OCR Text |
Show DAILY UTAH STATE PAGE TWO Htali Stair inurttal OGDEN, UTAH. FaMUhcn. rial FBbIUkitCMy. (Inoorporatsd.) Published every evening except Sunday Tslaphonos. Bell, 1(4 1 ring Ind., 114 1 ring Bell. 14 I rings Editorial Rooms Offloa Ind, 1(41 rings Tsrma of Subscription. ..l(e By enrricr, per week 50e By mall per month By earrter, if collected by circulaBt tor, per month v. matter at the postofflee at Ogden, Utah, under Act of Congress of March I. 1879. Entered as second-cla- ss GenL B. A. BOWMAN... C. M. JACKSON Manager Editor NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. Subscribers not receiving papers will obtain same by special messenger by sailing up office by telephone. And any carrier failing to deliver paper at proper address will be charged for such OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET For Congressman, JOSEPH HOWELL. ' For Justice of the Supreme Court. JOSEPH E. FRICK. COUNTY REPUBLICAN TICKET. For State Senator E. T, HULANISKI. ' For Representatives RUDOLPH KUCHLER HARVEY P. RANDALL GEO. S. DEAN GEO. D. FULLER For Commissioners OSCAR MADSON Four-yeTerm FRANK MOORE Two-yeTerm ar ar For Clerk DAVID MATTSON. For Treasurer a ALMA CHAMBERS. For Assessor EDWIN DIX. A. SEBRING. For Recorder JOSEPH B. WALLACE. For Attorney NATHAN J. HARRIS J. CRAVEN. For Constable of Ogden City Suits for are embodiments of mannish style and durability, coupled with moderate prices which make them the best suit values offered anywhere for the prices we ask. Ti Bebides the best Chronicle. MIS. EDDY'S CASE , f HENRY STEELE. THE IRRIGATION PROJECTS. So long as you have money to spend and are spending It, everything la easy and pleasant and your friends Congratulate you. When you begin to try to get it bark out of the business In whlrh you have embarked the world looks different. There Is a period of hard work and anxiety. If you get through It all right, you are likely to live happily ever after. If you do not, out you go. Tlie getting bark of Invested money Is the crucial point In every business, and we are approaching that point In our national Irrigation development The Question la whether the aettiers who are buying the naked Irrigated land at from $25 to MO per acre on ten years' time, without Interest, will be able to make the annual payments and no return the money to the fund to be used over again. Holland can pump out and dyke an Inland sea at enormous cost and run very little risk of losing by the transaction, for the reclaimed land Is surrounded by an Immense population and la within easy reach of great markets, .which will absorb the product at prices which will enable purchasers to pay from $200 to $400 per acre for the reclaimed land. What we have to find out ts whether the time has yet arrived In the United States when settlers can pay what our Irrigated lands will cost them and make good from the sale of their products. If they can do this, there will be no limit to the money available for all sorts of land reclamation. If they do not, congress will probably pull the purse strings and postpone development until population presses harder uporf subsistence. In Australia they are engaged In Irrigation projects on plans resembling our own, but rather more liberal to settlers. They have water users' associations there which cannot essentially differ from bur own. Thus far the settlers do not seem to be able to make good. A royal commission which has bee Investigating the diversion of the River Nnway reports that Jn Victoria the government has built the main canals, and the distributing ditches have been built by local organisations with funds loaned by the government. The report states that In no case have values and nattiest sfyles, we have the broadest variety to pick from. Prices: $2.50. $3.00. $3.50. ld.00, $4.50, 55 00, $6.00. $7.00 and $8.00. came. Very few people die that way, how- - PINCHES or binds cannot become comfortable except by losing its shape. That is why a lasting style requires a perfect fit. The Hanan Shoe is firt made to fit. retary was given an enthusiastic ovation. His speech was the best that will ben beard bare during the entire campaign and his coming at this time was designed to offset anything that may result as the tour of Mr. Bryan through the state, although the latter will have the last