OCR Text |
Show MORNING 4 THE EXAMINER Published every day in the year by the Standard Publishing Co. MONEY LOANED SALARIED PEOPLE Real Estate and Chattel Loans Service quick, oonfldeatlal sad prirata. No com miss to a. WESTERN 'Phone WM. GLASMANN, 634 . BROKERAGE CO. 223 4 Eccles Bldg. Managar. INDIVIDUAL Delivered by Carrier, Including Sunday Horning Examiner, per month Single copies HANK DElOSITS. statistical exhibit showing the growth of individual deposits in the banks of the I'uiled States over a period of a du.en years has been prepi roller of the Curpaled by the rency. It appears from tho showing that the number of banka repurl iug increased from 9..J58 in 16X3 lo B.diG in 1896 and 13.684 in 19'3. June 20 being taken as the date of comparison in each case, (if the whole numlier uf reporting institution, the national banka comprised 2,729 in 1892, 3.676, in 18m! and 4 939 in 1903. The increase in the tots! number reporting wss only 1 per cent, in J8X6, as compared with 46 per cent, in 1903. An even more striking gain Is shown in the amount of individual deposits. The total volume of deposits in state banks, savings banka, private banks, .loan and trust companies and national bank grew from $4,004,934,250 In 1893 to $4,945,124,423 in 1896 and A cU cts i SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mail one month (Including Sunday) outside of Ogden ....SO cts Telephone No. 66. Subscribers will confer n favor by Informing this office of failure to re mire The Sit miner before their knakhit 4 STRENUOUS JUDGE PARKER. It is evident that the Democrats believe that their candidate must itc strenuous in order to win in thia campaign. in attributing the strenuous character to Judge Parker, the Democrats. unconsciously, probably, pay a high compliment to President Kuose-vel- t. it Is direct evidence that although they have been ridiculing Urn president during the past three .years, they have really been admiring him on the quiet because of those bln if. rugged energetic, qualities ahlch urged him to live th.s strenuous life. And so they finally came to understand that those quantise were the ones which the people like and therefore all that partakes of those characteristics in Judge Parker will be esploited before the people during this campaign. When the news of his nomination was lakes to Judge Parker he waa taking his morning plunge In the cool waters of the river. Every detail connected with that early morning lwih Is given and probably some Democratic poet will soon embody it in an epic poem In which he will claim that swim with the swimming of the Hellespont by Leanrtcr, or the equally famous Philippine feat of General Kunslon. And the Democrats are so averse to bathing! Imter we find Judge J'arker on n prancing atoed at the little railway etatioa at Esnpus, where bis nomiaallon has encouraged II te railroad company lo put in a sidetrack, and between the first deep consideration of the platform and the sending of the historical telegram demanding the insertion of the gold plank, hs exhibits to hla astonished neighbors n wonderful nklll In horsemusblp. But now he has reached I he acme of atrenuousneea. Monday night, or yesterday morning rather, one of his bones got loose and he valiantly arose and accompanied by his loyal secretary went down into the field and caught the horse after one bour'a maneuvering! Surely the Democrats have a strenuous candidate! And their n pedal correspondents are adepts In finding these incidents that tell of the character of the man. They have vivid imaginations also, these correspondents! Surely never n distorted description of n Rooaeveltlan feat, pictured by the abortive imagination of n sneering Democrat, has ever equalled In ridiculous absurdity the real articles (hat those same Democrats are fidsling on n wearied people concerning Judge Darker. EFFECT OF THE STRIKE. Whatever the effect nf be strike of the employes of the packing House plants In the larger Packing centers of the middle west, it Is certain that It will result in two important rrfocts I in tho middle west which will Iw of far reaching importance. First, the fact that the packing house plants will be closed down for a week or ten days, at the least, means that ibe markets for livestock will be practically closed for probably twice that length of time and there will be a consequent cessation of livestock shipments to the east. This means a hardship for the raisers of livestock in the west for they will be obliged to sell their fattened stock to the local markets at reduced prices for tho local markets will be and that means lower prices. H means rutting off also of one path through which rtnney finds its way from ih east lo the west. It Is true that the retail prices of fresh meats wil be materially reduced in the west but in iiie warm weather the consumption of the fresh meats is also less and the general resnli, therefore, cannot lo