OCR Text |
Show THE ' GReAt BASIN. , FREE! FREE! Vast Region Lying Between the Rockies and. the Sierra Nevada Whose Waters Never Escape IN AWARDS Beyond Its Mountain Barriers. Hot ween the Rocky Mountains - and the Sierra Neada"Ties"a THU SALT LAKE TRIBUNK BOO lao VERS CON TUST IS yreat area of relatnely lowland, UST - STARTI NG NO J though portions df it .are soeral, 31 NO CANVASSING thousand feet aboe sea leel. . AN INTERESTING is his i designated hv the geograGAME ALL .CAN WHICH phers as the Great Basin for the 1 LAY IBIT SUBSCR FOR Till reason that few of its rners flow TRIBUNE AND ONCE AT beyond these mountain barriers. SO THE CONTEST , but loose theiiise yis in the desert YOU CAN' YOUR SHARE GET sands or emptydnto. lakes yhose OF THU PRIZES. ovaters are lost by eaporation. The Salt Lake Tribune has Nearly all of the eountrjm-- ' BOOKLOVERS luded in tile Great Basin is announced a vv tin h $5,000 00 in CONTEST in ..desert the trulyland, though aspeet of some parts has. been valuable awards will be divided radically chaugcdiln irrigation. among those who participate Most ot the land is exceedingly successfully. product i i w lien water is supplier This contest consists of Seventy-SevePictures one picture- - being to, it, as was demonstrated many years ago by rliu 'Mormons, who published each day in the.Tribum settled in I'tah and founded .ji Each picture will represent the strong and prosperous community title of a book, and the contestJhat has since grown andhraneh-e- ant is required to sohe the Seveuty-Sevei- r Pictures giving out in many directions. its Many thousand acres have been the name of the' book and reclaimed in the Great Basin and author. The first picture. appearMarch 23rd. are supporting prosperous hoiims ed in and yielding large annual returns 19 1J. The locations of-t- wo Although it is not required that irrigation 1 of ( the nt ie lover time projects ydu be a Tshbseriberp it isbestauld Tniekee Carson project, in Nev- - cheapest to subscribe,' so you will ' ada aml't he Strawberry Valle freed ve- -t he -- 1 ribunc every-d- ay project, m lTtah, are8 in this area. without' having'the' bother "and The new water supply for the expense of looking up a newsboy and pav ing 5 cents city of Los Angeles is taken from or news-stan- d ' for the Great Basin through, a long every copy." 5000 book titles of A conduit, the concept ion and concatalogue been struction of which have been has printed and these will be mailed upon receipt of forty noteworthy features in recent edges of the basin, where cents. In addition to containing , certain it Hscnds to mountain epe-st- s lik, the 5000 titles, from which the the Wasatch Range m Utah and Sev Pictures arc being the Sierra in California, there are selected, this catlogue also conmany valuable sources of water tains seven certificates redocmablt s powersome of width liaVe beeu for the first conTesTT .bf.the profitably developed. Naturally in such a region, the Watch lor Announcement in the ' dev of w hieh d Ike-Trib- une - - PatikmgCo KaysviUe r YAH For Sale A Standard bred trotting mare, broke to work; also throe colts. Inquire of Frank li. Layton, Kaysville, Utah. FOR SALE Thoroughberd White Wyandotte eggs. $1 pel setting of l5i. Mrs. W. P. Upper-so' Adv Kaysville. FOR SALE 20 acres of- land near Rosedale station, Centerville, also several young horses. Wm. Wright. , - county foundations, cement walks etc. All work guaranteed. Phone Harry Ross No,. 1. .. Farmington, -- U tab. Two and . one-hal- f centrifugul pump aitto flow"tifktreanisraif utmost importance." Dur ing the last 20 years' or more work of tips kind has been carried on bythc United States Geological Survey, and t lie results Are publi,sliced annually in SurPaper vey .reports. Water-Suppl' 310, just issued, covers the results of stream measurements made in the Great Basin inx 1911. The. work was done in all parts of the basin and the report, which contains 200 pages, includes records of flow obtained at 98 stations. It is made up largely of tables giving- - records of the -- flow of the streams at the gaging stations during the year and contains only such text as is necessary to explain the tables. - The report,. is intended for. use- of engineers and others who desire information in' regard to the quantity of water in the streams "at various times in the year in connection with the utilization of the streams for various types of hydraulic construction. Great Salt Lake is iheia'rgest Great of the water bodies of-t- he and disposes Basin. It receives of the discharge except that which is diverted for irrigation,, of a the most im. number, of yivers, Webportant