word. Secretary Taft will go from here to Denver, where he will speak tomorrow afternoon In behalf of the Rev. Dt. Buchtel who la the Republican candidate for governor In that state. From Colorado Secretary Taft will go to Idaho, to aid In the campaign for Governor Gooding, who Is a candidate Back of this is the carefully selected leather and the particular workmanship which makes the per- fin Clothing Co. Succegserg to Z. C. M. I. Whero tho Best is Sold' 376 Twenty-Fourt- h St. ever, owing to various modes of living, and it is very probable that their num her is becoming lesser every day, because civilisation furnishes more model of dying than did the original etate of simplicity and savagery. But death comes to all Just the same, and all the inlnd over matter talk, and all the chatter about "passing on" doesnt alter conditions a bit, because death U a result of natural law, and natural law was enacted Into Irrevocable and statute by Deity, who knowe no change. e PLENTY TICKETS. From the Columns of the Dallas Post we notice that Utah Isnt the only place where the official ballot has plen ty of tickets on it. For Instance, Penn- HOTEL ARRIVALS, last as fect fit Before returning to Washington. Secretary Taft will Inspect various w. stern military poets. Including Fort Robinson, Neb., Fort RusselL Wyo Forts Leavenworth and Riley, Kan., Fort Sam Houston, Tex, and Fort Sill long as the shoe. Okla. SECRETARY METCALF THROUGH OGDEN PASSES UST DEE-STANFOR- D SHOE NIGHT COMPANY Department of Commerce ie on Hie Way te Ban Francisco te Act in Japanese Exclusion Prob bm. Watson-Tann- er or it, for I am tired and want to rest'r Feeling certain that his hour was approaching, he bathed himself, attired himself in his ruffled shirt a relic iff former fashions, put on his best trousers, and with . the remark that they could put the coat and vest on afterward, laid down on his homely old bed and went to sleep. When they went to awaken him for dinner It was found that he must have been dead an hour. That was a nice way to die; the way nature Intends every one should die. The vital forces burned out like a candle, and when they failed the sleep A SHOE THAT Speaking at Omaha This Afternoon end Will bn in Denver Tomorrow Will Then Go te Idaho to Help Out Gooding in That State. Big Man From sylvania has: The Republican ticket In the first half of hla existence, so Democratic ticket for do his kind multiply. But rapidly Prohibition ticket the fact that death comes as rapidly Socialist ticket Socialist-Labticket as related the world would be unlm Cltlsens Ticket habitable because of their existence. Commonwealth ticket The physical being Is subject to deLincoln ticket Referendum ticket cay Just the same as other things, anl Union Labor ticket mate and Inanimate. The machinery, Rooaevelt Square Deal Ticket even though constantly replenished and United Labor Ucket built up, begins to feel the wear and Labor ticket tear and finally stopsentlrely. It la Union Workman ticket true the mind has a certain control Surely the Leatherheade cannot comover matter, fiut finally mind yields to that there Isn't variety to select the decay of matter and Itself becomes plain A from. man who couldn't please himIncapable of compelling obedience to Its self with a ballot like that In front of mandates. him couldnt make a selection from As ws understand It, t&c cult foundseventeen kinds of soup on a cold day. ed by Mrs. Eddy does not believe In death as the balance of ua do. While IT THE THEATERS. we die, they pass on." That Is the distinction with no difference. EveryPARSIFAL." thing is equalised at last In the democ"Parsifal" will be the offering at the of is and what dissolution, racy beyond no one has ever come back to describe. Grand Thursday night This religious drama teaches the lesson of ChrisScientists men versed In physical tianity, and tells the story of a redeemlore say to us that where a human be- ing love. Owing to the unusual length ing has lived a perfect life and the of the performance the curtain will end comes In a natural manner, that rise for the first act promptly at 7:45 p. m. There are four acta each one of people die as willingly as they go to which requires about forty minutes for sleep when tired. The wjiter Is pre- enactment The intermissions are compared to believe this, through