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Show . THE OGDEN : ' - v.' , t y . FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 9, 1921. TALL BUT MIGHTY 32 INCHES ' 'i STANDARD-EXAMINE- R " I. " Companies Assist Housing Movement by Placing Mortgage Loans La T il III M ft are TOMORROW'S COMFORTS, Ptrhaps becaut your credit it and buying mpr goods and paying good you art using It mort monty In tht nd than you would If you were PAYING AS YOU CO. It Un't vtry tncouraging la It? Your check gont almost at aoon at you get U Thtrt it no timt like RIGHT NOW to ttart to PAY AS YOU GO. It itn't alwayt ncceatary to BUV A BIG ORDER TO SAVE AT SKAGGS'. Start with a tmall order and tach tlm try to makt It a little larger and it won't bt very long before you will have your DEBTS PAID and OWNING A SUPPLY OF GROCERIES Inttead of OWING FOR THEM. Can't you Imaglnt what a wonderful feeling of eatitfaction you will have when that time comet. PROCRASTINATION IS THE THIEF OF TIME. DO IT NOW. frly II n ' : y.& I NEW YORK.. Dec. 9. Real estate i'mortgage loans have far Jrailroad securities as the leading investment held by life insurance according to oririnal statistics submitted to the fifteenth annual of the Association of Life In- J surance presidents here today. i cpeaKing on A JJecaae or Investments," Asa 8. Wing, president of the Provident Life and ?Trust company of Philadelphia, stated real estate .mortgage loans of the life companies have doubled in ten Jyears, increasing from $1,228,000,000 t the end of 1911 to $2,468,000,000 dn October 31 of this year, out-distanc- X- ed com-panie- s, con-jventi- on - re J x- ln-suran- ' , - , I v.-- .' 1T - y POUNDS NICE FIRM SWEET POTATOES FOR 3Sc POUNDS FANCY BLUE ROSE RICE. 7c value, for ..5&c 11.10 CAN PURE RICH FLAVORED CANE AND MAPLE SYRUP 5tc 20c YOUNG PORK SHOULDER ROAST, pound 10c and 12c 20c BEST BEEF POT ROAST, pound .....10c 30c PRIME RIB ROLLED ROAST, pound 17c 8 10 POLICY LOANS THIRD, j Investments in railroad securities were $1,383,000,000 at the end of 1911 ks against $1,713, 000,000 at the end of 31920. Real estate mortgage loans form imore than 32 per cent of the total assets of the companies now; while Jrailroad securities .which formed more ithan 35 per cent 10 years ago, have dropped to 26 per cent. Policy loans of $820,000,000 rank third and United 'States government bonds of $772,000,-iOOare a close fourth, being 11. 30 per icent of the assets. Other invetstments 'include state, county and municipal Datu Paglima Diki Diki, also called Datu Sibi Sibi, is r?7, weighs Jbonds and real estate. The total asexcess 23 in are of sets of the companies pounds and is 32 inches tall, but he is a crreat man. He is head 7,300,000,000. Moro chief of the island of Ubian, near Jolo in the Southern Philip Referring to the huge increase in ireal estate mortgage loans. President pines. His word is law in his tribe. JWing said much of it had gone to the ;farmers, but that there, is now a discernible trend toward the, city, again ing at an insurance gathering, I can PLAIN CITY XMAS fto meet housing requirements. On this point to the investment of life insurance funds where the greatest need of BAZAAR SATURDAY "point he said: v the nation called. has last the During TOTALED. REPORTS ; years it was vital for this nation, "In order that this convention .might six for and the tart it was playing, Members of the Relief society and have the latest data as to. the trend thatitself our be stimushould of the Mutual Improvement Associaagriculture lot life insurance investments in to lated the That tion of the Plain City ward are pr.ductivity age loans, 47 companies holding more comparieshighest met is condition shown Christmas this the assets of in the percentage of agricultural loans, bazaar to rive theirin annual 93jper cent of have gthan amusement the Saturday made American companies just at the moment another im hall. Preparation for the event has of There is demand Jreports showing the total amount that of construction been underway for the past several perative their farm and city mortgages as of catching up with deferred building in weeks. 