Show T THE H E E EASTERN A S T E R N U UTAH T A H A ADVOCATE D V 0 C A 1 1 E the advocate publishing company incorporated R W C n president and manager one N ear 1 v l t 50 six month he months month advertising RATES IN EFFECT MAY 1 I 1908 DISPLAY auit rate pr per inch per imy ac kate rate per inch per month OPEN io be u aed aed at option of within one 3 if car r 00 inches at I 1 fc 1 1000 0 inches at u 12 qc 2000 2000 ies or over at I 1 uc loo 3 POSITION 0 nitifor fulli full position top of column next reading add 25 per cent to above A ton g q e reading read 1 ng matter add ad to 10 per cent to boie aboe ler l erilee kinf onetime one time 10 per perline line nub nuen per be 1111 orts S 04 ar not over one inlo one dollar 1 r per monta mth LEGALA e aen cvita 4 cpr line arst n it I 1 iv v cent P line each a 8 h sequent issue ftc ir te ill at unit half I 1 ocal heading reading notice kate address all to advocate CO utah Y NOVEMBER 11 1909 wishing for success is easy paying the price ia is quite another thing its good enough for me never satisfies the man who pays the bill defeat brings success half the fights of life if won would bring failure few people can stand prosperity but most anyone can stand adversity once in a great while one finds a iran who ho objects to seeing the town cleaned up but duct s a rare specimen and would noi not bo be a good gond one to pattern af after ter go where one will away from home and only good words are heard for the future of price an this val icy what this town needs is to get rid of some of the homemade knockers mrs mary alary E judge a true friend of the poor and perhaps the wealthiest woman of the state has passed she will long bo be remembered as the builder of the judge miners home at the states capital utah loses a mighty good friend in the death of fisher S harris organizer and secretary of the salt lake city commercial club he ile was one of those big men who are not fully appreciated until gone when such men as thomas R cutler of the utah sugar factory interests visits price to inspect the lands of olf this valley it may be taken for granted that some things in the wind it is good to know that the gentleman went away elated with what was shown him every line in a newspaper costs its owners something eom ething if it is for the benefit of the individual it should be paid for if the grocer were ere asked to contribute groceries to one abundantly able to pay for them he would defuse the proprietors of a newspaper must pay for the free advertising if the beneficiary does not and yet it is one the hardest things to be learned by many that a newspaper has space in its columns to rent and must rent the same to live to give away aay rent for anything less than living aratea is as fatal to a newspaper as fo for r a landlord to furnish rent free fire insurance interests are wondering if ex vice president fairbanks is so tall and snowcapped that he lie can not feel a blush of shame for the use made of the family name in securing bular business ess for the illinois national fire insurance company of V which aich his brother was president and another member of the family secretary too many prominent men arc are not as careful as they should be as to where them the permit the use of their names for the benefit of institutions aich which have no soundness or respectability and aich which depend more upon the names of their nominal offices s and directors for getting business than they do upon the ability of the institution itself to give value received people arc are getting mighty tired of the privilege of of oten ferin sacrifices to prominence and influence wireless telegraphy I 1 14 no longer surprising a world orld accustomed to wonders and wireless telephony has also come to be accepted without comment but now we at lie e to have wireless lighting according to ti alie incentive Inen Imen tive age science has long known chat hat an electric current passing through a vacuum will produce a vivid light and this knowledge is now to be utilized commercially A rarefied gas nitrogen or carbon dioxide is to be employed instead of an actual vacuum and the gilld dinant is said to be superior to arc are or incandescent lamps and to be better distributed A drawback to the system has resided in the fact that after the current has been passing through the tube for some time the gas has apparently become absorbed with a consequent lessening of the light this obstacle has now been overcome by the use of an automatic valve through which the tube may replenish its supply of gas zas f from rom a reserve tank the valve to be controlled by the pressure on the tube itself coal when it outcrops outcrop on the surface is hardly recognizable as such being usually a mere brown stain looking like common black earth pat peat or soil this oxidized surface coal is of no value to burn nor is it fit if it for a sample for analysis being highly charged with w ater sand and other impurities and low in fixed carbon coal suitable for analysis or marketable may not be found until the scam has been penetrated afif fifty ty feet or more below the surface it is of little use to expect that a coal scam appearing small at the surface will materially increase in size with depth or that two small seams seam on the tile surface separated by sandstone will in depth unite and form one big seam or that a thick 1 beam eam of bone or shale in a coal seam will in depth or at a short distance within the mine play out and leave the coal seam scam pure sandstone showing impressions of fossil leaves or thin seams of lignite are good signs of coal but a coal seam to be of workable size and value must be upwards of five feet thick although very valuable coal such as 6 anthracite may be worth north working in a smaller thickness |