Show THE SAUNA CALt SAUNA N J Parley TO - Bates and Magleby LAWYERS Court House Richfield III Ut BULLOCK Have to 30 5 of RECORDS Cjhop j : Work at Caskets ACCESSORIES Salina Co op Agant for tki Otto 0 OIhb Utah Gasket work Ephraim Wo have la atosk an Uoo of Gofflao oad Gasket oad ooooooorloo Salt Lake or an Wo doal nodora olty atylea with manafaotarer and oa oato you middleman and proflt"'- Wo have gooda to Call on plooao everyone's pars s Wt eaa ploaao yon Tho ooacxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxws Who’s Your TAILOR? Who repairs and cleans clothes? OVin es YEARS' CXFERIENOC rap w va Ml" Trade Marks DriiaNt COPVWOHTS Ac btf ritantA idmuT nm tMrlHfPAiSAlS asnsy for ton 4 tk NMlri notice wltheat chsry iitbi Scientific American wsklf AfcRitdsormtly sotsuoit of liny selsnUOo lonml month $L fold by fonrMt el Tsrws 93 fwdMtr Mir&CoBrNewYcrk t radon Offloa BL Waahtaalon IX C Just Think of it? The Frrg Sewing Machine i in wired for five year against accident breakage wear fire tornado light- fling and water This ahowi our faith ia M y j? j tFREE Machine Sewing ThinK thl mcansl what break tba whole machine jj means— thtt It f any part (needle bait ar attscbmsnt ate) ill ba re without la fiend fist ! for our booklet ‘‘In the Dayi Work' Sewing Machine Co Chicago 111 Balina Co-o- p City LUMBER ffiV LUMBER That the Old Saying “Once a Thief Always a Thief" May Be Revised Is the Testimony of Those gaged In the Work of Reform In Various Cltiea— Mrs Maud Booth Cites Many Case That Personal Have Come Under Her Observation In the Course of Years YORK— Following swift on recent revolt of convicts in Sing tbelr defiance of warden and keepera their threats to dynamite the prison and effect a general delivery has come an Insistent question: “Is it possible to reform a convict and make a good citizen out of him?” Take that same Sing Sing with its for crimes army of men Incarcerated of almost every kind— burglars highwaymen habitual ne’er do wells comsecond mon thieves housebreakers story men pickpockets bank robbers bunco steerers bigamists grafters of swindlers every degree accomplished of every kind — take this mass of depraved humanity— is it possible really to effect a reformation in more than an occasional instance? Is It possible to restore a majority of these prisoners to places of respect and responsibility in the world of freedom? a great majority of those Possibly who asked the question knew that certain religious organizations welfare societies and other charitable agencies have long asserted that they actually can and do succeed in reforming criminals men and women of the most hardened types that they restore them to their families and see them become members of trusted and sometimes honored But the average man Is apt to be somewhat skeptical of such statements What he asks for Is plain definite convincing indisputable facts No Doubt of Co-o- y Pres FACTS Rescues Those who ask the question and man proof are for the most part men of affairs practical In order to ascertain whether a definite Incontrovertible answer to their doubts can be obtained inquiry has been made of agencies and individuals who have much to do with convicts from prisons and penitendischarged In each instance the attitude tiaries of those questioned was one of surthis day there should at that prise be any doubt regarding the absolute reformation of former convicts One thing that will strike the quirer who goes carefully through the records is the fact that while hundreds of former convicts are today successful In business undertakings and In trades a large proportion seek not to engage in money making occupation but to go into rescue work themselves Missions of every kind Industrial homes college settlements all forms of social service for the down and outers” seem to appeal more powerfully than anything else to these men who have been down and out themselves ajid who throw themselves into the work of reclaiming other human wrecks Prominent among those Interested in the work of rescuing human derelicts is Mrs Maud Balllngton Booth Here is her testimony on the subject: August Ericksen p Store at the Cit- Nephi Plaster Portland Cement and a fine line of Builders Hardware Store The Way Up From Prison By Maud Balllngton Booth Windows Doors Phone Moulding JOHN ARNESON NEW First Class Tonsorial AND DIRECTORS CHARLES LAMMERSDORF Capitalist Salt Lake City JAMES FARRELL Director National Copper Bank Halt Lake P SCORUP Farmer and Stockman CHRIS JORGENSEN Farmer H S GATES Farmer and Sheepman W H BROWN Manager Salina