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Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, PAGE FOUR. ADVANCE SALE Autumn-WintA Goods er Great Saving in cost of material for those quick to grasp this excellent opportunity. FERED TO YOU MONDAY WERESS GOODS WHICH WILL BE OFFERED TO YOU TOMORROW WERE RECENTLY PURCHASED ESPECIALLY FOR THIS SALE, AND EVERY PIECE AT A PRICE MUCH BELOW THE PRESENT MARKET VALUE. BEING IN A POSITION TO USE THE LARGE QUANTITIES OFFERED, WE WERE ABLE TO SECURE THESE BEAUTIFUL NEW FABRICS AT ABOUT OUR OWN FIGURES, AND WE HAVE MARKED THE G00D8 AT EXACTLY THE REDUCTION WE 8ECURED FOR OURSELVES, FOR THIS SPECIAL OCCASION THESE CLOTHS WILL BE ON SALE AT PRICES WHICH MEAN A SAVING OF AT LEAST 25 PER CENT TO EVERY PURCHASTHE CONTEMPLATING ER. WE WOULD SUGGEST TO THOSE WALKING OF GOWN A NEW FOR MATERIALS PURCHASE OF SKIRT AT THE PRESENT TIME OR LATER IN THE SEASON, THAT A VISIT TO OUR DRESS G00D8 DEPARTMENT WILL MORE THAN REPAY YOU FOR THE TROUBLE. 60c Plaid Mixtures SIXTEEN ALL-WOO- . PIECES. BOUGHT ESPECIALLY FOR THIS 8ALE, AND ARE AT THE ABOVE PRICE; COME IN ALL THE VALUES GREAT NEW COLOR COMBINATIONS, AND ARE JUST THE MATERIALS MOST WANTED FOR 8TREET DRESSE8 AND SCHOOL WEAR; THE PRICES WILL BE L, 45c Yard SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1905. ALL IN SAFE PLACES. BE ON WATCH FOR CHANCES. Womans Many and Varied Receptacles for Valuable Documents. A Germantown householder who had given various valuable papers to his wife to take rare of recently hunted all over the house for the insurance policy on his furniture and ruuld not find It. When the wife came home from a tea he told her bis trouble with considerable perturbation. lest the domucent should have Writer Points Out Danger of Opportunities Being Invisible. It is a dangerous thing to wait for opportunities until it becomes a habit Energy and Inclination for hard work ooze out in the waiting. Opportunity become! Invisible to those who a r doing nothing, or looking somewhere else for it. It is the great worker, the man who la alert for chances that seea them. Some people become so opportunity-blind that they cannot see chances anywhere they would pass through a gold mine without noticing anything precious while others will find opportunities In the most barren and out- way places. Bunyan found opportunity In Bedford Jail to write the greatest allegory In the world on the untwisted paper that had been used to cork his bottles of milk. A Theodore Parker or a Lucy Stone sees an opportunity to go to college In a chance to pick berries. One boy sees an opening to hia ambition in a chance to chop wood, wait on table, or run errands, where another sees no chance at all. One seea an opportunity to get an education In the odds and ends of time, evenings and which another throws away. O. S. Marden In Success Magazine. been lst. "Is that all? said the wife, looking with disgust at her ve-- y much dis-turb- desk, where the husband hid been rummaging. Why didnt you ask me?" and going to a picture on the wall she pulled the policy from be- hind it. And where," inquired the hue-- I and, after he had recovered from his surprise, do those shares in the Priahack Valley Railroad and Timber Development company "happen to be? was the They're safe enough. answer. "Theyre in the closet in the stain behind the jnic And the deed to the Muse? Thata upstairs In the spare packed away under your suu.mr auil. th By diligent husband found the locations, scattered from cellar to roof, of numerous other And now, said documents of value. he, whats the answer?" said the wife, who wai Why, use-to his slang. I don't mean that any robber shall ever come In and rlo n us out In a one hour search. He never think of the places I've clir .en, and if he did he would be he.. going up and down stairs and Philadelphia knocking over bottles. Record. cross-examinati- On to Schillers Curvet. teacher In one of The Bronx school! founj an excellent opportunity th- - ether dn to give a 1 le lesson on Sob tiler. The name had come up acof a readcidentally during the course ' ing lesson, so she said: Now, la there any one who can tell me who Schiller was and what he A - 50c Mannish Worsted Suitings SIXTEEN IN PIECES. 