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Show tm THE WEEKLY 'smm RfeFOX KAYViLLE, UTAH t& Quality First HY - tmU y we T I R MY DOOR I made up my mind to give you people the biggest possible automobile value for your money. I studied the situation from every angle. cn decided to hang the Chalmers Monogram over reasons. my door, I did so for salient, rock-ribbe- d I am convinced that Chalmers cars combine big value and sensible price. Hugh Chalmers does not make them merely to sell but to stay sold. Some automobile factories build their own frames, but buy their engines elsewhere in job lots. They are not factories at all just big assembly plants. But the Chalmers car is built entirely in the Chalmers plant from rough casting to final assembly. The great Chalmers plant comprises twenty-tw-o great, clean, sunny buildings. If you ever get into Detroit, visit the Chalmcr factory. In the chassis assembly room you will hear a din like the rivet hammers of twenty skyscrapers crashing in concert the compressed-ai- r hammer squad riveting Chalmers chassis. v , In the physical testing laboratory, you will see date instruments of torture ingeniously designed to crushrtwist, stretch, and bend iron and steel. Here all raw material that goes into the Chalmers car must first receive unqualified O. K. Samples of every shipment of steel, iron, bronze, and aluminum must be found perfect by Clmlmers chemists. Their laboratory is the best equipped in the whole motor industry. ' Youll see the great forge and foundry. There are 'more drop forgings remember in the Chalmers car than in any other car in its price class. The enormous fender press, which cost $90,000, turns out a graceful Chalmers molded fender with blow. every 175-to- n Automatic milling machines bore and grind Chalmers Cylinders accurate to of an inch. In the Chalmers heat-treinferno, the roar and smoke .of thirty furnaces suggest Vesuvius at bat batting 1000 per cent. 1-10- 00 at Everywhere youll see inspectors alert, all eyes, fingers, measurement insisting on deadly accuracy armed with, micrometer, with scleroscope; 226 inspectors all told ; and inspection alone costs the Chalmers company over $300,000 every year. Every Chalmers car I sell ties up with the great Chalmers organization, year after year, by virtue of the highly developed Chalmers Service. There is nothing vague about Chalmers Service. Its universal coupon system provides for 100 half-houof free inspection service every year, negotiable at any Chalmers dealer in the country. That s the reason why I paid cold cash for a generous ' quota of these magnificent cars. rs - WALKER S. CHEESMAN, Distributor LUCIUS LAYTON, UTAH Dealer for Territory Lagoon to Ogden m Wcrltto Ittftat o Caesar if given free rein. So strongly do they believe this that they will vote for President Wilson as a patriotic sense of duty, should Mr. Roosevelt secure the presidential nomination. act, 8 per cent over and above all ex thinketh in his heart, so he is. But memory of that gloomy failure is still pense, and an eight or nine hour day, all normal men and women of experi- sufficient to make the man BY W. P. EPPERSON & SON the cost of food products would ad ence know that it is a question which willing to bear the ills weaverage rather have, yance about one hundred ptr cent over closely affects the g of the than fly to others we know are worse. Entered as second-clas- s present prices. As a matter of fact, a race. matter Moreover, each community under farmer has grot to be a man, but most 15, 191I,"at Kaysville, Utah We are far from favoring the blue stands n The its own needs In this way bet has an under the act of March 3, 1879. any apology for a man can hold a job laws. We do not believe that mankind ter than the people living under wholly in a late number, in which it when he has the manager of a soil- can be regenerated by statute. We is set- - forththat the cost -- of food different conditions. If there ever was Advertising rates on application. less corporation to act as his guard- are aware that communities may easily a case in which home rule was the cor products have advanced 60 per cent in ian in furnishing him employment and go too far in seeking to regulate the rect rule, is it a case such as Subscription 31.25 per year when the past thirteen years, while the ad- rustling his wages. this. conduct of the individual. Nevertheless And if a in advance. paid ?1.60 per year on vance in wages during the same is censohship established, it period overdue subscriptions or when not some way should be found to has been only 30 per cent, The figures SALT LAKE ON THE EVE prevent should not meddle with private affairs. paid in advance. the scandalous exhibitions which have Its map le correct so far as retail prKe province should be the public wel OF MORAL AWAKENING contaminated in morals public in this the fare. cities are It should embody the discretion city concerned, but they TELEPHONES Whether or pot state regulation of and state without effective are sane of and healthy-minde- d not It protest. correct when certainly men, and applet amusements is the correct remedy, all cannot be Office, No. 10 that to charged Daris not cities In the narrow views of the abnormal great the matter of the sC. A. EppersonrNo. county. respectable people in Utah must like New York and Chicago are fruits and, vegetables; andDavis prone and fanatical. P. Epperson, No. 70. that Joseph S. Peery. in bis to blue law legislation and recognize is We assume that such is Mr. famous for county yet these both, the cost of communication to Perrys the Tribune, has cities have ..established and production censorships purpose. Those who know him will marketing hardly pays pointed out a Albert which which we have prevented at least the realize that to him Judge growing evil, Nortoni, of the Mis- expenses. The and short of the must deal the goal is- more with sooner or later.' Un- more .degrading exhibitions of souri court of appeals, after a con- whole matter long, than the means of attaining the goaL is not so much the first the ference with Colpnel Theodore Roose- cost of food doubtedly the parents of Utah are just stage, the dance halls and the caba- We feel products, as the demand as quite sure that he would favor ' eager as the parents of any other rets. velt, declares that the colonel will not for service and the no legislation which would Seek to subd method state to guard their childrens moral On the other hand, the advocates of support Elihu Root should he secure of living as applied to ject the individual to the social viws people who li"e ity in the formative the nomination for president. stages when boys state regulation would be compelled to of a few. It in the cities and towns. . The people of and girls are most sensitive to im-- f present some would not be surprising . if Colonel the cities have all the conveniences, very powerful arjru- But the goal Mr. Peery points out is Roosevelt made the statement. , Thou- short and jressions ,of evil. good ments before the would will-ing- desirable. There should be some means hours of labor, all manner of people It is not solely, a religious sands of oid Iins Repubircans "ar? establish a censorship that might of question. the"whlte' Tights, (an i The Christian determining in advance the kind of firm in the belief that Roosevelt will amusements; who remembers the emulate the mean tyranny which amusements the game of having a good iJsne play coming into the city. end either of Christ may feel that he is marked social Cromwell or a Julius to the limit. regulations in the early Then we caX apply those rules, comIf the fanner could ex teaching j especially concerned. As a days of the Massachusetts colony. The mon sense rules, which have been. found Feo-rua- ry Ilerald-Republica- well-bein- tui-tori- al 109-W.-- acceptable at least in the larger cities. The difficulty has been that there wai no organization making this matter ijs business. . The way was. left open .for scandalous exhibitions because there was no one who knew in advance that a protest should be made. And because there was no protest the need of regulation was not genrally known. Reasonable and normal restrictions will not invite objectiorf in any quarter, but an attempt to enforce blue laws and such an attempt always has plenty of fanatical backers would be energetically resisted, and the result would be that only harm would be done where good was intended. y Tribune. . slip-sho- - ly MARRIAGE LICENSES April, 19: Geo A. Derrick and Mary L. Bate, of Salt Lake City. Dalby H Busby and Jennie Peet, of Salt Lake City. , April 20: John B. Stevens and Agnes H. Widsteen, of Salt Lake 25: F. J. Wright and Ca therine L. Reese, of Ogden. City-Apr- il Potatoes for sale. Inquire of D. B' Harris, Layton, Utah. Adv. |