ua uf a law of variation ular change in the list. The standPhillips. Acott, Thoreso, Theo- and the formation of new species. dore Parker, and the rest who make Borne great family of animal life diing of the team in both leagues 1 up the list of America's greatest poets, vides. A part ascends in the scale of virtually the same. The Apache and I icing. A part remains forever behind. maintaining their hold on first place lurophets, orators, philosophers la the city league and thw newspaper literary men. He belonged by every At some time or other Nome members men still hold on to first position In right to that intellectual aristocracy or groups of the family of anthropoid which wrote the song, of human free- apes separated from the rest. They the commercial league. A comparison of the nreragee of the first twenty dom and kept alive the spirit of de- were elowly differentiated from the players in the commercial league with mocracy in this country during one of whole body of epeeiee to which they ihose of the rlty league give the for- lta most trying periods. belonged. They adapted themselves He waa one of the foremost of those to some new and higher environment. mer the ong end of the argument. who taw human slavery in any form to All the rest remained apes. These Both the Aparhoa and the Scribes of Wilson, who lit a menace to every sacred IntereM became men. And between the two have lost Hie urn-teeof men, whether black or white, and today Is a greet gulf fixed. has withdrawn from both teams. The Individual averages of tha play- It waa he who I tore the body of Dies not something like that take first hero and martyr, John place on the pane uf character, ers to date are an follows. in Brown, from the scaffold of his exe- the higher realm of eoul and spirit? City Leagua. Av. cution in Virginia to the no Name. Games. heroic Is not that indeed the deeper mean170 household that waited fur its belovei ing of all we see and know? What Is Hens ...IS ITU tluxt among the Adrionrtack in untalns this life to be for these boys and girts 9 Camp 107 And when the war broke out, Hlygln-aon- , and men and women, for you and me? IS Watkins a I'nltarian minister, a patrician Whither lead the diverging paths that 15 Smolder hit 12 17 of patricians, did something which bear us far asunder? What are the Drlgffs D 187 for Itecker ...... and patriotism cannot springs of genuine life and what are I lid be surpassed ip thtt annals of our its possibilities? IS Mind W easier 166 Civil war. He volunteered as colonel Of course, no one can in a few glib ,.13 l 163 1 homas f a regniunt and served lu phrases divide humanity into any fixed Mii.iiim 9 162 that capacity. ,...13 groups. Our life la loo divine a thing Wherry IGA . . . ., G v ein , It was from such an eminence of ex- to lead Itself to any hard and fast la i, 160 Craven perience that thia gracious knight of classification, nor can it in one Indi1 59 Rsken . ..; modern rhivalry looked down that day vidual acsle the. whole octave from ,.13 W llaon IS 15$ lino tha face of those young mm, an I nlmal to deity, put It serins to me 1S7 lieyond them Into the coming years. there are three poeslbiltles toward 12 taeilora . . 13 157 It was his ixsk-a- nd he knew It au to one or the other of which we ' are Glllien Imi - to apeak a D 153 nieusagr of Ufa to those bound to tend. I am gilug to name (lay D 14$ Burton Hu th.eoe three young men, a "good tidings, possibilities animalism, 146 could not occupy such n position atu fanaticism, and heroism. IS Baxter not be deeply more, by Its vltul 143 Glandt ..,..15 By animalism I do not moan mereTho question hs saw look- ly what we eommonly associate with Cemmarclnl Lsngun. ing out of their eyes, the interroga- that word that which te vicious and Av. tion implicit in their very existence, repulsive, hrutdllty, dissipation, deGames. Name. 1$4 6 the pathetic, insistent quest which generacy. I mean rather the absence Decker , 179 these young nmn on the threshold of of that which ought' to distinguish the Gilbert D 176 their life stood for, was tha one to human from all other orders of life Camp 173 which with all hip heart he felt it his the failure to morally and .13 Gyain . splrltaully I do not remember mature. 