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Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL Utal) jMrul Stair ilonntal Pablishcn. (Incorporated.) Publianed every evening except Sunday Telephones. Offiv Business Editorial Romne By By By By By ....Bell. 644 1 6 6 60 Genl. Manager OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY TO A ROBIN. I heard thee, Joyous votary, Pour forth thy heart in one Sweet simple strain of melody To greet the rising nun. AV hen It acroMa the morning s verge ite llrst faint beams had flung And found the crimson of thy breast the whlsiiering leaves among In thine own tree. Which sheltered thee, Thy mate, thy neat, thy young. I marked lliee, sorrow' votary, When in the noon of day Young vandala stormed thy sacred tree And bore thine all away; The notes of grief that rent thy breast touched kindred chorda In mine, For nieinorlea of other days, though slumbering, still confine In mine own heart The bitter smart Of sorrow each ae thine. I hear thee now, sweet votary. Beside thy ruined nest, Lift up thy flood of melody Against the crimsoned west. Forgetful of all else in this, thy one sweet Joyous strain; I thank thee for this ecstacy of my remembered pain; Thou Uftest up sorrow's cup To sweeten it again; T. A. Daly In Catholic Standard. APPLE CULTURE. It la a fart that the conditions of null and climate In Utah are altogether favorable to apple culture; also, that in past years, before the codling moth and woolly aphis and other insect pests had, through the Inattention and neglect of orchard tats, been given unrestrained liberty to get In their deadly work of ruin, Utah apples had an enviable name and fame both for alse and quality. Even as recently as twenty years ago, the apples raised here were of superior qual ity and lomjiaraUvt'ly sound and free from worms. Now, inferior slid wormy fruit Is the rule, the exception being the small quantity which a few careful and painstaking send to market. Yet the soil and the climate have not changed, and successful ap pie culture is as practicable now as ever before. Pure and profitable results will follow in all cases where Intelligence la used and care taken to plant the best varieties of apples and give the trees projier attention both before and after they coine Into bear- ed $008 Why teeth? dont you save your Just two things are needed a perfect tooth powder and a perfect tooth brush. Our Soluble Antiseptic Dentifrice is the most perfect tooth powder made. It cleanses the teeth without harming them and makes the gums healthy and the mouth aseptic. 25 cents. The A. D. S. tooth brush is perfection. PRESCRIPTION 2479 Wash. Av. Utah Independent Telephone Compy I-- SPECIALISTS Ogden, Utah pc,iple THE PHONte THAT TALKS I Change Every Week I Hursts Auto Car . NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. out- - paper not You should lecelvv later than 6:18 p. in. If not received et that hour call Phone 864 and it attl lw sent you by special messenger. Pey No Money to Carriers er ether cellectore unless they present credentials from the undersigned. Under ne circumstances will carriers er cellectore be allowed to take Stops. All noticss of this kind must b given to this office direct or by letter, er in person, er phene 664, one ring. JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO By B. A. Bowman, General Manager. My up-to-d- ate - matter at Entered as second-clas- s the puetofflce at Ogden. Utah, under Act of Congress of March S. 167. B. A. BOWMAN Is the telephone to Of course you want the best. Call 51 for information. This Week at SYLVAN PARK ring Ind., 8441 ring Bell. 864 2 rings Ind.. 8642 rings TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. 6Mail one Year Mail Six Month Mail Tliree Months Mali one Month Carrier ot.e Month Pay No Money To Carriers. A Modern Necessit s Through the Alps OGDEN, UTAH. PakUshisf Gaapur. MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1907. ing. The following excerpts from Oregon and Idaho exchanges w ill prove of Interest to the readers of the State Journal and hence are reproduced in these columns: Portland Oregonian: Thoae farmers who hesitate to plant apple trees for fear of overstocking the market may learn something now if they will. New York has Just received a consignment of apples from Australia and New Zealand, and tlie fruit Is said to be superior in appearance to the American product. The production of apples has developed rapidly In this country for the last few years, but we still fall to fruit to supply raise enough flrat-clathe home demand and the foreign market. The best goes abroad; the inferior fruit is offered at home and naturally sioils for want of buyers. There