Director Payson Exchange Bank H B CRANDALL MMMMNNNMMINHIHUMIMNnHMN9NM H F Jensen Proprietor Coffins THE PROVE LAMMERSDORF Pres JAMES FARRELL Vice H B CRANDALL Cashier CHAS Mo The White House i jjarber Made Good States Depositary for Postal Savings Funds United Societies ' of Salina WORLD Derelicts Office Over Salina Meat & Supply Company's Store Utah SALINA In Office ' izens Out of Veriest DENTIST- - - - First State Bank FORMER PLACE Philanthropic FO UTAH 6 Black LUMBER CO IOC give him a much larger wage he He is very proud of his kitchen garden and the fact that he la the organist wanted to put Skinny to the test Day after day be proved his worth for our services Last summer he went as caretaker and his wages were increased accord lngly so that at the end of a few to some vacant flats In Brooklyn Ho years he was in a position to marry rented them all and the agent let the with Wherever he has worked he has prov- him have another bouse ed faithful and has given every satissame result He returned to the home faction to his employers He is at with 830 of his earnings and to us In the winter spent 7 present holding a position of responsibility is married and has two fine of that amount for flowers for our He has lived an up- grounds in the spring young daughters fifteen for of a Rev F H B was pastor years right life Then there was the case of Tom thriving church in Philadelphia His who had served two short terms in wife died after presenting him with Sing Sing prior to 1889 Upon the a baby Later he became Involved in evening of the day of his second dis- a scandal which was of auch a chacharge from Sing Sing Tom wander- racter as to render his pastorate untenmet two of his able He resigned ing down the Bowery In a short time friends who Invited him into one of he was a physical and moral wreck the saloons to have a drink After In New York he was picked up by their third or fourth drink they were the police and sent to Blackwell’s placed under arrest bdetectlves from land headquarters who charged them with Made a Useful Citizen a robbery committed that very day After his release he came to ns His Innocence of No Avail frankly told his story and accepted our Tom protested his Innocence saying proffered aid One of the most elothat he was not the man that he had quent and scholarly ministers In only Just come from Sing Sing and In whose letter Is on file at the fact did not have time to do a Job of prison department wrote Captain Anthat kind Despite his denials he was derson urging him not to glwe the falllocked up for unfortunately Tom’s en pastor any money hut to accord appearance tallied almost exactly with him such assistance as would enable the description of the missing third of him to obtain some aort of a foothold the three men who had done the rob- The assistance was given advice was bery tendered the man was induced to beOn the day of trial the other two lieve that all hope was not dead and fifmen pleaded guilty and received be soon recovered some of his lost teen year sentences at the same time ground affirming that Tom had no part In the Today he occupies a prominent posiInhis Tom again protested robbery tion with a organization engaged nocence saying that he had not com- in the work large of human uplift He Is a mitted the crime that he had done forceful speaker and an indefatigable nothing for which he should have been workr His faith in human nature He declined to take a plea and in the arrested ability of the God assisted On his and decided to stand trial man to rise on “his dead self’ is one record he was found guilty in short of his most potent assets order and as he put the county to the Warnell had been so freF George expense of a trial he was sentenced quently in prison that he could not to twenty years in prison He went enter a town without Immeback to Sing Sing soured and sullen diate orders from the receiving chief of police and with a desire In his heart to get to He came to us saying that depart It even with society for the wrong he could find no place upon which he had dohe him and a determination could We set his weary feet that he would get even when he came for him obtained a place for out He him on a farm In New Jersey How well I remember the many faithful and today owns Ahe talks I have had with Tom and how proved farm and is doing a general and prosat times it seemed as though nothing Someestate real business perous that might be said would move him times he visits us and often sends but at last God working in Hie ewn us a donation for the purpose of helpmysterious