other fhan to work a hardship ami a loss on the raisers of livestock, without much benefit resulting lo consumers of lower prices. The people of the cast will be more generally affected than those in the west for it means a great increase in the cost of living, the fresh meat maikets of ihe cast as well as the smoked and dried meats being supplied by tho great packing plants. To tha cities in which the strikes am occurring It presages an unsurpassed dull period as In most of them the Packing Plant industry ia the foundation of their life and the loss of the weekly wages of the thuunaiids of men who have stopped work ia a serious blow at the prosperity of these municipalities. It is to lie hoped that the differences may be adjusted a once in a scanner satisfactory to both over-supplie- d turtle; tr thr 3 $9,530,-429.25- in 19o::. It 2 will be seen by eumiiaring these figures that while the increase from 1892 to 1896 amounted to only 6 per cent., the gain from 192 to 1903 was over 104 per cent. The deposits In national banks showed an Increase of over 93 per ceut. for the period covered, those in slate banks exhibited a gain of 176 per cent, and those in savings banks showed an increase of 60 per cent, but the greatest relative increase waa shown In the deposits in loan and trust companies, which exhibited an increase of 286 per cent, over those at the beginning of the period. UTAH, OGDEN, EXAMINER, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 13, 1901. Hq had seen tbe colt work cb half mile track and had gut t, aoUi lata hia head that hs would bs ie trim more of the line around Chi.-alhan trimmed him. and ao he had the greatest difficulty, got together $50 that be had offered to bet with and sailed up to Chicago with it 7? Some pf the spraktrs at the Demothe idea of making a mild killing cratic ratification meeting at Salt But the dierouragemeut of thVtra,,. City Saturday night must have received photographer got him reeling. He nJ some of their inspiraiinn from tbe rained the camera rasa a townie Missouri whom he hadn't seen fur jail declaration of principles at to lead him off Into a corner, and th Si. Louis. photographer had pushed it inio him that. there waa only one horse ia At a recent meeting of the medical race, and that the I to 6 favorite. tx, faculty of Queen's university, Ontario, man with tha $50 and the Amerita a proiiosal was received from a man In Eagle hunch went to the favorite u need of money to mortgage his body u my book, taking $30 to $50. the inslliiiilon. The communication American Eagle gumshoed hotn was shelved. like a chicken thief trying to be.( a bull-doThe bumble looking mT! who was $10,050 to the bad for h a is i M. Senator Pepew Chauncey swltrh stood alongside my stool, exploits liul re- director of seventy-fou- r tages that Salt companies whim with the photographer, lag th gard them as only miuor inducements William K. Vanderbilt is in fifty-fiv- e, horse came Into the stretch. fifty-tw- a J. In John There and Gould George cltizeus. of influx fur the to ask "When the crowd let out the bleat D. Rockefeller is a member of only one that the Eagle horse was hoi- h. are so many advautagea peculiarly onr directorate. began to go around that camera-p- t own that we think nothing of those er like a cooper around a barrel. Re which seem ail Important in the e.vea not only trimmed the photograph?, The oldest love letter in the world is of the Balt Lakers. For Instance, we in the British museum. It is a four different ways from Sunday, but be knocked tbe everlasting daylight, of marriage for the hand of an have plenty of the purest water from a out of two Pinkerton men who tried cool mountain stream, adequate for a Egyptian princess, and it was made pull him off. and his wrath was .500 years ago. It ia in the form of aa population five times that of Salt mighty that it finally took four mount Inscribed brick. Lake; Ogden is loratcd on the footed cops to pile him into the hast fertile a surrounded by hills and is wagon and lug him to the cilabooJ of alkali For some time astronomers have He hadn't had the moral Lackbou farming country inatead asto pass along a suggestion a t0 vw! flats; the sun's rays are here temper- tried to adapt tha stereoscope to he'd better do with a piece of Cosmos, Paris, and very ed by the cooling breezes from the tronomy, says TWAS EVER THUS AFTER A DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION. that he had resolved to play hUovB of the relief satisfactory photographs beautiful canyons, and within a short moon have been obTained by taking way and no other, but he had the canyons present view at sufficiently long intervals and nerve to try to put all of the distance the ears. her with her boy horse out from the stroking away youngster, authority uf Chicago oa tbe the must famous summer resorts In the utilising the alight swinging of tha across got a helter-skelte- r because that doesnt It ran and signify track the moon to and fro In space. The moon bum in bis chagrin over his poiiy. to stand moral man west. It la a little warm here the shoulcourage hasnt hia Into the infield rail. Jamming woggedneas when he came m a apiteara in exaggerated relief. der.' pat on a bet ha hasn't got all kinds of realization of It. New York Sub but not extremely so. The courage. Sail Lakira have our sympathy. "Forget it,' we told him. 