being the Bear, the lakes er, and the Jordon. Other are Owens Lake, which, receives the flow from the Owens River - basin t Walker Lake, into which from the r is discharged r Sink Carson "basin'; River Walker into Lake Humboldt including Carson of waters the flows which . and . Humbodlt rivers ; and Pyralakes, mid and Winnemueca .which receive the discharge of Truckee River. All these lakes areloeated in Nevada except the Great Salt Lake, which is" in Utah,, and Owens LL&lce, which is In the in eastern California. Great of the Oregon" portion Basin there are a number of lakes including Malheur, Harney, and .Warner. Lake Tahoe which lies partly in California "andpartly in Nevada, is a high Sierra lake, he of the Address all comniunications)re-gardin-- Salt Lake City, Utah (Comp) NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Richard Duenlen, claim dersigned at her residence, Woods Crosis. JJausL count, Utah, on or before the lQtlj day of August, A., 1). 191.1 ' . Elizabeth'!). Picpgrass, administratrix of estate of Richard Ducrdem deceas'd. -- . 1 1 k & a neat I 1 a r n eV, - chr e e ei v e st h e' waterfrom the surrounding mountain peaks and discharges it through Truckee River into Pyramid and Winnem-ucc- a lakes. There are many other bodies of water of greater or less importance. Copies of Water-Suppl- y paper may be obtained free of charge on application to the Director, U. -ashineton SrGeolegiea lSurvey,-" D. C. April 10- - -- May Frtflhtful World. e times' are , : ing Gotham What's Why, when we house we used to those awful bear 1 y, strong now? entered a frlend'a be met by one of beads on the rug. and now tbey'rf introduclng rugV CbLnesw-dragoa I - Another triumph ofihe tailors.'. Like all plain tailored garments it must rely for its effect on its lines, and here the Woolfcx Tailoring is shown at its best. .The pictiirejs a sug- gestion that you should see these suits on, if you possibly can The price is $25.00. Then we offtf- two values of suits at special prices that are positively great values. Misses rarY notee fund with U nda? fmnt t.f i " - ' U irer s tu uuhon ' Tut in bank, . - - , t'aptlol etock paid In Nurjdua fund $ ll.N, inus liAun ). . f. - . & UndUidd proGt, lweexprnep and tavte atd Nation t Hunk notan outNtandin pita lit Mh! Natlutm! Kiuikn tuipald j lndHttlu ti dtialtH auhjm't U i rh'rtt if tlifHfctf outetamihK and Juniors k Ladies latest new models. We have put you wise, a dandy suit cheap. , T 7 tan Uoewterd for Total . ft 114 , AIST tvSALE Mat i f HhIi, County of Da la, I I. K HltRon, CrtAhlar that tihot n miad Ua ik, Ut hdoimily nwaar that it HUi t Ntirtium iT ie trut in tli tHt my knowledt and Iwti t f k H 1 WIN, i ; L stiltAi i(d and aworn - lfoi to DAVID Jea Ajtost , K Adame lMrtv tore. mo Due b I AY La7. la Dr, Miles 'Anti-Pai- n :UlaI by lhautaada far a generation The easiest way out of neuralgia is to use Dr. Miles Pills. They have relieved sufferers lor so many years that they heve become a household necessity. 1 have taken Dr. Miles Pills tor live years and tley are the only thing that does me any good. They have relieved neuralgia In my I have also head In fifteen minutes taken them for rheumatism, headache, palna In the breast toothache, earache and pains In the bowels and limbs. I have found nothing to equal them and they are all that la claimed for them." n Antt-Pal- n Aj VtU prTceHve ever made on wearable goods. Some sleevealire long, some three quarters. The former prices range from $L25 to $3;50. 7 DN, Niitm f I'uUitc M Hmith, h , SALE PRICE IS 29 014OC This store is so of FATE full the good things to wear, ready made and otherwise, that it would seem the Ogden women have an easy problem in being easily, cheaply and well dressed, along the line of fashions trend The goods arehere in abundance The clerks and dispo- sit ions are 'lfere to serve yoir well;whatmore can be done. If you would he wise, you will take a tip from the women who trade at Oiii' evening, eeverul jorq ngu, In n gold mining camp In tlm T'anovunl, a inarj partially IntoxbjUcVf an-sup be actuatcjFIvy 11 teinptnd eulclde llrt t nk phla. hut this not piovl'ii; enough h tiled Yo hang liinmt 1' :ut waa prevntuL and handed oum to the abmtfr to he kept In aafe cuatoily for the night, and to he tiled hefoie the u ahrewi) acting gold cmmnlH8loner. and Holeinn Scot, tin next moirilng Th iTe IVel n g n dl a to n enl him from committing suicide If hr thought fit, but It being considered dealrahlp to punish him in sonic way. It was deold ed to bring a chaige of diunh.ennesa and dlsotderly conduct agaliiNt him To this the prisoner pleaded guilty, whereupon the acting