1921. 30ctober31, kj l At 11 o'clock the booths will be nnn ..T nanvnai iihuciiW V,oo an!""' .v,. od Qrtn v j vT to insurance investments and both useful and attractive company opened y Decernten months ia articles will be on display. Comforts in0VT met ?.dded ,5,00 er ZU 1920. ade equally clear in thee now percep- - in dainty patch work style, colonial ng a total of $2,468,600,000 real estates toward city lnono o era In " rugs in bright colored warps, and old on October 31 of th BONDS PURCHASED. Mortgage loans fashioned rag carpets besides dainty WAR i ,ovv,vvv io ryear. ui una itt.i, f of the recent wearing apparel will be offered. effect Another striking on farm property and $1,221,300,000 on life insurance investDinner will be served at 11:10 3on city property. Therefore, for the world war is in of o'clock. shown will be served ments their holdings irst time in many years, if not for United States bonds. On this point Mr. throughoutLuncheon the afternoon and the evethe first, time in the historyof of the "Wing said: ning. far,m country, the total amount At 2:30 o'clock a delightful enter."At the end of 1911, before these Sloans held by life insurance companies bonds as a were listed tainment under the auspices of the item, separate now exceeds the loans on city proper- the life insurance companies held Primary and Religion classes will be ty, the proportion being 50.53 per cent about $520,000 of them as compared given free. The of these or49.47 per with $772,000,000 at the end of 1920. ganizations have officers Joans on farms as against time neither spared jcent on city property. nor pains in training the children for bonds of States United The appearance FOR PRESENT YEAR. as a separate nre insurance invesi- - inis event, yuaint rairy dances, read-me"Of the increase of $261,900,000 in item occurs in the tables begin- - ings and songstwill be the feature of Vnortgage loans during the first ten ning with the year 1917. when the the occasion is in "months of this year, ,i $161,300,000 The event will be closed by a grand had increased to nearly $63,-nt.An f ri t ft rt A i u amount arm mongagesianu iiuu,ouu,uu nnn nnn i nr ball. Music will be furnished by n., in 'aU tne nssets. Three years later. Wecker'a orchestra. ity mortgages. The increase Snortgages is greater in amount than with the amount Increased to $772, 00 dur,the increase in the city mortgages is 11.30 per the 000,000, percentage case was as the ing these ten months, cent of the total assets and 26 per cent NEW JAPAN DESIRES 1920, but there is still the same. of all the companies' current invest,in; tendency that I previously pointed out. ments during the nine-yeperiod." PEACE, SAYS BISHOP proportion of namely,, to increase the as ou compared loans on city property with farms. !!:: Dec. 7. War between MILK WAGON STRIKE theCHICAGO. , ''This trend of investments toward United States and Japan is abhorIN CLEVELAND ENDS rent to the new Japan. liiahop Herbert the city has been strongly manifested since 1919 and can be shown most Welsh, Methodist .Episcopal missionin Seoul, Korea, declared in an ary, clearly by the proportion of new mon-- I CLEVELAND, O., Dec. 9. A virtual address here. ey going into each class of mortgages during the last few years. Please settlement was reached here late He said that the impression of note, during 1918 and 1919, that 91.03 Thursday night in the milk wagon as a militaristic nation had Japan been toer rent of all the net increase in drivers' strike when a compromise prevalent because of the militaristic loans was on farm property and 8.97 position drawn uu by a special city attitude of the Japanese nation, which In 1920, council committee was accepted by was not representative of the country per cent on cityof property.invested in t"he company and and the nrnnrtrtinn money thp propaganda farm loans dropped to 63.78 per cent. tentatively accepted by the executive the United States. spread throughout interwhile the city loans increased to 36.22 committee and William Ashton, Christianlzation of Japan is the national organizer of the union. factor which will lead to a muper cent.'