observ- paratively short and .the curtain falls ance of an Incident that occurred when st II o'clock. he waa a lad. An aged man, 9$ years was the term of his life, whose habits had been regular and whose life had been one of extreme activity, even up to the morning on which he passed away, spoke to his daughter, a married Voman of (2, and remarked: "Jane, I think I am going to die before noon. She replied that he must be mistaken, and asked him If he wasn't feeling as well as usual. Hla answer to the la tier portion of the query was an affirmative one, but he added: "It strikes me that the candle Is about burned out, and I am glad of WESTERN TOUR OMAHA Oct II. Hundreds of people from all over tha state arrived here today to listen to Secretary Taft who addressed a large Republican meeting here this afternoon. Ths sec- Boys a For Surveyor H. Oar School ng For Sheriff a TAFT BEGINS HIS these local organisations lived up to their agreement with the state. In Victoria I.OOO.OuO pounds out of a total of 1,300.000 pounds of obligations of these associations have been canceled by the state. In New South Wales the works have been built by , the government without any provision for the return of the money Invested. In regard to our own works we know In advance that a certain number of settlers will fall and lose their land and whatever payments they have made unless they can find others to take the enterprise off their hands. The only question Is as to the number of such cases. If the failures are few, it will not Interfere with development. If they are general congress will probably take it as evidence that the work has been entered San Francisco upon prematurely, Really, we do not see why there should be so much fuss made about the physical condition of Mrs. Mary Baker Q. Eddy, the founder of the Chriatlan Science cult. The old lady has arrived at an age where senility Is likely to occur at any time, and the fact that she has a malignant cancer is by no means surprising. When people get old they are more easily attacked by disease and growth like cancer, and. vitality being exhausted, the malady or condition will make faster progress than In a young person. Mrs. Eddy Is about $5 years of age. That Is longer than most people live. Long ago it was decided that three score and ten was about all man has coming to him, and when a person exceeds this by fifteen years he la fortunate. Mrs. Eddy doubtless owes her long life to regular living and habits and by taking good rare of herself. But although we may live correctly and abstemiously, we cannot expect to prolong our daya beyond reasonable expectation, except In rare Instances. Death Is Inevitable. It Is by far more certain than birth, because while one may not happen, the other must. If birth occurs. For a million or more years life has sprung Into existence, and from the moment It first felt anl inatlnn has been marching steadily toward the end. Some organisations live longer than others. Humanity hasn't the greatest span by any means. The eagle which flies In the blue vault of heaven, the slow-goitortoise, the elephant and the raven, all live Ungert than man. On, the other band, there are some of the smaller creations which do not survive for any length of time. The small fllea whlch Infest the air of summer, live about two hours, and a fly born In the morning may be JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER SI, 190S. Victor Metcalf, secretary of the department of labor and commerao, pasefed through Ogden last evening, en route to San Francisco where he la going to act in the controversy which has arisen over the exclusion of Japanese children from the public schools. Metcalf returned to Washington from California on September 26th, after having spent hla vacation in the mountains. In speaking of Immigration he said that by the end of the year 1,4000,000 Immigrants would have entered this country, which means 200,000 Increase ovjr last year. As ths representative of President Roosevelt at the time of the San Fran cisco disaster, Secretary Metcalf was right on the scene soon after tlie earth quake and flre.v He has a warm' spot In hie heart for Ogden because of the prompt response given to the unfor t unales In the stricken city. Peculiarity of Turks. "Turkiareextremelypecullar," writes g traveler, In regard