way saw fit to change his others who were as unfortunate or heart Tom put the evil desires and ing wicked as himself evil inclinations back of him and came Now has this all been worth while? out of prison a saved man I could take up ail the space of this Twelve Years of Upright Life issue of The Sun telling the story of It Is now twelve years since Tom the reformation of men who at come He is holding a good time or other have believed that every left prison position In one of the towns of Penn- man’s hand was against them Our sylvania We hear from' him fre- league has proved that good can come quently and the burden of his letters out of prisons If all that has been to us is that he thanks God that the made public about our prisons during Volunteer Prison league came into his the past few weeks will but find in the hearts and minds of your life and now he has wished that he had harkened earlier to the godly readers it will mean more for those counsel and wltfe precepts behind the gray wall than one can — John C was liberated in 1907 hav- well Imagine — New York Sun of the ing come under the operation parole law which permitted life prisImproved Dieting Rules oners who had served twenty years The rules for dieting in which the and whose conduct had been good to Medical Congress has been so For be paroled years reminds a writer in the Londonprolific Daily John had been an Inmate of Sing Sing tif Ruskih’s method of arand for many years of that Chronicle his food supplies prison ranging during his time hope and John were strangers He procured from his doctor Illness We wynt into that prison carrying a list of all the things that he must a message of hope to such poor souls not eat took them all and recovered as he and it was with gladness that it his rule to eat whatever made He he received the message and he has and he lived to his fancy suggested told us now he hoped and prayed that The moral Is obvious be over eighty the time would come when he would surrender to th6 stomach secure his release and thanks to the Never Defy it In an emergency Bully It slse measures instituted by our “What would be the he was one of the first who ask yourself for me to eat?” Then eat of the worst thing came under the operation He now holds a it and live forever— Exchange “lifer” parole law Why not say Hello to them? to This is the case of a former convict whose companions nicknamed him Skinny During his five terms he served over twenty-onyears in prison He was a young man who had not had advantages and in fact had stolen from childhood During his last term he contracted was so bent and broken rheumatism that he was unable for months to lie down and was permitted to do a little cobbling in his cell At times his pain was so great that the physician would give him a morphine tablet but of UBing them he kept them tending to kill himself when he had aved enough of them “How many of these would it take to kill a man doctor?" asked Skinny “About twenty” was the reply On the day that our message reached him he had accumulated nineteen of these tablets and following our talk he went back to his cell and threw the nineteen away After subof trust and responsibility in sequent interviews he decided to position in New come to our New York home which is one of the largest corporation one of four maintained by us for re- York city Years In Prison leased prisoners He came out on Another example and this one is crutches and he was Indeed emaciold He was I years ated dean of the prisoners think the of His Reformation Complete this state for he had spent During the eleven months rehe years of his life in the prison In mained with us he built up his shatevery one knew old Frank tered health and when able to work He too was a of the life beneficiary was employed by a gentleman at $3 men’s parole law for he is now much week While his employer was able bent and at tlmps somewhat feeble At the Indian Schools Nearly 50000 Indian children went to school last year more than half of them being educated at government Mission schools cared for schools 3000 and more than 17000 had so far adopted the white man’s ways as to be enrolled In regular public schools on Indian according to a statement education furnished by the Indian office of the United States Bureau of Education Your friends all want to talk to you over the ’phone Better have it put in With t Salina telephone in yonr home yon een ran errands ge sharwithout leaving home Yen will enjoy the ping do bnslaeea Why not have It? 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