Show GRIM RELIC OF THE COMMUNE SOLD assar iFirst State and in DIRECTORS w- - H Brown rB Christensen Chae Lammeredorf Chris Jorgensen James ARoss Chicagoans Can Manufacture Summer Weather i At of Salina OFFICERS A J Lewis President Aina Y Huish Cashier A ?jf Dr O VioePreeldent Aset Cashier Freeoe C Soorap ii LJ M A I A Drafts drawn on all the principal cities of the United States and Europe Banking in all its various forms Accounts Respectfully Solicited Four per cent interest paid on time deposits cL q w zvjs- - In the Rue recent sale of the “Villa of the Hostages’ PARIS recalls a terrible episode In the commune Against the wall of garden at a spot now marked by a memorial tablet 32 hostages Including seven priests were lined up and shot by the communists Their bodies were then thrown into a pit — The POOR MEN’S HAUNTS MEATS and GROCERIES Everything for the table for PELTSWANTED1 HIDES all occasions Fresh and Fine CEO WLONO PROP The White Front Market ? SCENIC LINE OF THE WORLD Fast flyers Daily Three BETWEEN Ogden and Denver Choios y of Routes Denver For Folders Booklets Trains Leave Saline Through St Pullman aud Tourist Sleepsrs to Louis and Chicago Etc address I A BENTON Salt Lake Oity Utah North bound 10:50 EM Peyton a m Gen Agt Pass Dep South bound 2:21 p m Local Agent LUMBER CO Lumber - In Everything Johnson-Arneso- n - - - -- We sell Jumbo Plaster and Portland Cement Phone 16black Doors Windows Mouldings apartments extending out under the Cheap and Free Lodging Houses pavements as far as the curb line of Various Cities “In St Louis cheap lodging houses are in a very good condition in spite of the fact that there is no special supervision and as a whole they are far superior to Philadelphia cheap One man Is conductlodging houses ing seven large lodging houses at ten cents a night for a good bed in dormiThen he has rooms six and free tory style Philadelphia — feet with a wooden partition lodging houses are made a special fea- six square feet high for 25 cents a night ture of the report to the director of “These seven houses were the best health and charities Dr Joseph S Neff housing lodging houses I saw in any city I by the Philadelphia visited commission’s chief Arthur E Every lodger has the privilege of hot or cold tub bath In his comparative EveryInvestigaclean The bed clothing thing was tion of 23 American cities was twice a week Ventil“In Rochester” says Mr Bucholtz ation changed was This me convinced good “the cheap lodging houses are In a that lodging houses can be very bad condition as to uncleanllness There is no sys- constructed and managed in a saniand tem of licensing or supervising them tary manner and at a profit I found some poorly ventilated In one place I saw the whole floor covered with sleeping human beings who and dirty but they were theexcep-tiohad not the price of a bed This cer“As a whole St Louis lodging houstainly proves a bousing problem as es are far superior to cheap lodging bad if not worse than in Philadelhouses in Philadelphia phia considering our population as has seven times as great as Rochester “Indianapolis practically no For some realodging houses “Rochester is still building the cheap son or other this city seems to be far ’dumb bell’ tenement house from the “hobo” and the other classes “Buffalo has an ideal lodging house that occupy lodging for vagrants and tramps to get free housesusually lodging and meals No man that has “Louisville has a great number of any money whatever Is taken In and bad houses in which both every man that receives its hospitality negroeslodging whites live and and there must do some work”' Every person is no over supervision is first required to be thoroughly ex- themabsolutely amined for any disease is given a “Columbus with 200000 population bath and clean clothes and put to bed or three lodging houses between the cleanest sheets The has next morning his clothes are handed I mean large places that charge ten to him thoroughly disinfected He is or 20 cents a night One of these Is run by a mission and Is In pretty good required to wash dishes scrub floors clean windows do painting carpenter- condition as to cleanliness and light but there is overcrowding and ventiling or other work Is not good One other place I “This institution was started In a ation visited Is in worse condition a as used Boys’ dilapidated building “In my opinion cheap lodging housclub The property Is now in fine re- es should be licensed and closely supair pervised t “In Chicago there is a lodg“In the case of ten and 25 cent lodging house conducted in unique style ing houses in Pittsburg the sanitary For five cents the lodger is given the policemen look in when there s a on of his in clothes privilege sleeping made otherwise they never a board six feet long four feet wide complaint I found them in fairly them inspect without bedding From a sanitary good condition except for overcrowdpoint of view this house compared ing and bad ventilation but the lodger favorably with any I saw there It does not get much for ten cents in was originally a warehouse running Pittsburg” from one street to another The three upper floors being used for sleeping purposes had thorough ventilation “The sleeping boards were all arranged domitory style and held in work Every place by iron frame morning the boards are lifted out from “John the Newsboy! Once Couldn’t Even Join the United their frame work placed upon the States Army floor scrubbed and set in the sun to dry There was nothing to retain from hunger dirt The old warehouse was well Chicago — Desperate and almost mad from brooding over heated and lighted “The price five cents gave a cer- the loss of an estate of which he had tain class of persons who would oth- been deprived when his parents died erwise have h:nl to sleep In the in Germany 14 years ago Peter Friedstreets a chance to get under cover rich 52 years of age known to thou“In Minneapolis the cheapest lodg- sands of ' Chicagoans as “John the ing houses are of a particular type Newsboy” appeared at the South They not only use the upper floors State street recruiting offices of the but the basement