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Show Thursday, February TACJli TWO 9 191L Take tablets, 0ne 0r two with or after each meaL you want to get rid of that sy, tired out Reeling. . Fifty cents is all Cy. E. Napp. or leading drugists everywhere ask for a large box of Ml The Skylark tablets. You c&n get a free trial . Th bird nd Their And His Spurs Ncet treatment by t writing Booth., a Co., Buffalo, N. Y. said would pass, near or over the nest XCE upon a time. ' - - , and there was a sky with' the three little eggs, daddy, lark which was very unhap they would be broken by either or the heavy boots of pv in spite of his beautiful voice. the scythe men. ' The cause of his unhappiness was the farmer or one of his The Women and Vhat shall we do! said the the ugly, long, sharp spurs which he had on his feet. lie felt sure poor little lady skylark. The eggs jThe Rainy Day that they would keep any pretty will be broken, and w shall have to him mv prpttjy little baby skylarks g. tittle iady- lark make us bajppy. Ob, if l had only for a husband.- DurihgTBanicotT907 n one of our After a time, however, it turn- laid the eggs on the other side of is There long where was there the1 hedge, wrong. merchants had failure ed out that he ... was one very pretty little skylark grass which the farmer never-cut- s staring him sternly in the an husband which lived near. the bird-wit- h face Me couldi see no That gave the so on which thought other alternative.' long spurs and idea. Suppose the eggs were much of his beautiful voice that the pther side pf the (hedge, do 3Je had , . created no she did not care about the ugly you think' they would be safer Revenue; Fund Wasnt claws on his feet. So she married there than they are in this place! breakers looking .for mate. him, and they went to live togethahead The bank where Oh, yes! said the - - he did business couldnt er near , a cunning little nest think I Well, he answered, which they built in the gras help him and he applied know a good way to get them I Larks fly high in the air, but they us. .to ' there. have their nesits on the ground. Very naturally our first With that he looked down at After awhile there were three obligations were to our the long, spurs- - which he had while little eggs spotted own customers. He was pretty so ugly and useless, ' he with brown in the skylarks nest, thought at his wits end and' inwith the spur. Why, and they were very happy think- clasped it structing his attorney te he said. fits exactly! if the when would be how nice it ing draw up his assignment Do you 'think you could lift three eggs should hatch out. They . papers went home to side of were so happy that they. forgot it, fly with it to the other break th news to big the hedge and then lay it down ail about the ugly, long suprs. . wife, , T asked his But one day a sad thing hap very carefully there Learning that $2,500, pened. The little birds heard the mate, who was greatly worried.., would save her husband, i , Indeed I could, my dear, he farmer say that on the next day she gave him the surprise he would cut the grass in the field replied And that is just exactly of his life by bringing what he dad with the three eggs. That would mean that him . to our. bank .and drawing $985.00 ; from been run over by several vehicles Murdered for Money. her .savings account. while lying in the mad. It, is be- "-'loaned her the" bal-- " ' r , T will recover. Sunnyside, Feb. 5. Three un- lieved he anoe on a mortgage she masked highwaymen held Up Vic'had previously bought-frotor Albert Jenkins of Salt Lake FILTHY- - STOMACH. us. City and George Bentley of j jThiswif began with in the street here at 12 :30 Food Ferementing in, Stomach the very week of their this morning, mortally wounded Causes a Rank Condition. to say $5.00 - marriage Jenkins and slightly wounded of her hojise- out a week Bentley'. Going southerly the des When you have indigestion ' hoid allowance. peradoes made their escape tem- your food sours; many times it . This husband and - p porarily. actually rots and forms gases that wife are now, real Two suspects of the holdup and poison the blood, partners chums in murder were captured at'Wood-.kle- , stomach tablets Take ' every sene of the on the Denver &'Rio Grande if you want-t- o change your bad - - word, and the inci- , i , main line in Emery county, twen- stomach into a healthy, clean one. dent affords an exty