gold comniiu ' loner, without the ghost of a smile, delivered the following extraordinary judgment" Myron tfiV, About J. W. BUDOH. Blue Springs. Mo. At all druggists 2S deaee 28 cente. Never sold In hulk. MILErwtDTCALCO.rcikhart,1nd: TBIII Con fectioner shall fine ye twa pundB' for your drunkenness, but I'll Just gle ye to un derststhd that I ken vera wetd what ye attempted to dae, and had ye succeed ed In your attempt, your poonlshment would have bln vera much more severe than It is'" K.ayS'Oilte, 7icxh Not btxmps The gum on Hie but ks of ttamps and stamp wafte waa once the subject of a tpiiHliiVii in the. bice of Commons b the late Sir Wilfrid "I jd ft con t a Ijt aj r o h ol?" Lawson anilously asked the teetotal baronet, and "was there uny danger of It causing blood poisoning If applied to a cut finger?" The reassuring answer came from the postmaster general thal the gum was absolutely free from spirit and that the stamp waste could be used asflrst aid for a rut with Impunity. London Chron- THE UTAH NATIONAL. BANK I fin-ge- - 0F0GDEN.UTAH UNITED 8TATE9 DEPOSITORY OFFERS TO DEPOSITORS EVERY FACILITY WHICH THEIR BALANCES, BU8INE8S AND RESPONSIBILITY WARRANT RALPH B. IIOAQ, Prealdgnt . r HAROLD J. PEERY; Vice - Prt. SERVICE VV J. PARKER, Vice Prei. A. V. M'INTOSH, Caihltf. JBSERBl t Our Leaves, SaltLake daily 8 :45 A. M. - Arrives Los Angeles 10:00 A. M. Two other good trains daily. California The Los Angeles Limited, ... , You Travel East . Dont buy your ticket via. a broken routa-rpa- rt onesys another. Tell the Ticket Agent you want tern, part 4 Ask any n Electrically Lighted Standard and Tourist Sleepers Diner and Observation Buffet, Leaves Salt Lake 5.P M. Arrives Los Angeles Excursion 4:30 P.M to go THROUGH VIA THE OVERLAND AS FAR AS IT GOES." . v The Overland Express, ' Dining Car through, Free Reclin- ing Chair Cars. j Agent about reduced ' For further information see any Salt Lake Rbute Agent. Write for California Literature. . . Ticket Office 10 East 3rd. South Salt Lake City . T. C. Peck J.TI. Manderfield A. G.P. A: G. P. A. Los Angeles Salt Lake City. ' fares at various times during the year. . they are Through train service via the direct route, short route. equipment the best money can buy, substantial road bed, new and dependable, and, EVERY MILE IS BY PROTECTED -AUTOMATIC SAFETY ELEC D.Er BURLEY, 7 Gen. Pass. Agent, Salt Lake City In merchandising you buy the best you can get for your -- TRIC ' BLOCK SIGNALS. money, WHY NOT YOU TRAVEL. IN DRIKKIK6 ROUTE There are Good Reasons for this suggestion, x Standard and Tourist Sleepers BUY THE . WHEN WHISKEY aD0yoprtIRaIslifa-E)as7- - BuTwe de believe that a httle Cood Whiskey la the bouse Is e COOP THING IN CASE OF SICKNESS m doetdr Phillips, - Diner-Ob&ervati- WEDOD'TBEUEVE . -- Electrically Lighted Equipment and Tourist Sleepers Standard Car. Free Reclining Chair Car i its up to you to get " v Pills Anti-Pai- tttttt $11.75 $18.75 over accumulation of Ladies Waists t arc"npw grouped on two tables at the lowest' ' ? Wmr Neuralgia, unothlng battarthan -- THE PACIFIO LIMITED Ask And vbarn nerve-rac- k SUIT $25.00 Fine of Man Who Attempted Suicide Would Have Been Larger Had . He Succeeded. Inaugurated April 6th, . ij I 1. n . . r itli, JUST ESCAPED .WORSE CALIFORNIA W Cburch-r-Th- a tto-- n eys for estate. the-wate- w hi dc- - Creditor- - will prceiit with vouchers to the un- 7 lal L Those who have suffered from neuralgic pains need not be tofd how necessary it js to secure Salt Lake Tribune - -- g this conest to BOOKLOVERS CONTEST -EDITOR . y ... -- d Salt Lake Daily Tribune butneiw i D Lawful uiiihtf 6od ftg new d &nd bdted fo diy 22 foot lift.j Address or call on lorrj, The Reflex, Kaygville' ITtahr P fJIlaon. elopnieiit entirely dependent on its water resources, studies of the is so n rri Cement work of all kinds done Tm part on order in all parts ' of the iMhiar'H FOR SALE inch'Amerfcan ' Kb HD I HUM ,svnnlA v'tirtd and tinAYilt OYnlrNfe, U S to MtH'ur HanklBK furtrtttirw ami llxeeufi from Nai Dank uol irewt-- v ngiint,) Du from mroved t'hckt td othor cash itettie . olht r National lUnke PructRuml curranof , tl ko at n, Thirty-Fivelhcture- eepnomic On Iavadji And s' -- cuty-Seve- nt JAMES T. HAMMOND Attorney Tiid Counselor it li -- -- Parties THE V WINDSOR Layton, In the Slate of Utah, At H'lfA - n The First National Bank o( Lafton NOTARY PUBLIC. S5,0B0 tho Condition of Report of J. R. GAILEY . J esn b knd olek. , Ttirjirman mnkaa II .bln btiiatM to donl In XUhitXfy and TVin tbnt in nboolvts ta II ndriMblo to knvo llttla anhand. always pp. -- V Dtab Liquot Co: r" " t ; - 7 APRIL-BOt- h x Eat Raisin Bread - 3 |