170 duty to resiiond 9 Lund 166 the theme of hia oration. Tho one W llaon 9 Are there not men and women who 166 thing that remains in my memory have much mote In common with Leedora ,. W easier 162 most clearly wan a few brief sentences furma of vegetable and animal life, 9 , 3 162 of direct personal appeal which he with trees and grass, with dnmeatle Shank a a 11 made, apart entirely from the aule animals, even with beasts of prey , ii Drlgga 159 Jeet of his oration. 9 Hs said, In Mile than they hue, osy, with a man like Clay 9 K. Knock i:,9 rlance, this: Young gentlemen, Jesus, nr a man like Lincoln or a man 9 Is one hit of advice which I like William Morris, or Ruskin or Msa-rln- l ir.a tlw-r, .. Watkins 155 e 9 . want to give yon. As you leave a , . . Frits or Kropotkin?1 You ran look Into 153 to enter into the real life of the the faces of a group of boys and girls, Glandt ....12 151 world. Identify yourselves with sonic of 6 Craven voting men and women, aad then. 6 lull reform. No matter whether your lot In Imagination out upon the Industrial , Nye 149 It'uile you naturally In that directin'! or social arena where tbeir lives are 9 Boaaner 149 or not, by nil attach yourselves to be apent, and safely predict for ass 9 Rosser 147 to eome human caue." , a. 9 Craig many of them either n wooden or, at 147 ..12 These yotiug men were going out bent, sn animal existence. They are Baxter ..A 146 6 Into n world in the making of which going to exist, and that la about all. nurkmlller . 145 they had had no part. Many of them, They are going to think the thoughts .13 Oliver 145 Indeed, must of them, were sure to 9 Barlow they find all ready made, and no oth143 find the conditions of their existence ers.' They are going to gcrept as final Fell! 139 such as to blind them to everything the conceptions or supposed concep12 Norton 139 beyond 'the narrow Interests of the ate tions which are nothing but the prod12 rnulsnn 139 rial or economic clasa to which they ucts of mindless natural forces. Borne 12 1 nn Dam 131 6 A. Scow croft might bebtug to everything except the of them will aocnmulate property 130 absorbing bualm-s- s 8 of but so far 3, Knocke that accumulation bear1311 3 or mono; gening. It was not at all ing any relation to the expression of Ltn deny for the sake of any cause or reform their own souls Is concerned, such of i hat Mr. Hlggmson spoke that day, it most of mean about as TIHTIC PUNT as It was never for the sake of any much aa n rock or a tree accumulating reform that Jeaua spoke, as ll cannot moss. In what n vast majority of Railroad Burvaya te Bring Tintic lie for the nake ot any reform that any cases will It have hot a whit more Mlnea In Touch With Smeltar, nan will ever speak moat potently moral meaning than a squirrel s store and persuasively It was for the sake of nuts or the Gam of the beaver or Bela Kitillah, the manager of the of those young men. This man upon the treasures of the bees!. Some of them are going through their years whose head more than seventy winter Ogden amelier, wax In Salt lake Satand stated tn tho had aifted thidr anowa. knew well that on this earth with hardly a serious urday on butm-aTribune that the plant at Ogden wax the great stirring, revolutionising. thought beyond the petty and beggarabout remly tu t.e blown In for activ movements of huninn lift ly concerns f the moment. Is there work. Ju.t when this Interesting upward toward loftier moral level any moral mathematics by which yon point will he reached. Mr. Kadlsh those movements which arc to man' ran figure out that It la 'worth while would not state. Inn from the annum) moral nature what pun bracing air Is to have come upon this earth upon an nf ore thar la piling up at the plant to his physlc.i being do not tak earth made sacred by the w'ords and nn tuber of ore contracts which their rise In the narrow clrrle of and life of a Socrates, a' Jeaua, a Moans, the management lx securing. II la appersonal Interests. He knew, too, an Isaiah, an Rpictetus, a flavona-rolan Eemerson. a