! GIV3EX WHERE NEEDED. The proposition calls for a weekly great tual between it and the understanding of 'wage scale of $30 to $37.50 a week. other powers, Bishop Welch concludMDurln$r the first Jen months cent 20 per 1921, the same tendency has continued said to be approximately and he pointed out that this could that in effept when 2800 driv- ed, be accomplished only through the forand the proportion of farm loans has less than on strike November because Cent while that ers went mission workers. dropped to 61.59 perincreased to 38.41 the company refused to arbitrate the eign on city prbpertv has per cent. With Justifiable pride, speak- - open snop quesuun. ROADS WANT RIGHT , builds up body tissues increases the action of the intestines Eat 2 to 3 cakes a day j O '. A FEW OF OUR REGULAR SAVING PRICES BEEF 2Sc Rump Roatt, pound 22c Htel Boil, pound . 20c Standing Rib RoJtt, in the familiar nt to ; ar ,' "; . Te.llinff-Bellevern- on anti-Japane- se TO RUN OWN AFFAIRS At Wholesale Price Old Yankee Maple Syrup, gallon Old Yankee Maple Syrup, V2 gallon Old Yankee Maple Syrup, quart All of you know $1.43 75c .40c the extra good quality of Old Yankee Maple Syrup. Never before have you been able to buy Maple Syrup at such a low price. Make your breakfast cost less by using this delicious Old Yankee Syrup on your hot cakes. nd '. . . lots Mixed Nuts Chicago Wholesale Grocery Co. 2376 Washington Ave. noaBoacaBoaeaoBBoninsoini & EOIff9E4 H II a "Delicious" is the word! 9 f an On oL H 9a H ea 00 SIOUX CITY, la.. Dec. 9. The State Bank of Oto, at Oto. Iowa, with a capital stock of S25.000, was thrown into receivership Thursday In district court on petition of the Iowa bank We guarantee these nuts to be the highest quality you can buy. Phone 486 halt." IOWA STATE BANK IN RECEIVERSHIP .30c .$1.40 Extra Quality Mixed Nuts, per pound 5-pou- ! PEORIA, Ills.. Dec. 9. Railroad rates and wages must be lowered and the functions of management must be placed in the hands of the roads themselves. C. H. Markham. president of the Illinois Central railroad, declared heer in an address. "The railroads perform a public service and it is proper that their service should be subject to supervision of the public's representatives," he said. "But, when' the3e representatives become so numerous, so and so conflicting that they powerful a represent burden on the public, when their duties are so construed as to usurp the functions of management, then it is that the public itself must call a Groon Chilo Chooso f. a i uoBeaeaeQoaeaeB6BaBtta9BBBBBOBOBOBOBoass9Q9B9u a afi 25c Shoulder Veal Roast, n n 9 oa a a0 jt V- - -.- '"Merry Christmas" Say it lERICAi!- - t.liiDE BREAD oftenthe oftenar the better, and, where you can't say it, write it. Your dear ones will appreciate such a greeting, and we have a wonderful selection of Christmas cards, artistically designed with appropriate sentiments for the occasion. Use them to spread Christmas cheer. Spargo's Book Store ORDER FftOU YOUR OROCSJU INCOMPARABLE SMOKED MEATS 35c Sugar Cured Bacon, stab DESPITE SPLIT or half slab, pound prisoners. In . . Smaller amounts, pound 35c Sugar Cured Hams, (Continued from 1'oge One) Is believed. Government circles In London, however, remain convinced that Arthur Griffin. Michael Collins and their aupportera will win the day as It Is felt that the moderates will follow this group. The split In the Dall cabinet will not Interfere In the releaw of the Irish 1Rc pound ACCEPTANCE BY IRELAND SEEN ......... I2vIvjSSIi the Internment j camps, according to the Irlih office, Those from the Ballyklnler camp will 10c be ctven their liberty today. WILL PAY DIIBTS. WASHINGTON. Dec. . The new Irish free ftate will assume the