to the quality of water they drink, and are willing to be at much trouble and expense to obtain water of the kind they prefer, To be a perfect beverage water must Issue from a rock, fall from a height, be of medium temperature, flow rap idly and copiously, taste sweet, spring In high and lonely ground and ran from south to north or east to west Tho excellence of any water la accord, ingly' determined by the number of these conditions It fulfills. It la remarkable how much pleasure Turks find In visiting a famous spring In tho country, to spend the whole day beside It, under the shade of trees, doing little else but drink carafe after carafe of the water, as the elixir of Hfe. Resorts of this description abound on the shores of the upper Bosporus under such names as the Water of Life, the Silver Water, the Water Under the Chestnut Tree, the Water Betide the Hotels. The spectacle of the great gatherings there on Fridays, arrayed In bridal colon, seated tier above tier on the terraced platforma built against the green slope of the hill, the women above, the men below, nil In the deep shade of the branches faceting overhead, forms a picture beyond a painter's power to reproduce." Writer In Good Health at 90L Sir Theodcre Martin, author of the Bon Gaultier" ballads, ia 90 yean old, but enjoys remarkably vigorous health and takes daily rambles near hla beautiful boms on the outskLtS of Llangollen, Wales. His Intellect, too, ie as keen as ever and on Sundays he reads the lessons In church. Sir Theodore Is a playgoer and a Ana critic of contemporary verse and fiction. Occasionally one has the fortune to meet women who are Ideal In looks and figure. Ninety-nin- e times out of a hundred you will find she takes Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 95 cents. T. H. Carr, Phar. SCIENCE PREVENTS BALDNESS. he Fatal Gena and Its Remedy New Facts ef Srteaee, n I E. DOOLY. President.' JOSEPH S. PEERY. Vlce-Pr- TI RALPH E. HOAO, Cashier. A. V. McINTOSH, Asst. Cashier. es The UTAH NATIONAL or UNITED L BANK I OGDEN STATES DEPOSITARY Interest Paid on Savings Accounts and Time Deposits I' i I S J UTAHNA THEATRE ALL THIS WEEK The Lyric Theatre Co. OF SALT LAKE NORTHERN LIGHTS Seats on Sale at Utahna Drug Store PRICES: (r 10c, . 20c, and 30c Grand Opera House - THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1st MESSRS MARTIN & EMERY'S MAJESTIC PRESENTATION OF THE GRAND SACRED FESTIVAL DRAMA' FAL PAR-S-I THE HOST IHP0SIHG PR0D0CTI0H EVER SEHT ON TOOK Prices $1.50, $1.00, 75c, 50c Evening Performance at 7:45 Sharp. Carnages at J It Is ths rarest thing la the world for bo necessarily bald. No man whose hair is not dead at tbs roots, need bs bald If ha will use. KeWbro's Herpl-cld- e, tbs now scalp antiseptic. Herpl-dd- e destroys the germ that cuts ths hair off at ths root; and deans tho scalp of dandruff and leaves It In a perfectly healthy condition. Mr. Mannett. In the Maryland Block, Butts, Mont, was entirely bald. In lass than a month Herpi-dd- a had removed the anomies of halt The following guests are registered at growth, and nature did Its work by covthe New European hotel: ering hla head with thick hair an Inch Owen Craford, Hartford. Conn.; W. long, and In six weeks hs had a normal Harrington, Bingham; Walter Hank., suit of hair. Bold by leading drugglata Robert Jack, Thomas Thompson, Rock Bend Re. In stamps for sample to Ths Springs; El Lee, Chicago; Mrs. Hen- Harploida Co., Detroit. Mich. drick, Chicago; Adam Snyder, W. Bleed Poisoning, Christenson. W. B. McEvoy, Salt Lake City; Dick Boland, Lot Angeles; W. H. results from chronic constipation, Davis. T remonton; E., C. Apperson, which Is quckly cured by Dr. King's Omaha: Dan Quinlan, Salt Lake City; New Life Pills. They remove all poiH. F. Stoddard. Mrs. Stoddard, Kan- sonous germs from the system and insas; C. Roberts, Chicago. fuse new life and vigor; cure sour stomach, nausea, headache, dlzxlness Order your Job Printing from The and colic, without griping or discomSlate JourtiaL Ruth 'phones (14. We fort 25c. Gusranteed by Ogden guarantee flnt-cla- ss work. a man to If You Would he Graceful EARN TO SKATE Ogden Auditorium ever afternoon and even-in- g except Sundays. Grand March at 9:30 oclock p. m. Prices: Admission, Afternoon, 10c; Evening 15c A Journal Want Ad. Wffl SeU, Rent or Buy Anything |