Lincoln, and then parent that the company will have to that the deep, swift current of cvolu begin operations xixm to prevent being lion and moral sweep aloiu to have to your credit nothing more Wumpelt. its channel far away from the rich ani siihstsntlal than a lifetime devoted to Mr. Kadlxh Mated that practical!? favored. No xnrh rhanu-:M- ) reeding the mere grind and routine of moneythe same people are Intereated In the movement would over seek that com- making. or to hare been a mere cog Tintic -- metier now being planned. pany uf college men. or wheel tn tin: modern machine of inTin- - fuel that several of the Tintic They must seek II, not for Its sake dustry? Is It enough to have eaten oi'craiorv of considerable important and slept so ninny times, to have alone, but for their own sake. in the ore production field are That cene in Osltorn hall wax mi a run sin number of good - a in this smeller WMlId lend is a true right lu--i times, t have gained for one'a self tu.'t. the it It from wax in New Haven an imprliia in Ogden ns give as lHrgr number of pleasant sensathat the Timtc iis Irue of the Hople sir.) Walk ibexe tion h possible, and to have tumbled Mr. Kcdlah stated st ree-.- on s Saturday night ga of tho at lai into the ground, leaving bepiatti would hare a onnage of ions n ,av. men who xat in that hall. And it hind no more genuine Inspiration than lietween :!bd and of Immediate an I Several corps ol xurveyor are now ,ii raises a ne of ihe beasts of the field, having work laying out ihe numerous milri I vital moment. What are 'he prime contributed no more to the forcea uf fr-.the plant ite to ibe uf liiiinmi connections of graclntw spier, bo e mid truth nnd righteousness than of i he camp, and this w iibl did fulfillment tor u non snd wom- i hose mute whom we have show that tile orgiint.a ion mean to en? What re 'he possthllllles tha! left fur back In the Jungles of animalleave liMle re.iaoti for 'allowing an beckon mx? Wont is Hie going to ism? Tintic ore to ewape iheir grasp. The mo; x tiiciin to us? What Is worthy t j b Indictment against railed life? fan we classify :he miji.,1 any nr any social or Indusar-alUTna'iw-- which lie before men trial uiiier lx this that It docs noi AGED WOMANINJURED mid children all of then1? women an 1 offer free clay to the ilx Science ha been classifying the making uf nu-i- i and women. In so far Mrs. John Smurthwaite Fell Down tliai are burled In the esrrh x hum-ibrings anywhere become lx there any science which cn i mere part of machinery, mere pawns Stairs at Hooper. tell us something abend the fusxl! on some r!iem ixiard mowed and mafroiii formHilon a well as ihe living Wjrd was received v,iii-,l:nipulated hv other hands, the possiHccii,-n- ' Hoolx-- r of a of 'he moral world. No man can bility nf eier achieving msuhood nr whle:i . befell Mrs. John Sniurtbsa-icn.olhev read liitnry. not even the history 'if womanhood lx reduced to the vanishol C. A. Smili b waive, uf tins lily. America duviug the pnx' hundrel ing point. What la the definition of . Mrs. Bmiinhw-ai'cw'.o is v! yiars of years, without knowing that there tie life? It I expression the expression H s!r,.ke of lussd (ormstioii in the moral sphete of your usn soul in all the work of age. recently ,iff-ivShe had so far recovered Ibei ax really hs there are in the bosom of viuir hands in all the occupation of she war abb to move aland til- -j the ear:h. Science ha been diclox-i- inur day. Whatever prevents such On bonne si.e !o about '.he origin ot exprcxxlon ot the fart anywhere, prevents life. r fe'.l am a down and hi the .inlnial siaircaso in siierics body veaeiable And animalism la nowhere and never, n not borne, s staining a mu re f'uoui'v world. there u!o science rf in my Judgment, the result of delibern' Tile hip. tin origin of moral specie, of the ate choice. ! may he in a measure .1 X. .VI' n wax ef character, of the evolution the prod'tci of inheritance It Is far In !r fenrv-ri ibe fraciire. It is tha toward higher und nobler '.fr? more the ronlf of environing cnndl-tlont n a, fount of tu bring to tl,ix Wha-- , are the year advauceil ax. hn-ewlih ti'e rec, rt ;iaia'jt:c xwsrmims !'re on otie rar-hy".ii-.kcaipd Mrs. Closely related to this sort of exSiii'ivtiiw.itic wi'J be every win n-- , in the xlinpe uf istence I the human possibility which Wliat i Mfe nieauina he-- Mn 1 rail Let any sort of "fanstli Ism. To wbxt r. '!