ob- APPROVE EXPULSION ligations in thla country of the Irish OF KANSAS MINERS republic amounting to about $6,000,-00Stephen M. O'Mara, mayor of Limerick, and finance nent of the Irish government. aid tonight. INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Dec. 9. AcMr. O'Mara aald certificates of the tion of John L. Lewis, of the republic sold in thla country were re- United Mine Workers president in of America, as of a moral obligation the garded Irish people and. probably would be revoking the charter of the Kansas converted Into bonds bearing Interest district organization and deposing it at five per cent to correspond to the officers was approved by the internarates on the certificates. There had tional executive board of the miners in been, he said, two issues of certificates session here one today. In United the States, placed The International board also held to I5.SOO.000 and the secamounting waa (Illifloated only to the ex- that the action of Inthe Districtan12assessond which convention placing tent of $385,000 in IllinoLs and $30.-00- 0 nois) ment on Its members for the benefit in the District of Columbia. the Kansas district was illegal and of belief JLr. O'Mara expressed the that the bonds would be of short maturity in violation of the laws of the organl- in view of the smalmess of the aumiIjU,on raised in this country as compared SPINOKIKLD. 111.. Per. (By to the annual revenue of Ireland which The Associated Press.) Officials of he estimated at 1250.000.000 a year. the Illinois miners" union at state oo headquarters here today had nothingto say when informed that the inlerNOTED OUTLAW p"nanons.1 executive board had proved the expulsion of the Kansas; RULES PRISON union, and held Illinois' aid illegal. i . pound Half Ham, pound 20c Cholca Dry Salt Pork. 5 ppunda or more, pound . Smaller amounta, pound . . 40c fresh Kippered Salmon, pound . 40c Bricks White Codfish . S3 pound 35c Lom or Rib '22c Chcpt, palls freth purs 10-poun- Lard 40c 2 pound pails Lard 33c 9 pound pails freth . . . Critco $1.45 6 pound palls freth Critco $1.29 75c 3 pound palla rreth C3c Critco Snow$15 pall rreth 2 $1-8- drift 55c 2 pound pail 35c 35c 3 11.69 25c 1Sc 3c freth pure $1.00 4 pound pail 15c 35c palls freth pur E5c .23c 27c 22c LARD, SHORTENING $1.65 Lard 35c Leg Veal Roaat. pound 25c 3Cc Loin Veal Roast, pound 20c 30c Rump Veal Roatt, pound 20c drift drift freth Snow E9c freth Snow- 49c 70c quart cana Marola . . . 59c 70c quart cana Wetton Oil . 59c 65c quart cana Supreme Salad Oil 45c ...... .... 40c pint cana Maxola 30c 40c pint cant Wetton Oil . 30c Hundred of Other Money Saving Items ufOur Stores at all Grocers QUALITY FIRST ALWAYS 0, -: r ' J i FOUR OGDEN STORcS Trade at the location moat convenient ' STORE NO. 6 and Waahlngte STORE NO. 10 Near First National Bank LOOK FOR THE ORANGE FRONTS STORE NO. 4 Twenty fourth and Grant STORE NO. 8 Near Golden Rule Skze 7JWA Twenty-sixt- h for infants od ! Settlers (Continued from Page One) kanas penal institution, made nn un-to successful, but apectacular attempt escape from the prison farm at Tucker, when he killed the truny guard In September. Slaughter had obtained a rifle from, the outside, and on Sunday morning when the men wert gath-on ered In a bath house he opened fire the guards outside. He killed lilies Adklnson. a trusty guard, servin a sentence for murder committed when a possee raided a band of draft evaders of whom Adklnson was one. He also wounded other guards. He finally was forced to surrender when a guard in hiding took him unawares. OFTIIN SCARCHKI). He often boasted that he would nev. er go to the electric chair. At Hot Springs he and his cell were searched dally for weapons. After a Jury returned a verdict of life Imprisonment he turned over to the guards, who included a company of national guardsmen, a handful of hacksaws, remarking that if the sentence had been death he never would have stayed in Jail overnight. The state guard' waa called out on another occasion