miles south, .at dark tonight. Ask Qy. E. Napper. lesson to cellent The third? suspect made his es ' MLO-Nis the best prescripand other husbands eape, under cover of darkness, by tion for upset stomach and indi, ; wives. wadiffg and swimming the Price gestion ever written. No matter PAID ON SAYINGS river at Woodside in his stocking how miserable your stomach feels " s jt feet. Sheriff Keller of Carbon Co. jC stomach tablets give im Brothers Thatcher will start two posses after the mediate relief. - Banking Co. . fugitive, however, one fram Wood Take stomach tablets, . f y side to follow him and the other which are guaranteed to cure in (Capital and Surplus from Green River to , head 'him digestion, and rid yourself of diz, , $195,000.00 off. His escape say the officers, is ziness, "biliousness, nervous or sick . H. EL HATCH. President , impossible, t , headache, or money back. L . S. HILLS, VWPraxirnt - G, F.THATCHER. Chier The thieves got $262 in silver tablets if yon Take BANKHEAD, AutChief from Jenkins, who ran a gamblJ.H, want, to make youf stomach so ' . 1 -- DIRECTORS' ing house. They overlooked $200 strong that it will digest the heart W in gold' in one of his hip pockets. iest; meal without Dwid Excle. fjoteph Howell, distress, and A. Rboker, Jme Mock, D. C. furnish good, clean,; nutritious Budge, Anthon Anderton, G. U . 1 Mgton. Hendricks. ' Gets Job as blood Goulds Son making elements to" the MI-O-N- THE JOURNAL : : by 7 tuet-tstte- d ,.-- - . CO. EAIIL AND ENGLAND PUBIISIUNQ every Tuesday, Entered at the and Saturday, at Logan, Utah Thursday second-clasmatter. as rost-Offic- e s AUGUSTUS GORDON P, J. MARSHALL, EDITOR CITY EDITOR SUBSCRIPTION RATES. of Ei gland consummated the exchange of an American fortune for an English title, by what was poli tely termed a marriage, performed in teh highest and roost expensive style and with every accessory complete, in St. Bartholomew k church. New York. After the manner of suoh notable society events, it was spectacular in the highest degree ; and that the primping, panring, genuflections, responses, ring presentation and the various attendant ceremonies might each, and all be properly performed at the right moment and without visible or audible prompt ting, a full dress rehearsal was held on Monday at which, all the mummery designed to celebrate not the union of two loving hearts, but the reguilding of an English coronet with Amrieari gold, was gone through in detail, the contracting parties have the satisfaction! knowing that if the marriage was not recorded in the archives of heaven, at least the society columns did it full justice, and that was the main point. , ' ' , -- 7 r. SAMPLES Just to ascertain the effect of the tariff on mens clothing, a gentleman in New York recently wrote for a box of samples of cloths with respective prices, to a well known firm of British export tailor?, viz., Messrs. C, B. Brier! ey & Co., of Huddersfield. The samples came in due course, This firm offers to supply suitT to customers in all parts of the world at from $6.45 to $13.40, according to sample of cloth selected ( exclusive, of course, of duty and freight charges.- - Suits of similar cloth would cost in New York from $13 to $26 full double the price charged j in England. Accompanying the samples is list of duties- payable on an imported suit of clothes in various- oan tries. The United 'States tops thelot with ninety per cent approximately. Belgium' charges thirteen per cent. Bermuda ten per cent. British Guiana twelve and one-haper eent, Canada thirty per cent, Cape Colony twelve per cent, Jamaica seveii teen per cent, New Foundland forty-fiv- e per cent, The Transvaal twelve per cent. principal European countries charge duty by .weight of goods. To import cents, cents, to Italy twenty-twGermany thirty-siErance costs twenty, cents, to a suit of clothes into to Spain $1.44. Besides these diminutive' figures' the American 'rate of duty towers like a skyscraper over arailroad shed. News item from tariff reform com, mittee, Reform Club, 26 Bearer street, New York " 1 City. . When not paid in advance, 50c per year additional . Furnished on Application Rates Advertising INCOME TAX AMENDMENT. I of the various Upon what the legislatures states do, depends the fate of the income tax amendment to tire Constitution. It is a ju. t measure, and will probably secure the necessary ratification, although the approval