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Show DAILY UTAH STATE PAGE FOUR. aljc Daily al Stair Journal OGDEN. UTAH PUBLISHER JOURNAL PUBLISHING COMPANY (Incorporated.) Published Every Evening Eseept Sunday. Telephones. Business Office Editorial Rooms Bell Bell 4841 ring. 464 9 rings. Ind. CM X 1 Ind. i4 THRUSDAY APRIL 2. 1908. JOURNAL, BUSINESS IMPROVES all points of the compass coma tha welcome p aurancca Improving; that tha that business ROM Is aa- - finan- SEMI-ANNU- AL cial depression Is over. It Is true the Industrial la not what It might be. but with the opening situation of spring a radical change for th better Is practically assured In ring. of the improvement In the busrings. labor circle. Breaking iness world the Tacoma Ledger has this to say: TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By null one By mail six months By mail three months By mail one month By earner one month Pay no money to Carriers. ale of Piano and Money la no longer In hiding. It la out looking for $4.06 As business opportunities present them1.00 Investments. selves. money Is ready. At the present time municipal .60 securities are finding a wady sale. The sal of bonds will stimulate business. It will assist In circulating money and shortly the demand la industrial enterprises will Increase. matter at the postoffice at Entered as second-cla- ss per cent city stock Baltimore offered 11.006.60 In 1. I67. Ogden. Utah, under Act of Congress of March oversubscribed was many times. The the other day and It Managing Editor M. F. CUNNINGHAM over and the 916.000,000 Business Manager total subscriptions aggregated B. A. BOWMAN bids were as high as 1.06. About th sama tlms New NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. York offered 06,000,000 la 4 per cent bonds, which were Ss5 than net later p. receive your paper Yea sheuld likewise readily taken. Tha total offer reached about m. If not received at that hour call Phone 6M and it will 180,000,000 and th premium offered was in som cases ba delivared yea by apecial messenger. unless Pay na money to carrion or other cel lectori higher than 1.04. Because of tha projected extension of they present credentials from the undersigned. the Harriman lines to Puget Bound, the announcement Under ne circumstances will carrisn er collectors be be must kind ef All notices this th stockholders would soon votss on n bond Issue allowed te take Stopa er in person, er that given te this office direct or by letter, of 040.000,000 to 150,000.000 la of local Interest Mortgages phene 664, on. ring. JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. are to be Issued covering all the unmortgaged lines con.66 Owtaf to die flaclt dial we ase jiscomdiwuiimg some ol oar agencies we find it aitsoHely necessary to of our entire stock oi 22 trolled by the Union Pacific. THE OFFICIAL PAPER OF WEBER COUNTY. BE ON THE SAFE SIDE BREWER has adopted tha plan of visiting tha Mayor and other public institutions of tbs city to are that every precaution la taken for the safety and good health of all concerned. A few days sines the mayor accompanied by Chief of Police Browning. Chief of tha Fire Department Payne aftd Sanitary Inspector Shorten visited the Sacred Heart Academy. They returned pro fuse In their praise or tha cleanliness of the Institution, of tha extreme care taken for the moral and physical health of the children and of lh wise precautions taken to guard againat fire. Otlter Institutions are to receive similar Inspection nt the hanJa of th city officials. It la a wise step and moat heartily to be commended. Thera la no truer saying than that an ounce of preventive Is better than a pound of cure. Thlfa applies with apecial fore to sanitation and tha of human Ufa In large buildings. The truth of thla has been forced In upon the minds of the American people by many aad experiences In recent yearn. If Mayor Brewer and his aslatanta In the city administration pursue thla policy of rigid inspection. If they Inslat that every public building In the cty he rendered safe againat lire and other mishaps and If they set to it that the rules of sanitation are enforced to the letter, they will render valuable service to ths community and da serve he thanks of every cltlsen. In this same connection the Are drills Instituted by Superintendent Allison and ths board of education at tha It will be n lohg various schools