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Show Have Your HARNE1I, BUGGY TOFt AND CARRIAGE! Drss4 witk W. B. CHAPmAN'l HARNESS AND CARRIAGE DRESSING Guaranteed to Preserve Leather ami Make it Look Like New. Whoesale and Retail by Z. C. M. I., glt Ltd City. "PHOTOS FREE" of my Registered Regis-tered Duroc Jersey Swine. From the Pioneer HrcL I pay express and give easy term. F. R. PEART, Oorniah, Utefa. T ijftii - tlAV&K wear well uSniKI and they keep you Tcf J:iS dry while you are )nm 4t wearing them m I 1 3oo JM y EVERYWHERE AM I GUARANTEED WATERPROOF, v I 1 CATALOG EREE VSfegEi. AJ.TOWER CO. BOSTON. U.SaT " TOWER CANADIAN CO. limited. Toronto. Can. Arc you interested in California, Arizona and Old Mexico, if so, it would be wise to write for full information infor-mation about the shortest line and the best service from your point to those sections via the SALT LAKE ROUTE, Utah's most popular Road. K. C. KERR, District Passenger Agent. Iftherpli anything tb natter wttk your homes or stock, nse W.B. CHAPMAN'S LINIMENT For Man or Beast. If It do not Can urlica nllfallStcloatpAyforiL Gat yr maaay back. AT ALL DXUOGIVT, WKOLMALX BY W. A. NELDCN DRUG CO. SALT LAKE CITY - . . UTAH MARKET QUOTATIONS. Owing to our extensive circulation, market reports must be closed Wednesday Wed-nesday noon. Figures quoted are Salt Lake wholesale prices. These quotations quota-tions arc given at the request of many subscribers and arc furnished and corrected weekly by the responsible firm of Vogcler Seed and Produce Co. Butter and Cheese. Creamery butter, 25 to 31c; cheese, full cream, 13 to 15c. Vegetables. Potatoes, $1.25 to $1.35. Poultry and Egp Live Hens, 15 to 16c. pe lb. Dressed Hens, 17 to 18c. per lb. Eggs, Country run, per case, $6.00; No. 1 Ranch, $6.50. Grain, Hay and Flour. Wheat, per 100 lbs., $2.00; corn, 100 lbs., $1.65; chop corn, 100 lbs., $1.70; oats, per 100 lbs.', $2.00; barley per 100 rolled, $1.60; bran, per 100 lbs., $1.35; flour, high patent, per 100 lbs., $3.00; straight grade, per 100 lbs., $2.80; alfalfa, al-falfa, baled, 75c. cwt.; timothy, baled, 90c. cwt.; straw, baled, 35c. Honey. Honey, case, $2.50 and $2.75, ex ' tracted, 6jc. per lb. m K . , - - H Ufa QULTYlWnn .-,., i SALT LAKE M 'k'M V - . COU NTS y Wo" ,stPcnat 1 AND LOGAN M "'M- BblH RHODE ISLAND REDS H ISIIIBi AND BLACK MINORCAS H VjHV EGGS FOR HATCHING KJkSIHkL $2.00 for 15 ORDER. AALY H 1I988BfM8 Huah w-Smith $S&IUmjSa&! 6BB El 1ST 0"TH, SALT LAKE CITY M FRANK IAMSI I Imported stallions and mares arc top-notch business propositions that H "jar the cherries" on a "wise stockman's hat" lams' "Peaches & Cream" H "Black Boys" are "eyeopeners" and "best stallions ever." They are M "diamonds" sold by lams at "50c on the dollar." jH Winners of "80 prizes and medals" at Paris, Brussels, Oldenburg, St. H Joe, 111., and Nebraska State Fairs (over several la., Wise, Minn., and H Mo. state winners; over some 1907 111. and "International champions.") H lams' "low tariff" stallions and mares make buyers. H "Sit Up and Take Notice!'2 I "Big Bill" get into lams' "money saving game" Buy a stallion and jH mare this fall save $300.00. lams "tickles" buyers with "Rippers'' at IH " let live prices. Owing to "bad crops" Panic lams' cash, his 27 years H of successful business bought and sells better horses cheaper than ever. M "Daddy" lams is a "hot advertiser" but he has the "farmers thinking' and H "has the goods." Pic sells horses at his barns only saves all "middle- jH men's profits." jH 1D2-PEBCHEB0HS, BELGIANS AMD GOACHERS Q2 I IH P''fcii "IS Wo t0 s,x vcars weighing 1,700 jH jPf . ' 'jEjtftfg2m to 2,500 lbs.; 90 per cent blacks, 50 ' H , ffiB Pcr ccnt ton stallions. All registered H G IH and branded. IIc sclls "toppers" H BL iiH ?I0O antl ?i,400 (few higher), H Hx JSIH krod tllcy nect not c "Pcddlcd" or 'H 4 'J&ffTB put on the "auction block" to be sold. 'H BiflMnP BiilflH lams' "selling clothes" fit all buyers. H BVy y' EH No w'tn moncy or bankable jH n9allifl w: aM'BM nolts Kcts away from lams. He H HjHflHuflHH buys, owns and sells more stallions' H f HhbB than any man the United States H f'HHHH BsH saves cnousanas ox aonars 10 siauion m KBiSuMBBM buyers. He not in the "stallion H Wms'' VWUMM trust." IAMS PLACES $1 500 M lPffi0mm INSURANCE- SI.000 SAVED AT IAMS' SI.000 I Ikey, what a graft the "Stallion Salesmen" arc working on the farmer H selling fourth-rate stallions at $2,000 and $5,000! Mr. Buyer, see lams' H stallions yourself. Take no "stallion salesman's" word. "lams haB the M goods you read about." His establishment is worth going 2,000 miles to H sec. lams' competitors "holler" "he is 'knocking' high prices out of the H X-mas tree. lams saws wood, "butts in," sells more stallions each year. H He makes every statement good Gcorgie, dear, buy a stallion of lams. H His $1,200 stallions are much bcor than our neighbors paid those Ohio H men $4,000 for. Then I can wear diamonds. lams speaks the languages, H buys direct from "breeders, pays no buyers, salesmen or interpreters; has H no two to ten men as partners to share profits with. lams guarantees to H sell you a better stallion at $1,000 to $1,500 than arc sold to stock compa H nies at $2,500 to $5,000 by slick salesmen, or pay you $500 for your trou- H ble you to judge. lams pays horses freight and buyers' fare; gives 60 per H cent breeding guarantee. M VVrite for Million Dollar Horse Catalogue, H GREATEST ON EARTH REFERENCES: ST. PAUL STATE BANK; CITIZENS NAT. BANK. M ST. PAUL, NEBRASKA iKA -n PER DOZ. ELECTRIC LIGHT GLOBES UP TO.. 16- HI lll r- 0 'Q fMVI Q SALT LAKE CITY, vDZ.OU CANDLEPOWER CD U O IK L. C. & OvJInO UTAH. H |