of thirty five of the states is re naturalquired Many of those most deeply affected, confiscaof act ly object, and claim) k would be an tion without constitutional justification. But rjfis In Bryan said in his letter of acceptance in 1900: the can draft the hour of danger the government citizen; it ought to be able to draft his pocket book as well Unless money is more preeious than blood, we cannot afford to give greater protection to the incomes of the rich than to the lives of the poor,' In his Madison Square speech in 1906, he said in relation to the same subject : ' The income tax, which some in our country have denounced as a socialistic attack upon wealth, iias, I am pleased to report the endorsement ofJhe .most conservative countries of the old world. It is a permanent part of the fiscal system of most of the countries in Europe and in many plaees iris a grad-e- d tax, the rate being highest upon the largest Ih , England has long depended upon the-", come tax for a considerable part of heT revenues commission is now investigating the and the English That the juice of coal is altogether too high in k Uniform to a graded from to change proposition Utah, a state possessing many pood mines wherein the veins are thick and easily dug and traffic condi' I am so convinced of th justice of the, income tions are good. Is generally acknowledged? The tax that t fed sure that the people will sooner or mine operators charge that it is due to the high rates : later demand an amendment to t the Constitution charged by the railway companies for transporta' which will specifically authorize ah income tat and tion. Identical hills establishing maximum rates . thus make it possible for the burdens of the federal for the transportation of coal, have been introduced government to be apportioned among the people In by Senator Gardner and Representative Eardley in proportion to their ability to bearthem. It is little the respective branches of the Legislature, and if short of a disgrace to our country that while it is just to the railways should be passed. Inasmuch as able to command the lives of t citizens in time of the rates allowed! are 56 per cent, higher than, in war, it can not, even in the most extreme emergency, North Daktoa; 36 per eent. higher than m Illinois, " compel wealth to bear its share of the expenses o' and 32 per eent. higher than in Iowa, it would seem the government which protects it that it should bq plenty-- The bill, if passed ryijl also The west and the southwest, generally, favor the put a' stop to the little games whereby the railway meorne tax, as do those in all sections of the country, companies have put competing private coal'compan who entertain the same sentiments as Mr. Bryan ies out of business; that is, claiming an insufficiency The time seems .ripe, hut the majority required B of enrsand' denying them to the comjwting concerns heavy. However, it wilt soon Se known whether the while supplying them to the mine in wihich they ratifications can be secured. have been Jnterested, and also of causing unreasonnecessary thirty-fiv- e able delays in transportation, and making excessive with Canada. , charges for transfers and switching. There must be Reciprocity With Canada as' provided for no favoritism in any respect, and all charges are , in the agreement with the Canadian Government arbitrarily fixed. The Traffic Bureau of the Comwas laid before congress in a special message .from mercial Club of (Salt Lake favors it, and the require the president. This agreement is th result of menls seem reasonable. . negotiations that have been in progress for the past ten month's. By its provisions the United States reAs" predicted in The Journal during the cammoves duties amounting to $4,850,000, while Canada in the event of Republican victory nnich diffremits duties amounting to $2,500,000.' Concerning paign, be found in the interpretation of the would th agreement the Associated Press says: It pro iculty plank ufwn the liquor question, which might vide a notableaba foment of duties on a number of partys mean meuh of little. Ever since the assembly of the American products consumed in Canada. ProminLegislature committees have been busy trying to ent among these is bituminous coal. Which is now ex- draft a law to conform to the plank and to the ported to Canada to the value of several million dol- promises made. Prof. Brimhall of Provo has