- -. to wh.it fuIn Russia for rx.ai-- a Eer violul ng the Sun lav rloi-b-ture. icornl'y. 'oiri'uaily. do ;he-- e centuries. ;1s in many parts of Europe o. x. El. .rp.:iet,.r of the Ke. millions cime who c ann.isUy. mo- - I today, as in mir owit country n less b .aiivin, J on th' !n tnuii'y lie'n g eaiied dog-- e8 portion of the pou-- i 'h..; iocal polUv. ex; 111, whr'iirl b) the iuerei (e uliion I dimmed by the verj condi (STANDING OF Nh II liMtpMdnt Tlwii Mali EXAMINEE: mi-idl- e wom-anhio- Malrolni McAilister of Salt in Opdep yesterday. take was Attorney General X. A. Brredeu ass an Ogden vlsltjr yestenlay. Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Wright left yesterday for a fear mouths' visit to Cal- Khupe-Vi!llara- - ifornia. d, Her. D. W. Crane, of the Finn Methodist church preached a Linmlii memorial service yesterday monilug The members el tbs local ot of the G. A. K., W. R. C. and Cilcon Circle attended tha set vires in a laxly. ta evening the first of s series of sacred concert a was given at tha church before s eongregathia that taxed tile of the edifice. ali MULTITUDES VISIT THE CANYON s ,,, FINE WEATHER ATTRACTS PLE INTO OPEN AIR. Work of Recent PEO- .... Flood Glvea Canyon col-irw- .... Spacial Attraction to Viol tort. ...12 ........ That it needs only a touch d spring to bring people out of doors and into the bracing air, was amply In the crowd demonstrated that visited the canyon. A constant Stream of gay humanity crowded the canyon cars to capacity from morning until night, and by a clone rule matt, the number who rodn over the canyon Una Is placed at 1 AoO. la tha morning but one car was tn service over the line. The crowds so Increased, however, that an additional rar waa put n. and by noon the corner of Twenty-filtstreet ami avenue resembled a favorite spot on a circus day. As tha rats time back with tbeir loads, some of which carried the more daring on th.' car tops, a general run would.be made for them and the first to land safely Inside were ihkcn to tho canh Warli-Ingto- ...... ...... .......... ..... ..... ..... ...,.13 ........ ........ ....... n ..., ' ...... .. ......... .... e yon. This Increased all afternoon without toward evening, when the rush began to grow lean. BuskM the beauty uf the day, which drove ao many from thmr hoinea, there wr aroused at the time of the sicfrm. neutral Interest in the river, which broke from its channel and ruuhed around the Sanitarium, so that the heavy waa in part (raffle to the canyon tauaed by the curiosity of the popu- oul-h-g- s break until .............. ....... iid-sr- n ... ......... ....... ...... lace. DIVORCES AID MARRIAGES ............. Table Showing th Number of Each In the Different Countries. money-makin- It-- Some Information la contained in !he table recently laeued by Fred W. Price, commissioner of etalintlrs, showing the number of divorcee granted In the several count ice of the itate, the number of marriage lleensea Issued and the amount uf money extended In the relief of Indigenta. The Ignreit are as follows: g iir ac!-fis- a, lnie:-Vxte- M Sevier N7 7 o'lmmit Tirade Untah T'ah :UiT; 1.7 III 70 ML ; 2 7 iVasharli R'ajn- - .... h'cbtr 3i i Total, 1Pm3. Total. i"4 ii.till.il IjrtJ mi n si -- !ti.;s :i I.i.Tf'! . Us 7s ,, ( l r. lit; Total. 