is fitted up for sleep- United States army the other night ing purposes and ventilation is pro- and asked to be enlisted as a soldier “Send me to some place far away” vided in some cases through a grating “Send in the pavement close to the building he pleaded in broken English line In one case I found the sleeping me to the Philippines or Nicaragua Philadelphia Expert Makes Comparative Investigation in Big Towns of United States — His Description No f Call At Homer Rasmussens THE CAFFETERRA Bakery Bldg mm $ Leather Goods Harness Shop and Shoe Store Horse Blankets Tents and Wagon Covers and a Harness Saddles full line of Men’s and Boys Dress and Work Shoes We want your trade Our goods are the best and our price the lowest Drop in and look over our line and be convinced Secures a Wonderful Ring One Belonging to Wife of Rameses of Nineteenth Dynasty Acquired by Museum II striking to the eye than this ring of Rameses which is made of cornaline a stone used nowadays only etc for cane handles cuff links It London--TGuimet museum In is thick with a wide flat rectangular Paris has Just made the acquisition bezel with covered gold while a of a ring which belonged to the wife thread of the same metal encircles the of Rameses II a monarch of the nineoutside in a groove teenth dynasty who flourished about There are two names engraved in 1300 years before the present era so characters on the bezel the ring is something like 3200 years hieroglyphic These are the names of Rameses and old There appears to be no doubt re- of one of his wives Ousemara Sete garding the authenticity of this relic and Nefritarlmerl Mout M Guimet bought para of ancient Egypt to the ' characteristic In addition It from a noble family living In the of the ring the perfection of the environs of Grenoble in whose pos- shape engraving is In the eyes of the musession it had been for a long time Indisputable eviThe rings In the famous jewel shops seum authorities dence of the authenticity of the relic of the Rue de la Paix are perhaps more Prescription Is Simple and Can Filled Without Much Expense-- No Excuse for Being Down cast In the Winter Be Chicago— The National Council of Horticulture told Chicago to cheer up at its meeting the other day The council decided that if any Chicagoans were down with a fit of the blues on account of the weather it was the Chicagoans’ own fault “Don’t be depressed because the outside air is filled with dank mist and the underfoot Is made unpleasant by mud and slush In half a dozen different strata What If the sky is gray What if the weather does make you feel like stepping casually off the roof of the Masonic Temple? There is a remedy for ail these afflictions and It is very simple Fill your home with flowers” This was virtually what the horticulturists advised Chicagoans to do If the present weather disheartened them and what is more it went on to tell Just how to do it “It is easy to beautify your home these days” said J C Vaughan president of the council “Everybody ought to do it “The winter flowering plants generally known as Dutch bulbs lily plants from Bermuda and Japan and azalea plants which are evergreen from Belgium will all be available In a few days at the various florist establishs ments They can be used in boxes All and Inside window these are ideal plants for dispelling withe dull days of this nter” “Then there Is the wide range of cut flowers now available for this city marChicago is the greatest ket in the world Daffodils are here as are early tulips French hyacinths lilies of the valley— all suggestive of bright sunny spring dayB” “If everybody kept his or her home filled with pleasant flowers had them to look upon and to smell the coroner would not be as busy as he is” said another officer of the society “Flowers in the home at the present time bring thoughts of spring and summer and can make even Chicago’s winter weather seem brighter” The purpose of the meeting was the selecting of a list of writers on the subject of horticulture who will prepare a number of papers on that subject which later will be submitted to the newspapers This is to educate the people” said President Vaughan “It 13 the aim of the council to furnish brief but authoritative information on all garden and flower topics — counteracting the ‘fake’ stories often told Those who wish to go back to nature and back to the farm and garden may do so in a sane manner with prospects of real suc- cess’ Fish Now Popular German Food Fish Is now one of the chief means of subsistence of the German people because of its comparative cheapness There is a remedy for everything except some of the remedies Earthly Home lor Poor For Choice Confectioneries Fresh Fruits Ice Cream Tobacco Cigars Stationery Restaurant Old Post Office All Hours T - or any place I’m sick of this country Long time ago I make lots of money — some times $3 in one day — but now I get old and I can’t holler ’extra paper’ out loud like the young ones can and I get no business” When told by Lieut Franklin B Kinney that he could not enter the finited States army because he was not a citizen of the United States and because he was physically incapacitated he sank Into a chair and buried his face in his bands saying “These civilized countries are all alike — America and Germany and all of them — they treat a man good when he’s got qioney and is able to work hard but when be got no money and can’t drive horses or work building houses they do not look at him” Friedrich has stood daity for ten years at the entrance to the ‘congested South Water street and was so weP known that the barkers on sightseeing automobiles pointed him out at one of the celebrities of the city Lieut Kinney touched by his plight bought him a turkey dinner and sen! him home to his lodging in the hearl of the slums with money in hit pocket Mother of 24 Children York Pa — Nineteen funerals in hei own family in her lifetime was the portion of Mrs Raehael Myers of Ho bart this county who died at he home here aged 80 years Mrs My ers was the mother of 24 children but all but six have died Her hus band William Myers died some yean ago 7 1 |