given lars annually. There is also a much better opening the strict interpretation as. he presented it to the for American farm machinery and implements. . voters during the campaign, which was, local otpion No less than ninety-on- e per cent of the Canadian in cities of the first and second class, having police goods imported into the United States will benefit protection, and straight prohibition in the various by considerable reductions of duties. The intention counties outside of those cities. Tim is the strict of th commissioners to remove duties on printing construction for which the element paper and wood pulp was effected eo far as tho Do- & working, and the tone and shading vary from minion government could do it1 outside limitation down through' county local option, to ronre-thin- g that, existing in th laws of the Canadian provincial govclosely resembling th wide open idea; and ernments imposing export duty on. wood cut on each subdivision claims to be Standing squarely up crown lands in Canada, but the American duty will on that Republican platform plank. So multifarilie only on the comparatively small proportion of ous, both in number and nature, were the bills being .Canadian pulp or wood cut on such crown lands: introduced in the Senate and Ifoase, that, despairThe agreement, to become effective roust be shaped of reaching a compromise in this manner, a joint in ing as a law amendatory of the existing tariff-actCommittee of five has 'been ajjpointed to endeavor to the United States and in Canada and it will require determine just what was meantby Sharp work to accomplish this, so far as congress is liquor plank, and to draft a bill in accordance concerned,-it- t thebrief, period of time remaining of therewith Even then the fight may be renewed The Commoner. the present sesrion. r with greater ferocity than ever. Gov. Dix of New York has recommended a I?ed-erMarriage, in Americas millionaire eircl, inincome fax amendment and th elect ioq of Uni-te- d stead of being a sacrament, has been made a specStates Senators by popular vote. a show to which hone but the el)te and sun-dr- y 1 lf o x -- T f - . - -- ultra-temperan- -- s f Y Daddys Bedtime Mi-o-r- a 5 from-takin- - -- well-know- . -- - his-scyt- m Sun-nvsicP- e. . . - -- MI-O-N- A - s- jfr j .? MI-O-N- A MI-O-N- -- 4 MI-O-N- A in-La- w s W.-S- body, , Messenger. New York, Feb. 6. Anthony J. 0$ & P Drexel, who married Miss 'Marjg orie Gould, went to work today, He got a job as messenger with a stock exchange firm and began his duties this morning. With an! w I To get in on some of our choice farms we are offering for . ,, . , , e uriness e earoing 6 room gale. An elegant Farm with full .improvements, e and call i" house, water and all conveniences for $7300.00 rung of the ladder. Young Drex- - - , . get terms. ' el worked hard on his first day all with and tramped through th fin an-- O 46 acre Farm with full improvements, water right " ' kinds of fruit trees.See us for. priees, a snap. cial district in the slnrh and cold 1 0 27 acres in Greenville an elegant fruit orchard , could Until 4:30 oclock this afternoon. be made out of this land, call for price. ; He had twenty minutes for lunch. 8.5 acres with home and all kinds of fruits such s Tomorrow hi .sister-i- n law.' VivPeaches, Apples, Cherries and Strawberries, just what you ien, marries, but he will work w want,- - close to Logan, see us for terms. half a day nevertheless, quitting Farms and City property in Cache and. Box Elder, just in time. to dress for the cerecounties.' . mony. He journeyed borne tonight on a crowded L train. , - ( p P NOW IS THE 'TIME -- 1 . . 0 Young Man Injured John M. Fowler, a young man employed1 as levelman in the office of the city-- engineer of Salt Lake, inx dazed condition Iv ing almost buried In mud in an ajleyway leading to the Salt Lake Livery & Transfer Co 8 barns on Saturday at midnight, ne had a number of severe scalp wounds. An improvement in the quality rather than in Whether ho had been attacked or increase in the number, of Congressmen, would be struck by a vehicle could not be ' " . preferable. learned It was believed he had waa found al tacle; men capable of doing the spectacle from the justice stanpoint oj; the vulgarians who promote it are .invited. On Tuesday Miss Vivian Could, daughter if George Gould, and Lord Decics newh, paper -- -- 00000 ? O fer &7Z&JT. mr 0 0 O O O 00 OO0 |