are to he commended. time before the horror of the recent calamity In Ohio paaaes from the minds of parents In Ogden as else where they pay high taxes to Insure the proper education of their children. They arc entitled to know that their children are cafe when In school that nothing within reason Is left undone to guard them from harm. It In a satisfaction to know that the school buildings of this city have been rendered safe; that they are furnished with means of escape fB case of fire, and that the children ere perfectly drilled to peso out from the buildings quick All this la worthy of high ly and without confusion. praise. Complaints corns to the Btat Journal as to the sanitary conditions of bulldlnga In tha business district, and of tha lack of cars In soma Instances to guard against fire. Rubbish la permitted to accumulate in basements and In the rear of aulldlngs and proper Are escapes are lacking o" eome of the higher bulldnigs. These are matter entitled to consideration. safe-guardi- ng JUSTICE IS VINDICATED ARBOR DAY OVERKOR CUTLER has Just Issued a proclamation designating Wednesday. April II. as Arbor Day for the state. In his proclamation the governor calls attent'on to the wonderful work that hni been done In tha planting of trees since J. Sterling Morton ortglnatedt the day In Nebraska thlrty-al- x yean ago. Arbor Day should hav a special significant for Ogden proper celebration la In such perfect harmony with the work mapped out by the board of park commissioners and the City Improvement League that 1U celebration thl day. year should mark a In n large degree Arbor Day Is a day for tha school children, and for this reason those In charge of the school of Ogden will be doing a good work for tha children In particular If they Insist upon a proper observance of the day. The .planting of a good tree calls for little labor and little expense. It ehould he regarded as a pleasure as well as a civic duty. Tha Btate Journal suggests that the Board of Park Commissioners, the school authorities, the city officials and this year In making tha cttlaena In general Arbor Day the greatest day of the kind ever seen 1 pVJ red-lett- HE . CLIFFORD PINCHOT ELSEWHERE in this Issue of the State Journal will brief abstract of Chief Forester Gifford Plnchot'a reply to those who a few days ago attacked hla honesty In Congress. This paper has little patience with the men who attack the honesty of Gifford Plnchot It smacks too much of cheap politics. It does not appeal to the Judgment of men who know the chief forester welL There Is not a dishonest hair on his head. It may be that Gifford Plnchot makes mistakes. It would be strange If he did not In carrying out the gigantic schemes of hi department If may be that In his seal for the preservation of the forests of this nation he may at times go beyond the proper limit, it may be that grave evils have crept Into ths bureaa of forestry. It would be strange If this were not true where such a tremendous revolution la being worked out. But the essential fact remains that Plnchot Is an honest man. The still greater fact remains that no man In our day la doing more In a material way for future generation in America than Gifford Plnchot, the chief Player-t- he FIVE IN THE RACE from eastern political centers have It that LATE reports la to be a regular fight for the presidential nom- greatest player can operate it Pianos $ 50.00 ORGAN $15.00 EPORT of the serious illness of Admiral Robley D. Evans, which passed over the wire yesterday from Ban Diego, California, will cause unfversal regret, it seems from th report that the veteran sailor Is a physical wrack aa the result of a n battle with disease. Coming at this particular time when the whole nation was rreparlng to do him honor the news will be thrice unwelcome. It is still hoped that the Hines Is of each a nature that It may soon pass away, and that the retiring admiral may stm be able to participate In the feetfvttteq preparing fir Mm and hla men. But It must be borne In mind that Admiral Evans la now an old man; he went from Utah to Annapolis a a cadet before the Civil War; hla life haa been a strenuous one. and he haa Just passed through a slrge In the tropics that has sent many younger men to the hospital. Serious Illness on the part of ie commander of th fleet at thla time win detract much from th pleasure of tha reception. Bhould the Illness