'It's all physical I waa making book on tha Qlilcago hasheesh. There waa a man we all PITH THE PRESS known In here only half an hour ago tracks eight years ago. One big stake NO CLUE TO DOUBLE MURDER. who saw Hermis in his stall as late as day, for tha third race on the card, TWO HUNDRED THAT SWIMMING EPISODE. New York, July 12. The dead bodfo o'clock, and tha hone, he tou us, had a horse chalked UP at 200 to 1. aa chesty as a pouter pigeon The hone's name was American Eagle. of George Abbott and William looked THOUSAND ON Hed never raced on the Chicago tracks, Tbe president will have to do some- with n whole coop to himself.' were found today In a Brook-ly- n "But that spineless Baltimore sport but the hooka runners reported that he real strenuous after that swimwhich apparently thing junkshop, CARD A OF TURN ming episode of the Democratic nom- waa too scared to believe us. He had looked and ran like a giraffe, hence the been set on fire after the mea wen inee. Salt Lake Telegram. la hie pocket a ticket reading $16,000 big figure against him. killed. Both the men had been shot sort and their skulls fractured. There b to $1,000, Hermis Chicago winter "A quiet spoken, bumble-lookin- g York a book ticket. Herald.) of chap made hie way up to my stool no clue to the murderer. (New WILL VOTE HER STRAIGHT. He wanted to lay It all on. Offered nttle while before they were due to That story in the cahle news about 0 $325,-0Uwon 1 ia sums to suit. That was go to the poet in that race, and said the Mislssippi Colonel who The voters of Utsh will this yesr ua In tha Monte Carlo institution of hare such a blanket ticket to prepare soft enough, considering that the night to me: Do you want to take $50 on that chance in two weeks play sounds good lor tbe ballot box that many of them before tha race Hermis figured a 4 to 1 but it seems to me that It took him a (those who are afraid of losing their chance, but we didnt want to gouge the Eagle horse? That didn't give me much of a lung time to get hold of a little money vote by spoiling their ballot) will just man. Wa told him to hang on to his a member of put a cross under Ihe eagle bird or ticket and stand to own something. like that," remarked chanue to round up my book, with one "He got sore when we refused to take $10,000 to $50 bet on the outsider, but Washington's Oldest Inhabitants As- rooster and let it gu at that Emery 10 to 1 so as to let him down easy, as the race waa ao filled with good ones sociation, whose only prolonged ab- County Progress. he put it, and then he went hiking that I decided to take a chance. I sence from the capital during 6U years occurred when he joined the forty-niner- s IS A FRAMER FROM WAY BACK. down the line and, inride of an hour, nodded, and he waa Just slipping me of no contamination when yoa give I once saw to have the fifty when a man he apparently in California. had met enough conua your meat orders, you are sure in worth win to off him $150,000 $200,000 Baldwin been enabled had who gave by, lay standing knew, Lucky Theodore Roosevelt Is ssfil to have of getting good, wholesome mcit, siderably lesa lhan a minute, although framed the Hepuldluan platform. It of Hermis at the figure be waa offering him a poke on the arm. there were no rallies or telegraphs at looks as if be framed the Democratic had be had that much of It He gave not an ounce of doubtful "This man happened to be the track Boma of them 16 to 1, I hear, in his photographer, and there are some racethat time lo flash the news (o the platform, too, New York World. ever enters our praviskm world. panie. goers who imagine that track photogmarket. IL is your Interest as well I saw him at the track after the raphers know the difference between a That happened one night in SepNO FEMALE PERIL. as ours to remember this. Invetember. 