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Show 2 SKETCH FROM LIFE OF THE WORLD'S WEALTHIEST CITIZEN XI BEFORE S PUBLIC EYE VJ wf rhimss Oldham, President G. 11. Champ, A. U. Thompson, Second J. E. Shepard, Cashier Vlos-Preside- Vioe-PreaMe- nt n ILL nr Yfi ar s! finimiwir II Incorporated. FAMOUS INDIAN CHIEF DYING. LOGAN General Banking business transacted. Ample facilities for customers. Deposits received subject to check and on demand certificates. Interest allowed on time deposits. Drafts issued and money sent to any part of the world. Special attention givea to collections and saving deposits, and remittances promptly mads. SAVINGS DEPOSITS. Interest allowed on savings accounts iaaaionntaol bne dollar and upwards, compounded quarterly Correspondence invited. Your business Is respectfully solicited and oourtsous treatment promised. Red Cloud, Fighting Leader of Ogal-lall- a Sioux, on Death Bed. Once the recognized chief of a nu- merous tribe, now stricken with the infirmities of his 85 years, broken in health and spirit, scarcely able to see a or hear, Red Cloud, the famous Sioux Indian, is dying in a tepee in the corner of the yard surrounding the little wooden house which the government built for him many years ago dh the Pine Ridge agency near the Black Hills in South Dakota. As was the case with many before him Red Cloud secured fame by the shedding of human blood. Prior to the Fetterman or Fort Phil Kearney where Col. Fettermans massacre, Ogal-lall- f Our New Home- The Nation is now located at East Center street, block east of Thatcher bank. No. 28 1-- 3 . I j 4 ' Ileal Estate & Loans Choicest list of city and farm property for sale on good terms. Plenty of home money to loan on city and farm security. No delay, no red tape, no trouble to show goods. H. A. PEDERSON & CO. Office over First National Bank, old Z. C. M. I. corner. JOHN Red Cloud. force of eighty-fou- r soldiers was ambushed and annihilated, he was but little known. The Indians say that Red Cloud was not present at the Fetterman massacre. Be that as it may. he certainly got the credit of having planned it, a circumstance which he did not hesitate to fully make use of in gaining absolute control over his tribe. He continued fighting against the government until about twenty-thre- e years ago, when he signed a peace treaty. He then buried his tomahawk and bas never since then broken his compact with the government When he fought the whites he did so with terrible earnestness and ferocity. Descending like a whirlwind of death upon a settlement, he always left a gory path behind him; but when he signed the treaty of peace he did it in good faith, and for twenty-threyears he has lived in amity with his tfhite brethren. e CHICAGO MAN GIVEN POST. D. ROCKEFELLER. A Sketch from Life, by George Varian, in Cleveland, October, 1903. John D. Rockefeller's illness of sev- not seen his chief business agent for eral years ago left him wholly bald. a year pr more, having talked with The skin of his head is like parch- him only by telephone. It is a very ment. He has not been to his office lonely life he leads; at least for other in the Standard Oil building in New men it would be lonely. He lives inYork for six or seven years. While doors, except when he plays golf for in that city he seems very seldom to go down town. He does not often even go to board meetings. He has his health. He reads much. His age is 64. Special Correspondence of the Boston Globe. Logan Real Estate & Loan company. First National Bank. Over LOUIS S- - CARDON MANAGER Joseph Knowles NOTARY PUBLIC LIFE Office Not the least carious feature of the critical situation rapidly developing in the far east is tb attitude of Korea and the apparent apathy of the Koreans themselves in the face of the threat of national extinction. Their d With a population variously at from 10,00,000 to 15,000,000, and a territory about as large as the area of Great Britain, Korea awaits the decree of fate and apparently has less voice in Huvjnatter than any of country forms the bone of contention the other nations concerned. The and may yet be the fighting ground official classes by turns have paid upon which Russia and Japan are to deference to China, to Japan, and to settle the question of supremacy in Russia. Koreas dependency in one the Orient, but their possible prefer- way or another upon the two former ences and their future position are powers having lasted for centuries. still a mystery. The people themselves, docile, tractPresumably some light might be able and indifferent, are too unenlightthrown upon the question of Koreas ened to care, though since Japans agultimate destiny and upon the prob- gressions in Korea in 1894 they have d able tendencies of its people by an been credited with a disexamination of their racial character- like of the Japanese. Russia alone, istics, but even here the