prove total a wet blanket would be cast over the receptions planned on the coast Utah takes a peculiar Interest In the welfare of the grim old veteran. The sympathy and good withes of the state are with him. 68.00 100.00 60.00 i Is P 110.00 Including: Stool and Book INDIANA TARIFF REFORM FIGHTING BOBS" ILLNESS made-anyo- ne This is the method by which we propose to move our stock ination In the Democratic convention. Mr. Bryan Is still In the lead of course, but he has competitors. lit addition to John A. Johnson, governor of Minnesota, then an Judge George Gray of Delaware, Lewis 8. Chanler, the (Meant lieutenant governor of New York, and David R. Francis of Missouri. FYcncIa Is the laet to enter the race It fa announced that hla support era have opened elabrate headquarters In Denver and that A vigorous campaign la to bo waged In hla behalf. Francis has element of strength. Ha haa also elements of weakness He has Iteen mayor of Bt. Louis, governor of Missouri; he was In Cleveland's last cabinet, and ha was president of the Loslana Purchase Exposition. Abova all els ha la a business man. Hla weakness la In the fact that he voted against Bryan In 1000. He voted the Gold Democratic ticket The fact that the nomination la not to go to Bryan by default, but that there la to be a battle royal tor ft will add materially to the Interact of tho Democartle Anal 1 See the Mellvilie Clark Interior Ogdeif. not eesy to understand the logic of Vice President ITFairbanks and Senator Beveridge as expressed at the of SOHMER, IVERS & POND, KIMBALL, HOBART M. CABLE, STORY & CLARK, WINTER & CO. VERDI and and BREWSTER PIANOS-EST- Y, GREAT WESTERN ORGANS Before April 15 er Republican state convention In Indiana. Both argu that chapter in the tragedy of Chester Gillette and the tariff should ha revised; both argue that It should Grace Brown has been written. If there remained he revised at a special session of Congress called to meet any doubt In th mind of anyone as to the guilt of Gillette Immediately after the elect to. It must be removed by the Anal confeaaion of the If the arguments of these men are understood their demned man made to Sheriff Austin B. Kiock Just befora position Is that no action should bo taken before elechla execution. Ha aald: tion fur fear of disturbing business; and that It should "I struck her with my flat, and knocked her down In not go over tin the meeting of the new Congress next the boat. Then I grabbed her by the legs, breaking the spring tor fear that the next House might be Democratic, elastic garter which was shown In elvdence at and that a compromise would have to be reached between the trial, and then threw her Into the water. She rose the Democratic House and the Republican Senate. again to the surface and grabbed hold of the side of the The question naturally arises if the tariff needs reboat. Then I picked up the tennis racquet and atrnck her vision and an are agreed on that point why not get at over Urn eye." it now? President Roosevelt Insisted to his own vigorous It Is comforting to know that In thla sensational cast style In his message of test week that the start should there was no miscarriage of Justice, that the man at the be made at once in the removal of the ttoty on wood pulp helm In New York, Governor Charles E. Hughes, was and a reduction of the dtuy on print paper. This Indiana Idea of sandwiching tariff revision In be, proof against all appeals on sentimental and technical ground and that the murderer suffered tha punishment tween the election next ton and the meeting of Congress to which his crime entitled him. next spring savor more of politics than It does ef And thus ends the tragedy with th old. old lesson business. o the consequences that must ever follow a departure from the right T dispose Pianos and 70 Organs consisting such famous makes as I SHEET MUSIC Books and Folios Any Copy of Sheet Music in the Store Choice of any Book or Folio in stock (worth from 5oc to $2.5o) 25c A small amount down will place in your possession any instrument in the house, while easy payments will soon do the rest. The store will be open evening until 9 oclock to accommodate those who cannot attend during the day. Dont overlook this . g:reat money saving opportunits. YOUR TERMS ARE OURS long-draw- THOMAS-HOI- M C; MUSIC 2336 WASHINGTON AVENUE Next to Geo. A. 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