1906.. lu.' :;rj 4 1 l.n,:i;.!7 4.i'23 liovils.TT 3.9711 $n.:.2t.n2 repor from l'jut.. up to Mil will i Id atxiiit f2.riliii u the anioui.t iiiuUr ih head of indigent for cm', i CYCLOKE THOMPSON HERE .lohn Thontpwm. . by Thompaon and John. Jr., arrived in Ogden jeaterdav fnnn ' their home near ChtcsKo. They remain here for a few- dava. after which they will leave for tin mast, where Thorapn I matr'.ed tu nsl-- t Rafe Turner. Feb. 22. Tnminow th. aae gainst the Tj clone" an, Manric,. Thompson, who are charged wuh ! In a prise fight In the municipal flawl'ii.i," Kelly, manager of :h j. t fi ! lo.reut-lo.ii.i the xpected roast oday. Johnny mik thfeeling fine and l.c Tv-cIot;"-" accuni-panie- - Vw-lniP- -- n-.i-i- j part '' j. mtnii'-tbtn- fu-x- ; M-- e i OX' late 1 world-pictur- Pete Ban d re.t-li-ii- FEBRUARY tions of ha life to an abnormal existence to a life the very opposite of that which the whole rare, enjoyed for thousands of centuries before dawned the life mankind Uved all the time the human body and brain were being developed make this creature uf the vast out of doors a mere piece uf machinery, a doer of drugerr, a dull, a parasite, an idler, a toy mud the function which hlin from every lower order separates becomes atrophied. He loses the power to think, and becomes the easy victim of a world uf ghosts, the blind follower uf delusion. Such men and women do not arrive at are rastx of arrested developmentThey na surely as apes and monkeys are. They do' not realize that the aubllme arbitrament of destlney in la their own hands They are as oblivious te their own power nnd station in this potent universe me the chained elephant becomes unconscious of hla reel strength. Ani so they people the skies with phantoms. titer become the victims of superstitious, the worshippers of dead tradition, a dead weight in the march of human progress toward better things. And they fail of life by as wide n margin ns. their brothers of the dene end Junglea of animalism. But another possibility beckons these souls of ours, and if we have had no glimpse of tt, no sense of Its power, we have missed much that makes life worth living. For want of n better word, let us call this possibility heroism." There la some fib ness In that word, too, for the early men made gods of tbeir heroes, aad not even we Inter men can have a God-- who does embody our moat heroic Ideals The definition of a hero, if we may trust the moat ancient two. orda, la that of one who performs some great and useful service. Bo nil the heroes of the Greek pantheon were created. I do not mean by heroism anything superhuman or spectacular. Rather do i mean fulfillment that which belongs to life aa blossom belongs to bud. The things commonly called heroic arw almost always the exhibition of physical courage or daring, rarely of moral courage or daring. They are the things any of ns would do under at rasa of emergency or excitement. Neither have I In mind the recipients of Carnegie medals. Heroism la no virtue. The quality I have In mind belongs to those who find n purpose to live for which kindles ennobling enthusiasm. breeds g great hope, a deathless faith, and organises life for better, nnd ever better, things. There are men among ua who are saying that nil religion meana la the good life. I contend that, religion meana more than that It meana the better life. Life is and must be unreattng, incomplete. To see It or fee) It as finished or complete la sever to see It at all The story of evolution, aa science reveals It to ur mind, is one long ascent, one unceasing upward climb. How much more rarely must moral and spiritual evolution or In one ' word life, atlll be a constant a cent, a steady climb from good to bet- ter. from better eternally to better till! Ufe meana moral ascent means a climb, in every thing we da, In nil our hands handle, In all our hearts feel, In all the products of our labor, in all the relations of oitr existence. The man or woman who In to have part lu thia upward climb, who la really to live, must discover some supreme and commanding Interest or pssslnn and that Interest or passion mum have u do with this present world and be capable of stimulating enthusiasm and enlisting one's bext. There la no such thing as the nnfoldlng of human nature upward and away from the brute exrept aa men and women act and live from a motive power greater then any selfish end. Thia source of inspiration may sometimes be a great and worthy affection, or It may be devoted to a cauae. In the last analysis. It la the larger demand of some splendid human cauae that transmutes the baser metal of our nature to the pure gold of character. I. doubt very much If there be such a thlng aa a