39c Yard LAST 0- There was alienee for a moment, and then one hoy slowly raised his hand. Well, who was Schiller? asked the teacher, encouragingly. Schiller y'nat to 'pitch tor Cincinnati, was the unexpected. New York Press. on - Life "P.ee ij rradiiaily out it. .. , V( "wl 4 d"9 I:e travel .,d?: "h My be that carri.,'j,. f this thing, and I tir, t Aere are pleu-- j ia,:t . In the laments are ail bv ailora and dremaW, let this haa no , ,boltwi f,r r r-e- Vf ' -- v . .' pena-i.m- Crand fct; never mistake ll mg cannot In the . ! these there is Yorkers. No. and snap and style L Rra a.., , n..,, r,hlCh ago passage was n f K M '".v iuii.j .T u W w . half-holiday- iia'-ai- r Hia Dream. What might he termed a mean trick was played on a Kanaas City young man a: the race t: ck the other day. One night he had a dream In which he saw himself wearing a red carnation and playing the races. In the dream he was winning big rolls of money. Yesterday morning he told one of his friends about the dream ar-said he Intended to wear a red cart at Ion an . play the races. In the meantime his friend told half a dozen of the young mana acquaintances about the dream, and they all wore red carnations to Elm Ridge. Before the first race one of the conspirators met the young man who had had the dream. Say, Joe, he said, 1 had a dream last night that that If I wore a red carnation out here Id win. Now Im not superstitious The young man swalloired the bait You did? he said In amazement Well, Tom, well clean these bookmakers up. As they started for the betting ring five other carnations came in sight. Say, Joe, yelled their wearers in chorus, I had a dream But the young man had fled Into the crowd. Kacsas City Times. Churchill's Studied Ruci-ne- si. Winston Leonard It urchill of England is now no. in ive yean he has been through two rau'i.aigne-- . those In the Sudan ami South Africa haa been a prisoner of the Roen only to male a sensational escape, has written half a dozen noteworthy books, la the fiercest and one of the moat effective of Chamberlain's political foes, has an unrivaled power cl rudeness and can boast of being one of men in British the He Is equipped with a mind sal manner comparable with that of Here Is an example of hie rudeness: In a recent speech he laid: The other day a cabinet mlnlster--I forget which this with s drive-ou- t sneer which brought down the house really, gentlemen, how could I get through my work If I had to bother about the odds and endi!" Spi-un-- r ( best-hate- d poll-tic- High and Low. .Irving Grinnell, Wish a Business Education You Should Attend a Business College 4 the Following Courses The New Building Is Located in College Court At 258 1. A FULL 2. A PRACTICAL 3. A THEORETICAL A AN & A SHORTHAND 6 A 7. A COURSE COMMERCIAL AND BUSINESS ENGLISH COURSE. THE BUSINESS COURSE. OR STENOGRAPHIC SEVENTH AND EIGHTH COURSE. H. B. C. COTTAGE HOnE LETTER GRADE WORK. 8TU DENTS FROM OUT OF THE CITY CAN FIND HERE TYPEWRITING COURSE. IN I. Street and Is Called Twenty-fourt- h BUSINESS COURSE. COURSE COVERING WITH KITCHEN, FILfNG AND MIMEOGRAPHING. J treasurer of the Church Temperance Society of Net Taste In Rutter. The Moor prepares bitter in an York, was taking about the difference between high and low church snioii original way, and gets a different taste from the uaual one. Fresh butEpiscopalians. I heard two boys talking on the ter he despises and uses only tor cookState to Build Good Roada. ing. It must be old if it la to be liked. Under a new law, Illlnola, during street the other day, be said. Our church is awful high. Wi After It haa lain In a hole in the the next two years, will spend $50,000 ground for some years and haa got a In building good roads to serve as hsve matins. Thats nothin,' said the other boy, certain appearance. It becomes a samples of what is desirable In that We have carpets. respect Moorish- - You Have a Choice of tia a group of cosmos i;,s cussed It. I dont know about lilt. L,u,u grace, laid an Englishman, and style' are ,TiabJ I should say that the N, Yukw an air about him; an air of a rt con fide-.- ee which distinguish. :im-J- is so, said a Frer !,, distingue ; zat Is eet." Out our way." said a ,a fr0B Chicago, "we call that h nt.fi1icnw, gall, and the air' hot.'-v.- y, York Times. Df Now In Its New Home If You : V"' V. effi-.ee.- ami-Viu- . THOMAS 0f dre Ifa of iway from uew to-da- y did? THE PIN CHECKED AND HERRINGBONE STRIPES AND A COMPLETE RANGE OF NEW COLOR COMBINATIONS; THESE ARE MADE OF HARD TWISTED YARNS, AND WE CAN RECOMMEND THEM HIGHLY FOR STREET WEAR AND SERVICEABLE TAILOR 8UITS. MONDAY YOU BUY THE NEW CLOTHES FOR ;rk CarcteriKtic, Us DINING-ROO- AND LIVING-R00M- 8, A BESIDES FULLY HOME CLASS-ROOM- S, EQUIPPED HALLS, TOI- LETS, 8HOP, FURNACE ROOM8, ETC, ETC. For Full Information Write or Call Upon President J. A. SMITH, College Court, Ogden, Utah |