ahould be no inferior apples on the market. It pays better to make the whole crop of first quality than to have some good siieclmens and many bad ones. The orchardlat who offers inferior apples for sale picks his own pocket; and until everybody who wishes to eat apple can purchase a supply of good fruit from early fall till late spring at a reasonable pries there la not the slightest danger of aa overstocking the market. The use of apples for habitual food, like that of cheese, is a practice which. Is only beginning to be common in this Americans used to believe country. that fruit was all very well fur a luxury, but of little value for nutriment. The mail who works must have his rations of meat. We have now learned that for sedentary workers, at any rate, fruit Is superior to meat as a food. In fact, many sensible people have coine to the conclusion that our national dyspepsia is caused by the use of too much meat at the table and the neglect of the more rational diet which nature provides Those Idaho (Boise) Statesman: Oregon papers are continually reminding their readers that the apple la a crop that It pays to cultivate. They have the example of the Hood river sections to which to point, and they( are urging people of other sections of the state to put out orchards. While it may not be true that other sections of that state can equal Hood river in apple production, it la altogether probable that many others can produce fruit that will alwaya command a good price. There are certain condition! of soil and climate needed to produce a perfect apple. Those conditions are met with at(Hood Illver and in the Boise and Payette valleys, and there la no limit to the market open every year for frutt from such localities. It has been demonstrated that with care apples can be producted in this section that will command high prices every year. Further, with proper attention, the trees will produce a good crop every year. With an orchard ten years old. It Is possible to take off a profit of some 2500 an acre with certainty, while the profit will often run up much higher. This ranont be done exeeptlng by those who are willing to learn how and then give the orchard llllgent attention; but It pays to give that attention, and no energetic farmer who wishe to increase his Income ahould fall to have a good orchard coming on. This is esfieclally true of the young man who has plenty of energy and wishes to get himself into comfortable circumstances with a bank account before he grows old. He ran put in an orchard of twenty or thirty acres, perhaps, planting a few acres each year, and ten years hence he will be a capitalist If he carries on his business with Intelligent application of all the information he can get. The correct varieties for this section are now known and any young farmer can learn exactly what and how to plant and how to care for the orchard so it will yield him more from a single acre after ten years than he can make off forty acres with the ordinary crops. - WORKING OVERTIME. A court's view of working overtime la given In a circular letter which is being sent out by J. K. Turner of the Manufactures Information Bureau company, a copy of which we have received. In which he says: On April 23rd, J. H. Thompson, conductor, and M. B. Reid, engineer, employed formerly by the Grand Trunk railroad, were placed on trial charged with doing grievous bodily harm to one Bright, by omitting to stop the train and' violating the rules of the company. thereby causing a wreck on September find last. "The Jury returned a verdict of guilty on the second count, that is. violating the rules of the compai.y. tlie maximum punishment being five year in the penitentiary and a fine id IMPORTANT An Electric Flat $400. FREE The moat interesting part of the trial la the comment of the Judge up :i the plea of the defendant that he had worked extra time. The court thr w aside this plea, saying that if the d feiidant had worked extra time, it wan his own choice and not that of tlie Grand Trunk railway. "The trial Judge imposed a penalty of three years Imprisonment and a fine of $400 on May 11th. "In the Interim between the verdict and the sentence, the court had been Investigating minutely every circumstance connected with and precedli.g the wreck. He stated that he had invited representation from every quarter and that he had been waited upon by representatives of the brotherhood, who In effect assured him that accidents must happen, no matter what precautions were taken. "The Judge held that while accidents In a measure were Inevitable, yet they would be vastly minimised if the men understood that carelessness and neglect would be severely punished. Th court criticised