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Show OAILY PAGE FOUR. of having their names chiseled on the corner-stone- s. Fred J. Klesel endows the public school, the school of the poor a well as the rich the university of Daily &tatr Smtruol OGDEN. UTAH Journal Publishing Co .. . .Publisher the plain people. (Incorporated) Viewed from every standpoint this Published every evening except Sunday gift is most worthy. As an expresTelephones sion of public spirit, of confidence in Business Office Bell, 641 ring a desire to lnd ring the future of the city, of Bell (42 rings help the boys and girls of the comEditorial Rooms Ind 642 rings munity to secure educations that will make of them better men and women, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION a rebuke to those who woud hold as OO M By Mail One Tear 00 this city back from its destiny of true By Mail Six Months 150 Months Mail Three By greatness, this gift is most worthy. As 51) By Mail One Month a result of it many who have not yet 50 By Carrier One Month come upon the scene of action will Pay No Money to Carriers have occasion to bless the motives that actuated Fred J. Kiesel to take this second-class ter at Entered as ns' the Postofflce at Ogden. Utah, under important atep. Act of Congress of March I, 187. 141 M. F. CUNNINGHAM. .Manag Editor B. A. BOWMAN.. Business Manager TO TAKE Jl TRIP ' SATURDAY. JUNE 13. STATE JOURNAL. 19C3. What They Think of It Republican.) (Inter-Mounta- in All Utah must be Inu.esied in the i hundred dollars an acre. Land that news of a new irrigation scheme for doesnt produce anything but sage-D.- 0 Kw Republican's Ogden i " B, fifty years the will produce .wheat .1 The reports corn and hay and all manner of root company has already been organised, crops and garden and orchard yields the land has been secured, There is something rather majestic and the rough draft of their in one of these big Irrigation schemes. drainage and storage system has been It partakes a little of the genius of the decided upon. A very large tract of Creator to take the elements and get land in the counties named is to be foodstuff. It Is big work. It means reclaimed, and irrigated. It Is one of something for the day and something the big things propected by Utah men. vastly more for all the. years of the And what Utah men attempt, they usu- future. For this land they reclaim will roore ally complete. be richer and more produc1 We have a good deal of faith In this valuable and more encouraging every latest announced irrigation project It year of the world, down to the end ot is in the right counties There is time. plenty of water there, and plenty of Our congratulations to the people land that needs the water and will who are building this never get it unless men do precisely Irrigation work. They may what the promoters of this plan con- make some money for themselves. They template And when they have accom- are adding to human life and human! plished their work land that is worth happiness and earthly riches for thou five dollars an acre will be' worth two ' sands who shall come after them. headquarters mi the Cleveland grounds, taking along much advertising matter for Ogden. He expects at least TJ ORTUNATE indeed is the com- - 150 Utah teachers and educators to be present during the national convenmunity that has among its such splendid men as Fred J. tion. Superintendent Allison leaves next Klesel. On many occasions in ths Monday. past this man has demonstrated his great worth to the City of Ogden. In Two Types ef Women. offices of trust and responsibility on There are two delightful classes of occasions without number he has dem- girls to my way of thinking the onstrated his ability, his Integrity, hla American working girl, bleae her! and Intense loyalty to his stats and ths the average English girl, God love her! Robert Barr, in Detroit Free city of his adoption. Press Even in the walks of private Hit lx has made his Influence felt, as few SPECIAL MEETING other men In tho west have dons, and always for the benefit of hla fellow Ogden Trades end Labor Assembly. Special meeting Is called for 1p.m. men. It was Fred J. Klesel who transJune 15, 190. Matters of ImMonday, formed the Irrigation Congress from on Typographical portance, Including idle dream into a vital, positive, aggrievance and Independent Telephone gressive force (or the upbuilding of proposition. Consultation in other mattho arid west, and for the establish- ters of general welfare. A general attendance of membership ment of countless homes where beis imperative fore there was little but desert and B. UNDERMAN, (Signed) waste. It was Fred J. Klesel who made President. it possible for the Ogden Tabernacle Attest: C. C. NOWUN, Secretary. choir to visit the Portland exposition to do inestimable good for all Utah. It was Fred J. Klesel who mads It possible for Utah In all departments to win such laurels at Sacramento. At all times and on all