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Show i :, Xothinff quite tykes 'l the place of a glass of I i 'ood, wholesome hoc v. f.; It is a pleasing, satisfy -ing thirst-quenchei, cx- ;v liilarating, refresh ing. i it's pni'f! and mild, lnvui.'d 3 of (ho very Ijfst inn I fiial.s ;imi(l liyj.'ifnii: .sin'roiiiidiiv-is. It-; H is boll led direct from i trliiss - onaini:li!il t a. n k s : through jroveruincnt - coji- ' (rolled pipeline. l!'.; fi. Fisfisr Brewing Co, l-i Salt Lake City. '' Tho prize is in TJ.'i J.'KEK. !.- j Tt may be written in history that Ger-j Ger-j many was submarined by her own U boats. New York World." I INDIAN I MOTOCYCLE I SHOW I TODAY Everybody Welcome. jj 4 75-77 West Broadway. 1 j S k uj vgb w v lift Ifl' Miltl W ashington and the Telephone Can you imagine "the Father of his Country" using a telephone? Can you fancy his friends calling him by telephone on February 22nd to wish him "many happy returns of the day?" How gTeatly comprehensive telephone service would have multiplied Washington's Wash-ington's ability at the head of the Continental Army! How it would havo simplified his duties as the chief executive of our new-born Nation I The telephone is still young, but it serves the public to an extent that would have been beyond the conception of Washington's day and generation. t So intimately has the telephone won its way into the very lives of the people peo-ple of today, that a general cessation of the service would be nothing less than a national calamity. By the way, has it been noticed that while every other commodity has been steadily raising in price, and while the cost of materials required in the furnishing fur-nishing of telephone service is constantly increasing, telephone rates in general gen-eral have remained the same? Gradually the margin between our total revenues and our operating costs has narrowed until the lines are too close for comfort. Washington was a servant of tho public; but he was never confronted with the problem of conducting a public service with a fixed rate of income, and trying to make this balance with steadily increasing costs. I The Moijriaiu States Telephone and Telegraph Co. , ifjfjiiiiiiiiiiiiir I Begins j v. Tomorrow at J W a, mnio J Store will closed all day uuuju today. 1 i$l$if if if if if if f If f 1 t r Start Saving a Dime a Day First of ail, get one of our neat pocket dime banks. A dime will secure one. We-deposit We-deposit the equivalent of ten cents in the bank wa give you. Carry the bank and deposit de-posit every spare dime you get at least one dime a day. At the end of a couple of years youH b surprised at the headway you have made on the road to success. Don 't delay, your bank is ready. "The bank with a personality a voice and a heart." MERCHANTS BANK Capital, 9250,000. Member of Salt Lake Clearing Houat JOHN PINGREE, President. O. P. SOULE, Vice Pres. MORONI HEINER, Vlca Pre, v RADCLIFFE Q. CANNON. L. J. HAYS, Assistant Cashier. V. Corner Main and Third South, 8 ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. V J j George Washington When President never dreamed the wonderful city that bean his name would today be the governmental center of the greatest and wealthiest nation, and the mecca, of travelers from all over tho world. In his tim Washington City was reached by stage after long and tiresome journeys, while today the modern "all-steel" trains of the Baltimore Balti-more & Ohio, affording every luxury and convenience, conven-ience, land passengers from Western cities in the Nation's Capital in less than a day. DIRECT CONNECTIONS are made by all Western Lines with BaJtimore & Ohio Trains at ST. LOUIS or CHICAGO Low Fares Account Inauguration President Wilson. Stop-overs permitted at Washington on tickets to BALTIMORE PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK ' M. J. TANTSXR, Traveling Passenger Agent, 232 Judge Bldg., Salt Laio CHy, Utah. BALTIMORE & OHIO !"Our PassengerM Are Our Guests" I "t I ' - ' IT IS just ns . rnsy -i ,v v nnd more miv;ui- ! 'i tiiijonuR for llic smiill ' '; -c. f f deposit civ to nCfiliatu. ,.. .'! with the largo frank. :S $ 'I I. Tribune Want Ads Pull I |