Just about a year ago to guard the penitentiary here when a plot which ho had Instigated for a wholesale delivery of prisoners was uncovered. oft' marking the headqdaners building U. M. W. of A.. District J2." have been effaced and the words "Illinois Mine Workers" put In their place. oo A GUATEMALA CITT. Guatemala. Dec. 9- - (Hy The Associated Press) The Guatemalan congresji which waa I , oo Yet Inanta,InraI14j aa4 rowfnf Child ren Rich mCEmaJt i Tfce Ordinal rood-Dd- c Tot AH Art! BOY LIVES 4 YEARS Hnrlirlf'c vi i ii via vl it CooBag grain extract la Powder KorfM lXgstlU BOISE MAN PLACED ON PRODUCES BOARD Dec. . Following apof the first board of direcpointment tors of the N'atlonsJ Live itxck Producers association by the executive committee of the American Farm federation, the organltation win immediately bexin to function. The board includes E. H. Cunningham, De Kit Carson. .Melnes; C. E CoUlns. Colo., and Hugh Eproat. Boise, Idaho. First Moorish flier made a pair of wlnga to escape from prison. CHICAGO. Ilu-re- MILLIONS OF POUNDS BY THE GOVERNMENT a. Mini man wcner TI J. uV l,. r.,- -- , SAME PRICE " For more than 30 years Ounces for RUSS GIVEN ARMY'S SURPLUS MEDICINES al , r- - Original Id Imitation Substitutes BOUGHT WASHINGTON. Dec. 9. The war will be authorized by con department gress to 141m over to the American relief administration its surplus rnsdi-csupplies for use In the famine districts of Russia. Members of the house military committee have agreed 16 report favorably on the resolution authorizing the tranafer of supplies, and It la expected that the committee will formally report the measure today as a substitute for a bill passed early La tJx weak ihM aeaato. i. ike dissolved during the revolution of SepWITH ESKIMO TRIBE tember 1920, has been oalled to meet tomorrow to receive the resignation of Carlos Herrera. whose presidential regime waa overthown In the revolt of 8. SEATTLE. Wash.. Dec. f. Harold Nolee. who left her at the age of last Monday night, and to elect a pro1 in 111, to Join the Ftefansson Arcvisional president. oo tic expedition, remaining in the north with th Esquimaux, returned to his ItFTTUHNKD TO SCHOOL home here today aboard the. coaat IXX1AN. Dec. . Jack Otterbeck. guard cutter Unalga, Nolce. creditthe youth who wai arrested Monday ed with being on of the youngest nt Ogden on a charge of stealing, waa explorers recorded, did not see a white returned today to the Industrial echol man for four years. He aaid he had at Ogden. from which Institution he learned the native languages and .va on parole. Juvenile Officer llmtl planned to publish a compilation of Anderson took him to Ogden. them. and a woman were detained by police here for auestloninr in connection with the robbery of a Grand 1taplds bank. They were identified by the officers as Claude Glodoney of Nllea. Mich., and Mrs. Margaret Bacon, of Jackson. Both denied any knowledge of the robbery. In Glodoneys pockets were found $800 In new B0 and $100 hank notes which he claimed to have drawn from a South Bend bank several days ago. Grand Rapids officers are en route to Jackson to question the man and woman. T7 - GUATEMALANS PICK PROVINCIAL RULER invalids r r 1 j JACKSON. Mich.. Dec. 9. as 14c VEAL COUPLE DETAINED IN BANK ROBBERY e O . . pound I j . . 22c pound 30c Spring Lamb Loin Roatt, 22c pound 25c Spring Lamb Shoulder 20c Chops, pound 25c Spring Lamb Shoulder 16c Roatt, pound 20c Whole Pork Shoulders, ' .n,,;,.;,,,:,;,,,,. . . 15c 17c 17c 15c ......... i 1 . 30c Legs of Spring Lamb, PORK j j . 1Sc 15c 35c Pork Loin Roatt, pound 23c 35c Pork Loin Chcpt, pound 23c 25c Pork Shoulder Sttak, 17c pound tin-fo- il package with the yellow label. For sale at your grocers. '! SPRING LAMB . . . pound 25c Sirloin Steak, pound 25c Raund Steak, pound 25c Hamburger, pound . Avoid yeast preparations in other forms. Fleischmann's Yeast is sold only in its natural fresh form j r SIX UNUSUAL BARGAINS for Saturday Before Noon co 1 WHY PAY WAR PRICES? J au |