student with its policy of gradual meets with difficulties which defy encroachment and adroit intrigue. AND 143 FIRE INSURANCE. West Second North Bt A- ft. H. FftMieR The Plumber, No. 37 west 1st Northstreet. Dont send to Ogden or Sat) Lake for BRICK When you can buy in any quanj tity the finest kind of brick aj lowest prices, from G. Gessell, Prov- idence Half a million ou hand. Keen the money at home. Finest white brick in the state. estl-ate- What are Going to do this winter? Stay at home and work or take that vacation which you planned for during the summer and didnt find time to realize? How about a trip to Southern Europe? Too long? Mexico or California? No? to been Florida? Why not go? It doesnt take long Ever use if you the Rock Island. Choice of several routes and a good time with every ticket. May we tell you about it? You... deep-seate- L. Murray to Be Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Labor. Lawrence O. Murray of Chicago, who has been chosen assistant secre-- . tary of the Department of Commerce and Labor at Washington, is at present secretary of the Central Trust Company of Illinois. Three years ago lie went to Chicago, prior to which time he had been trust officer of the Central Trust Company of America at New York. This will not be the 0- - slow-movin- g E. DRAKE, Dili. Psssenjer Ajinl G. A. BIBLE, Trav. Pass. Agent West Second South Street Salt Lnke City, Vtsh HAL S. RAY, General Agent. Denver, Colorado. T o.miPi34y first that Mr. Murbeen private has for he has held, ray secretary to the assistant secretary of the treasury, and has been deputy comptroller of the currency, holding the latter position two years. Mr. Murray was bora at Addison, N. Y., in 1864; was educated at Niagara university and was admitted to the government office bar a in New York city in 1893. He is friend of Secretary Cortelyou. Financiers Have New Fad. Lawyers and business men who lead the strenuous life In downtown New York have adopted the fad of having their heads thoroughly rubbed at noontime by barbers. The operation takes about half an hour and costs from 60 cents to $1 in addition to the cost of shaving or other service rendered. The process Is said to be very refreshing. analysis. The Korean is an indubitable Asiatic in his modes of thought, his conservatism, his distaste for civilization and his preference for the lower forms of Buddhistic worship, but he is sharply differentiated from other Asiatics. He is neither Chinese nor Japanese nor yet, as some ethnologists. would have it, an offshoot from remote Caucasian ancestry. The effort to trace a Caucasian origin through the singular tribe of Ainos, the light colored people of northern Japan, on the ground that the latter came from a Caucasian race of great antiquity, has been rejected as untenable. Several theories have been advanced identifying the Koreans variously with Mongolic, Japanese and Malay sources, but perhaps the most authentic and satisfactory is that which regards them as a distinct type intermediate between the Mongolian Tartar and the Japanese. Whatever their origin, the distinction is too marked to admit of confounding them with the Chinese,' while the contrast between the tall, robust, Korean and the diminutive, swarthy and active Japanese Is even more marked. The difference in the spoken language of the country, both In genius and In structure. Is but another evidence of the fact that the Korean Is a type by himself. large-limbe- d Tli Scenic Lain to Glenwood Springs, Aspen, Leadville, Pueblo, Colorado Springs, Denver, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, and points eas connecting at Ogden Union Depot with all Southern Pacific and Oregon Short Line Trains. The only Transcontinental Line passing directly through Salt Lake . Where Korea and Manchuria Meet seems to have gained ground without arousing antagonism. Indian Prince In New York. prince of India has arrived in New York, tall, handsome, rich, a law student in England and a ward of the He Is the British foreign office. Sahebzada Nasir All Khan, brother of his highness the Nawab Hamid All Khan of Rampur. He has come on a visit of observation, not in search of an American wife, and at present the guest of Mrs. Henry Duveen of New York, where he will spend a few weeks. In talk and manner he is a typical young Englishman, except for Ms very dark comnlexion. A 3 spendidly Equipped Fast Trains Daily between Ogden and Denver via three Separate and dis tinct scenic routes. Through Pullman and Ordinary Sleeping Cars to DENVER, OMAHA, KANSAS CITY, ST. LOUIS , CHICAGO Without change. Free reclining chair cars. Personally eonduc ted Excursions. DINING CARS. Service ala carte on all through trains For rates, fold :rs, free illustrated booklets, etc., inqure of your nearest ticket agent, specifying the Rio Grande route, of address I. A. Benton, G. A. P. D., Salt Lake City. I |