1856. Baldwin owned several race, aa forlorn looking a man aa ever race horn and a smokehouse. acres of fine land on the crest of what While much has been said in the leaned up against a race track rail and toss your want to '"What stigate our 5 per cent rebate sysd'ye Is now known as Nob Hill, in Ban past of the danger of the females ached to have somebody come along money away for like a sudaed sailor?' tem. at even that shoe with This him leather, dent Francisco. up property he inquired of the humble looking man. usurping the positions of tha male and I never could understand," went on That mitt hasn't any more chance time, on account of it a future value for wage-earnof the United States, it 2451 Washington Avs. was OGDEN. how these residence purposes, would seem by a comparison with the the bookmaker, than a tree-toa- d la a typhoon.' track tor fall these will era crazy worth easily $20IMM10. other of I countries man wavered. we that The have figures quiet spoken Tom Vanbrugh, proprietor of Ihe gut a lung way to go before we re- rumors New York people dont be- found out afterward that be had come to that not I'm them. any El Dorado, a big gambling club, ownlieve going tire (he male contingent to obscurity ail the way from a little farm down la E. WEATIIERBY. ed faro banks ail the length of the and idleness. The percentage of fe- the winter books plant their rumor Missouri to play American Eagle the town a few a to the In in addilkm big days possessing big male wage earnera in tho slope, started. the United mongers first time horse gambling club In tho City of Moxtco, Stales is 14, in Germany and Eng- before the big races to see what can be and was a mllionaire several times land 25, in Italy 40, and in Austria done in the way of having over. Vanbrugh wanted Lucky Baldticket sort of combed down in else, 47. Santa Rosa Republican. win's parcel nf Nob Hill ground, but IOC hut I know of a lot of incidents that would make it look something that Baldwin would not even talk about NO HELP FOR THE DEAD. way. selling it. Vanbrugh owned a block in Lower Market street, on whlrh BaldSince the Coroners JffFy has found The year that Banastar was left at win wanted to build. It was worth out how little real inspection had the post in the Suburban a Philadelatmut the same amount as Baldwin's been given to the Slocum, why would phia barkeeper had a ticket on the winNob Hill ground. Vanbrugh had of- it not be the part of wisdom to have ner of the race, the old mare Imp, that block a Coroners fered to trade the Market-stree- t jury sit on some of the read $40,000 to $2,000. fiir Ihe piece of Nob Hill land, but officials before the catastrophe occurs. The barkeeper wasnt much for the Baldwin would not listen to him. It's too late to help the people after horse game himself, and he had got That is the way it stood between they are dead. Bakersfield Echo. hold of the ticket in a peculiar way. It Baldwin and Vanbrugh on that night had been given to him by a dying sport in September. 1856, when Baldwin A GOOD WORD FOR 11ETTT AND In a Philadelphia hospital. havafter El Dorado the strolled Into The sport had bought the ticket RUSSELL. ing dined. Vanbrugh was sitting at down in Hot Springe while making a a desk in his private room off the good season of It there. ReturnTha small uewspaper jokers, tired pretty main hank when Baldwin stepped In. to Philadelphia, ho had embarked ing mother-in-law- , of at the now laughing Hello, Tom,' said Baldwin to Vanat the wind-u- p of which direct their Jibes at Russell Sage and on a big spree, brugh. How are you feeling?' found himself all in. he "'Still Nob Hilly.' replied Vanbrugh. Hetty Green.malnly because those perThe barkeeper took care of him. and 'When are you going to transfer the sonages are very rich, very industri- when the sport fell out of a window deed nf that piece of ground to me, ous, very economical and very philan and fractured one of bis legs in a whole thro pic. They might be about bet- lot of different anyway? places, the barkeeper "'Tom, replied Baldwin. 'I'm gel ter business. We are a frivolous, Im- looked up a hospital for him and had riotous and would crew, it provident, ting tired of hearing you talk about do they dentded some of us good to imitate Bage'a him .taken there.off. When that ground. Come out here and get sent for the the to take sport leg wonderful working habits at $8 and to the barkeeper and handed him the behind the box.' and Lucky Baldwin . lunch with lletty $40,000 to $2,000 ticket on the old Imp partake of a led the way into tho main Vanbrugh followed him with alacrity. Green. Truckee Republican. mare, and telling him that It waa the The dealer at one uf the kind of a lottery ticket worth hanging "AND THE DOG HIS DAY. tables waa Just shuffling the cards for on to. another boxful. The barkeeper tucked it. into bis Mr. Bryan can new fully appreciate 'Bit down there Tom. and get busy,' vest without thinking murk about It the and of truth the deep unerring said Baldwin to Vanbrugh, pointing to and the sport died under the operation. old saying that every dog has lta day the dealer's chair. Horse circles began to get. right Stockton Record. Vanbrugh motioned to the dealer, buxxy about the chances of old Imp two who slid out of the rliair. Vanbrugh or three weeks before that race, even ONLY ONE REMOVE FROM HADES. slid into it. though the experts had it that with "If ihe are loses, Tom.' Baldwin Banastar In especially after the way There be some was may that place to said, wlihnut a trace of excitement, Banxstar had waltzed away with