In no unmistakable manner the actflshnesa of the average railway employe in hie Inaane desire for the fat pay envelope. "This case establishes a - valuable precedent and emphasizes the fairness of the average Jury when matters of vital import to their interests are being considered. Thia Is also a very Important and significant decision, and ahould impress all railroad men who are apt to be misled by their love for long hours and fat pay envelopes, until their senses become benumbed and they fall asleep at the switch or wherever their poet may be. When railroad men understand that their liberty must pay the price of their selfishness and neglect, then will travel become more safe." 30 Daye' Trial Fop Cut out this Coupon aud Mail it to u. Utah Light fc Railway Co : Gentlemen Please deliver to mv ail.ii ONE ELECTRIC FLAT IRON ($4 00). h understood that I may return game, if unit factory after 30 days trial, without fun JT obligation to mygelf. Mrs. Grover Cleveland Mrs Grover Cleveland, wife of the of the United only living States was born In Buffalo, N. Y., in 1864. Her father had been at one time in a law partnership with President j Cleveland about the time Mr. Cleve- -, land was mayor of Buffalo. Misa Fol-- ! som was noted for her beauty, aud had been admired by Mr. Cleveland when only a child. After she graduated from Wellesley college, at Aurora, N. Y., she again attracted the attention of her father's former law partner, and after a short courtship was married to President Cleveland at the White house on June 2, 1886. "Mrs. Cleveland Uvea at Princeton, N. J., where the Clevelands have a charming home and are active in the social life of the college settlement. THIS IS Name Address AJ07 SULLIVAN A C0N50DINB GRANT, Oeicril Manager Two Complete Performances, 7:30 and 9:15. Matinee Dailv at 3:30. No Matinee Sunday. Eveninga, al OVERTURE. MOREY LONG Rendering an Illustrated Song Replete with Beautiful Special Slldea. BARR A EVANS Present Their Laughable Sketch, "The Rube and the Tiny Boubrette. MISS IDA HOWELL, Comedienne. ' THE RIZLEY8 World's Greatest Acrobats. EUGENE EMMET Character Change Artist A latest HERBERT'S DOGS Wonderful Performance. Motion pictures by the UUhnancope, and "The Stolen Pig. "The Blind's Dog.' YOU WORK HARD FOR YOUR MONEY when you get it, how much attention do you give to the of it? It is the proper care of jrour Income that counts for future prosperity. Do you realise how nicely a checking account will systematise your financial affairs? How much lees trouble It Is to havs a check account than to keep books? What It worth to you to be able to look over your expense account anil know Juat where your money goes? Do you know how won you may have to pay an account the second tlms because you failed to get a receipt? No trouble about these thing when you use chock; start an account with us; you win find it a convenience as well a really care1 I helpful. THE OGDEN STATE BANK OF OODGN, UTAH H. C. BIGELOW, President, J. M. BROWNING, Vice Pres. I I J. E. DOOLY, President. JOSEPH S. PEERY, Vlce-Pre- .t A. P. BIGELOW. Cashier, R. A. MOTES, Asst. Cash. RALPH E. HOAd, Cashier. A. V. McINT05H, Asst. Cashier. I UNITED on STATES DEPOSITARY avns Accounts nd Time Deposits j DR. ESTES, SPECIALIST Shaft from Oscar Wilde. A FACT PROVEN. One of Oscar Wilde's bright saywas ings this, with which he transfixed Errs the Moot Sktf a literary contemporary: "He has no IkssM Cesvlset Ural at Ita Tratk. enemies, but he Is intensely disliked It there Is the slightest doubt In tV by his frlenda" mlnds of any that Dandruff germs do nt exist, their belief is compelled bv th fact that a rabbit Innoculated with t' Often Does, Though germs became bald la six weeks tlm. It must be apparent to any perse It takes very thorough education therefore that the only prevent on to deprive some people of their baldness is th destruction of the germ nral sense. New York Press. which set Is successfully accomplish la one hundred per rent, rf case I the application of Newhrns rerplrlde. A CURE FOR A LAME BACK. la caused by th If you are ever troubled with pains Dandruff causes baldness and en he or lameness in the muscles of your vented with the earns remedy Newhrrpr back use Chamberlain's Pain Balm and Herpicid. Accept no substitute. "Destroy t they will quickly disappear. Mr Alexander Vlollette of Vulcan. Mich cense you remove the effect." Send 10c I says it is the bent liniment he ever Bold hrforleading drugrists. sample to The Herpicid C: used for lame back. For sale by all stamps Mich. Detroit. druggists Two else cents and II. A ........... Week Commencing Saturday Matinee, June 22 MY 49TH BIRTHDAY. Meyer, the present of the United States, was born in