satisfying affection between soul and soul which does not find expression, because it must, in a heroic llfo which does not lose and find Itself again In' devotion to some glorious human cauw. It la hardly too much to any that man alone has spoiled out the deeper meaning of human love is inspired by hie thought of its object to some strenuous earnest service, to a service that taarn the largest capacities of hia nature, whose soul under the potent shine of that affection flowers and fruits in all high thinking and courageous thing. No finer tribute can he paid to a man or woman than to say that he or she In the inspiration to noble deeds. Xo more terrible thing can be said of either than that he or he possesses nothing capable of Inspiring suck a hope of life. The supreme task of human uoclety, of human Ufe that alone which can Justify or make It good is the creation of a moral atmosphere, a nodal order. In which shall be wrought the nerve and fiber of a man making power. to live in which la to breathe the air of freedom and feel the summons to heroic service. That is indeed the final meaning of every genuine human cause, of every really great moral movement in the midst of human society. A holler religion than thia cannot be. The voice that calls to auch service is the voice of God ihe voice of a Divine Life in the midst of men. And the affections and loyalties, the friendships and passions, the faith and hope and love which upring up and blossom out of the soil and in the atmosphere uf I hla great fraternal world that Is slowly fusing into form, are intimations of immortality and glimpses of God such as never gladdened the heart nf man In all the bur led pant. To hare some such vision of Ufe. to be Conscious of having part in such a task, to describe In ones few years n this earth any auch moral orbit, ia more than to exist is to walk ihe waya of this world In companionship with the Eternal, Is to discover the richest secrets of any human tie, and to find one's life divinely worth while. ; WHEN YOUR FEET Burn or Ache There is a Reason ASH0E REASON It the chemicals left in tlie sole leather after tanIb ning, which your feet ab sorb. A , are soled with scoured leather. It's an expensive proceoa, but absolutely necessary for ihe comfort of the wemvr good of the leather. is It never done in cheap shoes; seldom done in good shoes; but always done in llanan Plioes. In the making of a llanan Rhoe, nothing that makes for comfort, style or service is slighted. j! That is why it is better than it costs. and the DEE-STANFO- RD ready-to-we- SHOE CO. . . . SOLE AGENTS mu . i PRYER Makes the Ice Cream, Sherbets, Punches, Frozen Puddings, Etc. You Will Need For That Party PHONE . DEA1H OF The final test of a tailors ability is found in his come again trade trade that sticks because of past value and satisfac" tion received. The majority of men do not follow styles, but require the aid of those in authority in the matter of selection. Suggestions in printed literature, illustrations, etc., are essential as aids to good dressing, but the tailor who has them on file and cannot execute them, in incompe' 4 tent. learn to discriminate in the matter of selecting a tailor, because there are good tailors aud bad oues, and an illy made suit is at. once a reproach to its maker and an eyesore. We point with pride to the garments we are turning out for our regular and onr new customers. We are GOOD tailors and in the proper and economical dressing of man we won't be satisfied till he is. Men do, boweypr, goon OGDiimRL n Fri-la- l n-- b-- Daughter of Henry Brown Diet While on a Visit. 1 n l r. . r, xio-,-t- o clifli-ucter- e 'i? l.-- c1'':'-:z:i!!o- a-- jis-er.l.'- ? 1 K-'n- l..r The daughter of Mr. aad Henry Brcwn. of this city, died at Lark, near Blnghant. from an attack of heart trouble. Brown wont to visit with relaat Lark about a week ago. At thar time he waa as well as she had been for a long time. After arriving nt talk she grew worse until the en-Mrs. j T'tah. Mia tive EDMUND TAILORING l canto yesterday morning. The will ho brought to Ogden for body 345 Twenty-four- th t - St. CO. |