the I .aka Halt than hotter an.l yesSunday Vanbrugh, the Nob Hill is yours. If Brooklyn ban.Ilrao alia had little or we hut are of the opin- no strongly the ace wins the Market-atree- t block terday. chance. All the same, the winter ion it be would that necessary to die In books chopped her pries down from ia mine. How about that?' "Vanhrngh nodded. He shuffled Ihe order to get into it. Salt Imke Her20 to 1 to 10 to 1. and they weren't Isr cards, did the unusual courtesy in faro ald. suing any big tickets at that price, bank of passing them over to Baldwin either. to could cut 26 cards as 'Two days before the Suburban day well a any veteran faro batik dealer a man who waa known to have quite a slid and the cards into the box. lot to do with a western winter book 'With vour permission, gentlemen.' started the story around Philadelphia aaid Vanbrugh to the other players that Imp was having fits In her rtall, around the table whose play had been and that there wasnt any chance for Interrupted, and they leaned back In her to get the peot for the Suburban. their chairs to watrh the outcome. "Tbe barkeeper with the big ticket on "Baldwin removed hia Ianama from the Imp chance was an invertebrate sort Around Broadway's Turkish hotels of a his head, and a cabbage leaf which he yannlgan, and he went to this always wore Insulc of his hat In hoi they have lieen telling for the past rumor all in a coil. Even In Philadela of week man Baltimore weather fell to Ihe floor just as Van whose credul- phia they were wise enough to give the Your favorite beverage will ba greatly taiyrwed hrugh started to slide the rards nut of ity cost him something more than $15.-O- hoot to any such visionary yarn as that Ilia on the box. Baldwin slopped to pick up ruuulng uf the Suburban so seasoned and sedate a mare as Imp by adding the cabbage leaf aud replaced ii in handicap. was liable to have anything so crazy as Thia Baltimorean," said a book- stall fits his hat. Before he mukkI erect be but the barkeeper her, ailing was the owner of Vanbrugh's Market-stree- t maker, telling the story, ia a man all ate the yarn up. block. The see had come out of the layers have become acquainted about He didn't know anything m the right side for Baldwin while he with on the track of the eastern Juroff a bet. If he what's called isdiction. His marker is aa good aa bad. he'd havelaying was stooping over. easily been able to get in the shed, and bia word haa $2,000. at the 'IfI tour 'name isn't t a (it. Lucky, wheat, very least, for his ticket, double I'll of steel on It. He's was ail list Vanbrugh but the stampede got him so bad that said, and on the following morning he good fellow, at that, but the most he would have parted with hie ticket transferred the Market street property spineless sport I ever rented an eye for a new hat if It had got down to upon. to Baldwin." that. A man acting for the PhiladelHe came crowding in here late on phia agent of the winter book that had the night, before tbe suburban. He had written the big ticket got the piece of Juki got in from Baltimore, and he pasteboard away from the barkeeper Makes everything good. At Bars and Fountains. looked like he was in a bushel of trou for $300 on the night before the rare. hie. He nudged several of us that he EDITORIAL COMMENT When the glass wiper's friends knew aside. beard about it. they guyed him so much "'Say.' he panted, 'what's this thing bout It that he felt It Incumbent upon Whether right or wrong the Balt about Hermis having run into a fence him to do something to show them that Lake lieniorrats have ratillrl. and smashed himself up?' was dead game la spite of their critibe "We looked him over, and then gave cisms. Bo. a little while after he hsd each other the gaze. for $200. he waved the " Fence? he said. 'Smashed himself? sold his ticket In putting a switch in at Esopus $200 aloft and offered to bet It on BanWhere did you get it?' the rail real company virtually H. B. Hilliard- astar at the best price anybody there G GRebsrJ. "Why.' he went ahead, without present would five Mn. Judge Parker. a drawing long breath, 'just before I TWO THREE WABBLING left Baltimore. That's what sent, me The very man who had bought the Witb a lteer famine threatening In over here Would have taken $2,000 ticket for $200 offered 4 to 1 Bait Lake there is not much enenur-agremea later train if it hadn't been for that.' against Banastar to the barkeeper, sad CENTRAL AND BAR " Napping after dinner, and dreamt for a hot political campaign waa put up at that figure. the down there. that about liermis, e.li? one of na sug- Thatmoney race furnished the crueltat dumn gested. malt swabber ever that a weak-knee- d ' 'No. he fellow a 'Saw had to stand for since the beginning of The relations hetweeu Judge King who had a protested. about it. teleThe telegram 'lairse raring. You'll remember that Under New Management. and Prank Cannon are