occasions when a hard pull is to be mads for Utah and ths west in general, and for tho City of Ogden in particular,' a demand la made upon the splendid executive ability and the tireless energy of Fred J. KleseL Few In Ogden have yet forgotten his services in the fight for ths Lucin Cut-of- f. But among all the achievements of this man. his latest act will stand out with peculiar prominence especially In th eyes of this Immediate community. This Is his presentation to the City of Ogden through the board of education of a magnificent alto for a public high CIVIC SPIRIT AT ITS BEST . citi-aenah- lp inter-mounta- (Coupyrighted 108 by Newspaper En- Cannon U outraged over the terprise Association By Lincoln lion cf his own system v, an,ia vention. In our" interest t,.r Steffens.) CHICAGO. I1L, June 18. We need which we saw applied in .ivlUa Not ventlona, and wlikh he Im,..;, more politics in this country. " many of us think so. ''Have too much oped to so a high a state ..r ,in the House of Represent iv politics now- is the commoner sentiWell, there Is something m ment. But look at this Chicago convention, not as a partisan Republican, It is too bad we cannot h,.r or business fir an, or anything in par- ation. which weigh in the ticular; but as a cltlsen Interested In tion of the nominees and the general problem of government and the Republican party. ii;l)lir w course of political evolution lh of common social living. " to nominate the president i:; came here, I is That especially why delegate! having some sense of urgent public should, pass hack from questions in the mind of a great and to the people themselves. Tins troubled people. I should like to see will be a step toward dei,;,,,,,-'how Republicans see things, and what the initiative and refere i, Urns For that matter the deleguies t0 thu they propose to have their party do about them. And what do I find? I convention or to some of in. find the work of the convention prac- may break away from the onsanizition Then they will tell us now tically dona .i;y wiuj Delegates elected by the Republican had been decided upon but why jC electors are not yet here. They will waa ao decided. We cannot help not begin to arrive for a day or two or ing that one of the best result of lost pablic three. They do not meet until Tues- Politics was lost when discussion toef down do public when sit and question. whtt they day, gether they may not deliberate at all. the whole people no lunger Most of what they will do has been de- hear what is done in their Now there ia always the danger that cided upon, or it will have been by so in not perfect a machine will fall into evil here that time in private, and hands Reagain, or that a well meaning The in but Washington. Chicago, publican national convention of 108 and popular leader, in control of mti promises to be aa useless as the elec- a power, may become an autocrat. toral college which elects." Thats bad but it is not as bad as it might ELECTRIC THEATRE d-- The ideal twentieth century home carried to the rooms Just the same aa has Just been completed at Carollton. the steam from an ordinary furnace. IU., saya Cement Age. The house is The rooms are heated with ateam radiators. constructed of concrete and there la not Of course some arrangement a sign of a chimney, although the had to be supplied special to furnish hot wabuilding is supplied with an abundance ter for the bathroom. Near the ceil- of artificial light and heat. Neither la there any fire in the house, nor coal, nor ashes, nor dangerous gases While this wonderful residence is the first of Its kind in ths world, it is beyond a doubt a good example of what tho average American home will be in a few years from now when both wood and coal have become too expensive for common use. This model home ia two atories high, with attic and basement and has eight rooms on the main floors In building thle dwelling Edison's idea of a concrete house to be poured in one big mold was not carried out, yet the foundation and walls are of concrete blocks The concrete was mixed on the site and molded Into the building blocks as required. There was no waste of building material. The floors are of wood and the interior ia finished in plaster and oak. The style of of architecture is of the plain, substantial mission type. This idea is carried out in the interior cartoons as well. The building Is fronted by a large porch 6x82 feet, and cost leas than 83.500. Perhaps the most novel feature about this wonderful residence ie the fact that It Is heated by steam from a central station. Instead, the steam, which usually goes to waste about small electric light plants is carried to the house by underground pipes. This steam pipe enters the house In the basement and la ing in the bathroom is located a water tank, which ia kept constantly hot by a number of small pipes through which a continual flow of hot water la maintained. This tank supplies hot water for the bath and to