Boston, June 14 j' 1858, and is a graduate of Harvard with the class of 1878. His debut in' politics was made in Boaton in 1888, when he was elected a member of the common council. He next served with distinction in the Massachusetts legislature, acting as speaker of the houu for three of the five years he spent at the state capital. Governor Walcott appointed him chairman of the Massa- - ; chusetts board of managers for the Paris exposition, and in 188 he was elected Massachusetts member of the Republican national committee. From 100 to 105 he was the American ambassador to Italy. In 105 he was transferred to Russia, where he represented the United States at 8t Peters1 Boise Capital News: No citizen in burg until chosen by President RooseIdaho can feel anything but regret at velt as a member of his cabinet. Mr.a the conviction of the men connected Meyer is a man of great wealth andinwith the land fraud cases In northern controlling factor in many large Idaho. Not because of the conviction, dustries in New England. but because the acts were committed THIS DATE IN HISTORY. which brought about the conviction. 1214 Bruce defeated the English at Borne of the men are among the most prominent in the state, and society, at Bannockburn. 1580 Spaniards defeated the Portuleast, always suffers more when men at Alcantara. guese of prominence ere found to merit pun1824 Benjamin F. Butler of New ishment. But in it all there la a feelYork became attorney-gener- al of the ing of gratification that Judge Dirt-ric- h United States. was unmoved by the plea for leni1860 Viscount Kitchener of Kharency on account of that prominence. There were poor' men before him for toum, famous English soldier, born. 1858 Balloons used at the battle of sentence for whom there was none to Solferino. a make plea for leniency, and Judge 181 Btatue of Henry Ward Beecher Dietrich held the one without friend before him in Jaet the same light as unveiled In Brooklyn. 184 President Carnot of France he held the ones with Influential frlenda to plead for them, and he fixed the assassinated at Lyons 1895 Marquis of Salisbury accepted sen tences alike, taking only into con sideratlon the crimes found against the British premiership. 188 Norwegian expedition on the them and the nature of the offense. Fram sailed from Christiania. 1900 Thirty-fiv- e lives lost In SouthDngan Journal: In Balt Lake, as a ern Railway wreck near McDonough, test rase, the Chrlatensen Hhue com- Ga. pany lisa refuse to pay the city license 1902 King Edward VII o;ierated on of 20 per annum, contending that the for appendicitis license Is unconstitutional for the reason that It is double tsxatlon, as the Greatest Horseback Ride. merchants are compelled to pay a tax on their stock as well as the license. The greatest ride on horseback The outcome of this case will be ever done up to h!s time was done by watched with great Interest by all mer- Cowper Thornhill, Huntingdonshire, chants In cities, for if the Christensen England, April 29, 1745, who rode 213 Is merno contention company's right miles in 12 hours and 17 minutes to chant In any city of the state may be win a wsger of 500 guineas. Ancompelled to pay a city other possibility Is that back to the point marked by the statute of limitations they may be able to recover the Always. After a woman has picked out her money already paid. box of strawberries she always disSacramento Bee: The Fair Illll covers that one of the other Witt Baptist church In Philadelphia Is to better. have a naif garden. In which a vaudeville show will be given during warm weather, as a means of attracting men, Mans Greatest Value. women and children to gospel services. A man is regarded as of greatest Dr. McClellen,, the fMStur. says that If value to his country at the age of 24. found necessary a free lunch will be furnished, which draws many men to saloons. Tills Is "going some" for a Alaska's Tall Grass. church. But why not free soda water On lands In Alaska grass pasture or ice cream to draw the women? grows six feet high. i UTAHNA THEATRE Dimtloi George Von I postmaster-gener- Iron Free Examination and Consultation for any Chronic Disease of any Name or Nature A PARTIAL LIST OP DISEASES CURED. Catarrh, Deafness, Ringing In the Ear, Diseases of the Head, Throat. Noee, Eye or Ear. All Disease of the Lungs. Bronchial Tubes and Cheat Diseases 01 Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder. B Troubles, SL Vltne Dance. F0A SliLBCUI Tro,lbu Tape Worm, Blood Poisoning from OP7 t0 WoawB-- ANY PRIVATE DISEASE quickly cured to etay cured. aud advice Is FREE. Com at once. may be too 1st. Gall or writs. Sr1 mbit w t6p' ENTRANCE ROOD 19. 2468 Wash. Ave.f Boyle block, RETIEnBER . |