about aa cordial gram was cin unistantial. It said 'Phone 135- -t that Bsnastar was left at the post, and that and sympathetic aa the relations be- - Ifsrmis' exercise boy was giving the old running as don to the ground tvm Bryan and Cle eland a ing iM,. afternoon and that ihe es sImp. nnwbird. edged home on the hit Hut the wail that Is given space this Lake paper morning in the Balt marks the climax of oe for that city. The intensity of the sun's ray was Mimcwbat awful down there yesterday and many prostration from heal are The' heat soemed to have recorded. soft marks in the Sab lakers and the result waa a list of unfortunate who were retired for some t.mc to the solitude of a sk-- room until their brains become cooled off. The Herald inis only one timates that Balt and bases bade from removed degree the Infcrenre on the intense heal-b- ut mind probably the Herald also bad in (bn Democratic ratification meeting. And all this time Ogden has no kick to record. We have all the advan- Will the Balt Lake City real estate association return thanks to Dubois, Cannon, et al., for tbe advertisement with their church separation" of plank in the Democratic platform? l! - pro-IKiti- al coniti-tute- e, OF YOU ARE DUBOIS TREACHERY. The story published In the Ran Francisco Examiner and republished In another enlumn of this Issue, Is ihe record, If true, of the most, dishonorable political art in the hlstjiy of either party, and stampa Renal or Duoois of Idaho as a man who possesses not a single attribute which would entitle him to the friendship of honorahle men. It is a true index to Ihe character of a man who, in older to gain political advantage, would wage an unreasoning, needless fight against tha people of two stafea. That his ullr-ancin regard to Ihe con I'llons Kii ideally in Idaho and Utah are untruthful will now be recognised by those who read of bia disreputable action in St. ea Louis. It scorn a that he had been bnalen in Idaho al the convention and then pleaded with the llearst men to he alloweJ to go to tha Bt. IjouIs convention as a delegate. They magnanimously agreed to this, but hla arrival at Bt. Inuls marked the owning of a treacherous course toward Hr and.. Ilia entire effort was expended in getting tha plank intu the platatitl-polyga- form. Now It Is charged that August Belmont gave $t,000 each fur votes for Parker, aud that tha Idaho delegation, although instructed for llesrst, followed the lead of Dubois and changed to Parker. The almost direct charge Is made that Dubola benefited in tha receipt of some of this cash offered by the New York banker. The apparent venality of the man is I hits illustrated and the slory from the Examiner clearly explains the character of Dubula and the animus which Itas Inspired hia attacks on the Mormon church and the voters of Idaho and 11ah. It places those Democrats of Utah who are either defending or apologising for tho Dubois plank in a most embarrassing jnmI.Ioii. And I hat reminds us lhal Frank Cannon and Dubois play politics logwher. That both were lilenufbM with the Smoot Invesligaf ion at Washington when, II was whispered, neither of them was loser flnani ially In making Ihe fight. After a visit to New York these political Dromlos were announced lo have formed a combination w Ith lie rut and received the price " by a Salt Lake palter. Now, that Puiaria Is charged virtually with having been bought off by Belmont for $1,000, it is wondered If the same explanation can apply to the change of Frank Cannon's suit u.le. When there is easy money around loose Frank's previous record would rather Indicate that lie has a capacity for annexing it. POOR SALT LAKE CITY. After all, the capital of the Mate is entitled to sympathy anil the people who drag out a purposi-l- r existence as citizens of that municipality should be encouraged with consoliug words. For they are subjected in rianv grievous troubles down then-- . Krery two years a session uf the legislature is held and all of Ihe ambitious and grasping politicians call the city their home. The citizens are burdened with the tak of offering chances to earn a livelihood to a population far In excess of what. Is warranted by the natural advantages. The water supply has for years been inadequate and now tha breweries are unable to supply Ibe required amount or beer. The newspapers devote their news a spare to accounts nf how Site use short weights and small measures In order to gain sruue profit in dealing with the average Salt Imher. Many griefs, indeed, have the resident:-. of Salt l.ai,r CiM t nier-rhmnt- SURE sure-thinge- rs fleub-foo- d high-grad- out-of-to- e A. toppy-ook-In- g r aoi SUIT SALE 8,10,12,13.50 $15 Suits at $7.95 faro-room- With Corresponding Cut in Every Line Throughout Store . Putnam Clothing House cut-Lu- 2345 cky THREE WABBLING Washington Avenue BETTORS (Settles the Nerves uti F. J. KIESEL CO. aide-trark- ed DOTE nt 0 t Distributor. |