tha wash bowls located in two of the upstairs bed- rooms. EXCURSION TO DENVER VIA RIO GRANDE WESTERN G. A. R. SATURDAY at Corps and Circle will meet at City Hall at 7:80 p. m. Sunday, June 14th, to attend Flag service at Presbyterian church at 8:00 p. m. THOS. LUNDY, Commander. Earl Burgess MOTOR RACES V A And Every Succeeding Monday Night During the Summer at OJENWdDW j EwimM amdtong (Sutherland and Bamberger 9H MATINEE pout-bl- schooL This gift comes at such a critical time In the life of the school system of the city that Its value Is Increased many fold. Through an unfortunate misapprehension bonds for a new high school building were recently voted down. And this veto on ths part of tli taxpayers left school affairs in such a muddle that no man was In a position to say what the final outcome would be, or how the city was to be rescued from the dellmma. Fred J. Klesel solves the problem. With such a magnificent site for a permanent home for the high school, a site whose value at this time and In this crisis is hard to estimate, the board of education may go to the voters with No progressive! perfect confidence. community in America, certainly not! the City of Ogden, would hesitate for a minute over the acceptance of so magnificent a gift. There is one phase of this a ticn on the part of Mr. Klesel well worthy of mention It throws a strong light upon the man's character and reveals one of the secrets of his great success. Fred J. Klesel is a Democrat not In the petty, narrow, partisan sense of the term but In that broad sense that means a lover of the rank and file of ' the people. Other men give large sums to found universities, colleges and church schools; many for the purpose G THE BLUE AND THE GRET A drama of the Mouth In 'L Tlx greatest American picture yet. Every picture announced by our lecturer. A trap drum will produce effects a.nt e greatly to the Interest. Come if to matinees or 7 o'clock shows Our people. capacity will be taxed. That is a big gain. JUST LIKE HOME" In 189 another and a different kind convenof a man ran the Republican tion; ran it with another, many different forces and in another and a different interest. This was Mark Hanna. It was the sort of politics he represented, the sort that reduced tha naFrederick Moore, Pearl Ethier tional party t'o a businesslike machine Moore, Lessees which Roosevelt seised and turned into an engine for the enforcement of popular policies. Indeed tho Presidents Matinees Wednesdays machine is Hanna's personal machine and essentially the same. and One of the first and richest sensaFour nights and Wednesday Mations I got when arriving here was to tinee, starting Sunday, June 14th. hear those same old organization men and friends talk about Roosevelts auCo. tocracy." They talked about tha way to used Mark talk about you and I Presenting the eenetional Chinsa Hannas autocracy. It hurts them now. Melodrama They obey but they hats it; they call It the steam roller that runs over and Chinatown Charlie flattens out their schemes; they sneer about the President's telephons wire" the way we used to sneer about politics Prices 10, 20 and 30 Cent and wires. It Is said that even Speaker Saturdays O. A. R. excursion to Lagoon Monday, June 15th, via O. 8. L. Train leaving depot at 10:44 a. m. Fare $1.80 round trip. No entrance fee at :85 P, m. P. S. Post Theodore Roosevelt Is doing the ciding here. He and his candidate, counsellor and friend, Taft, are doing the deliberating. In other words a popular leader, elected president, is running the convention, and he ia running it with force and aa he Intends and believes in the interests of all the de- Utahna Theater Tickets on sals June IS, IS and 15; fere 128.50 round trip; good to return until October Slst the gate. Return, leave Farmington BEGIN-NIN- he. in al-w- as ci f. Superintendent of School Granted Leave of Absence for Pay no money to carrier or other collectors unless they present credenEastern Visit- tials from the undersigned. Under no circumstances will carriers or oc I lectors be allowed to take stopu All notices of this kind must be given The board of education this afterto this office direct or by lottery or in noon granted City Superintendent Wilperson, or phene 664. one ring. liam Allison a leava of absence of JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO, two weeks for the purpose of attending a aeries of lectures In Chicago on the administration of schools. From Chicago, Mr. Allison will go to Cleveland, O, to attend the meetOFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY ing of tha National Educational association. H will establish Utah HOW FORCES WORK BEHIND THE SCENES AMONG REPUBLICANS V , Weber-Davla-Morg- an NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Tou should receive your paper not later than 7:00 p. m. If not received at that hour dill Phone (4 and it will be sent you by special messenger. City No paper delivered after 7 p. m. UTAH |