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Show MORNINO Published every j,r la the Tir the Standard Publishing Ca e by Cmnler. Including Esamlaar. Morning DrllwM Sunday ....75 eta ptf BOBth 0hfl roplM... i CU SUBSCRIPTION RATES. .By mail one month (Including Rnaday) aotatda of Ogden Telephone Na St breakfast TICKET REPUBLICAN - ik-s- Subscriber! trill confer a favor by liUmlof tbla office of fallnre to ro reira The Examiner before tbelr ' i FOR PRESIDENT Theodore Roosevelt FOR kncTritESIDENT Chas, W. Fairbanks of Indiana. EXPERIENCE WITH PROTECTION. ' It la ruaiomary for our friend of la tha opposition, whenever a campaign distribution on ' to bewail tha unequal to point of wealth In tbla country, duwuw and tearfully to tha favored massr. and to den the aa an nounce the protective tariff to on-rthe vuay ngency for "robbing down-trodde- the few." d Of conrae. there are rich people the In are poor jieople and the latter common than majority. Thrift la leaa st The genlua for avumii-1waatefutneaa. ecfor Ion, for bualneae nniarprlre, onomy. tor perceiving and graaj.lng to unit lea, for adapting meant are ende, le leee prevalent than lJkewlae, auch characterlallce. talent a aa make alaleemen. orator, Inmualciane, poets, mathematician!. poaaeaa-avent ore, aatrononiera. etc., are human being. by tha minority of la undoubtedly rich to get The ability of Inlmrn temmetier a much aa quite of achievethe la faculty perament aa of epeclal enline other In ment any deavor. ot Hut what la the actual condition In respect Watea affaire In Ihe United to three mettere! It la typified by two Items of Information to which the New York 'Commercial" time alludae: The official announcement that the etock boldera of llie Pennsylvania 44.950 Railroad company now number since May ea Increase of 57 per cent, of testimony bit 190J la a algnlflcant fact that hors 1q a new quarter to the wealth of the the In the United ISlatea wide distil remarkably country baa a Iyear about two button. and n half mttllona of people In New York Slate had deposits In savings d of the enbanka practically their end aggregate tire population It.lU.OtiO.WtO. In the exceeded deposits entire United States there were 7.035.-ghold-Ing- a savings hank drixnrttors, wllh -- an aveIS.935.ono.oim exceeding rse of $117.51 for eai li dopoultor. and the largest average of any country In the world whose slatlMh-- are available." II should he added I hat the Untied fustm has mine home owners then any ruber country In Ihe world, and that !e people are the heel dressed, licet fed and beet whistled of all human beings. Tbla is the rnnnlry to which all the world floe ks and from which nobody Wlfihes to depart. II has made Us and greatest progress under pnitm-tlnneviall the direct and dence Is lu favor of that economic system. op-no- rt e opi-nlt- -t one-thir- g Manufactures formed nearly one-haof the capons from the State in the month of July. Speaking with statiatlcal accuracy, they formed 43.27 per cent of the total domestic exports. For tha Aral time in tha history of the United Stales manufactures are exceeding agricultural product In the exportation of product. Figure juat issued the Department of Com more and by Labor, through Us Bureau of Statistics, show that In the month of July menu-- , factum cxiiorted amounted to 40 million dollars, against 31 millions of agricultural produris; and in the month of Juno manufacture amounted lo nrarly 43 mlMkraa. against 37 millions of agricultural product. In former years agricultural products have greatly exceeded manufacture In (he exports of the country, and it It only In recent mouths that manufactures have equaled or exceeded agricultural products In thv export statements. Even In (he seven month ending with July, 1904, agricultural products exreed manufacture by nearly 100 million dollar, but in the month of May, 1904. manufactures for the first time la thd history of the country exceeded agricultural produris In the statement of domestic exports, and this was again the ease In Juno and In July. In the month of May. 1904, export of manufactures exceeded agricultural product hy about 1 million dollar; In June the excess of manufactures over agricultural products was over 4 million dollars; and In July the excess of manufactures over waa nearly 9 agricultural product mllloa dollar. In the three monthe of May, June, and July, 1904. the total valuo of agricultural product exported waa $140,503,133, while llie total value of manufacture. exported In Ihe sanio lf porlml w SATISFIED WITH CUTLER. i fisnl-tulf- w-r- 1 Ms-ci- TONIC. The pettUnated Irmiyali'.irr who doe the ki yilng fur the Bowwow." cow that the poodle la in Maine taking the KeeFy cure, has a hysterical at-t- lt le in last evening's issue and assume lo Alma Chambers for the alleged shortcomings of one. young Mr. Uan.-vin- . There Is a general feeling of aatis faction In the mind of nioxt of our i Itl-.with the nomination nf John C. I,,r 'v;rn"r T1U,P Hvu,,liraB All parlies aeein Slate convention. agreed in saying that Mr. Wells ha made a good record as good and nif- lie better than Mr. Cutler will mak but. Mr. Wells has held th position fur nine years, and the people feel that It Is contrary to the gnnln of our Anierhan litxtltutUius to make terms of Hum much ofilrr tbat. Furtherlonger more. if one cli Hen bus too much of the public patronage ii keeps other from getting their share. Reirctary Hammond has made a good officer- - lx a capable gentleman, and doiihtlcxa would have been a good governor, but be ha had a long pull at the public service, and H is but fair that someone else should have a chance. It it often iivgfrf by men who have an eav way of making money that the higher official are not paid xiiflfi Irnt for'tbc-services in nnr state, but hero are two nf them who. notwithstanding thc:r aud the fact that they are probably as good material for the business as the stute affords, were qui w tiling to sueceed themselves at the old price. Iron County Record, the treasurer's deputy, Thu draw-luck- , poor old aiiy evidently suffering from some ailment pcruiisr to women A VICTORY FOR MUSIC. ot and we ailvlxe her to avot l excitement and try a buttle of Lydia Some nf the faddists have born Pin k ham's famous remedy; (ailing 'o leimirg great things for mitxtt nf lute, obtain relief in Ibis manner, it is pox-- from curing Insanity to sttbsi it uting for fu.nl. The Port Arthur hand hie that Pink Pill for Pale People breakfari wiil he In a imsiTUm to furnish Monte I lie lienefit. of It migii on that p.iuit if it ever expert perhaps that the grand motherly old wiut get ay. San Jure News shout d have hysteric, hut the g mi' THE AMERICAN GAME. people of Orii should not hr both ' ere with her truuhit The cnnvirlitii of four poker p'.j- - yar. si na-ur- . g buy. cn M.I.r.VSTURH SM A PRESS Kinery county Republicans and Democrats are agreed on one proposition this year, I. e., that In this county la now tieing harvested the grealcat grain crop ever grown here. Nearly every frutt tree of bearing age ha been, or of Is now laden with fruit. Vrgetabl remarkable all kinds are showing Jidda. Lire stock in the fields or on the ranges are fat and sleek. No storm nor drouth have checked tha efat. Desert Lake fort of anyone-exc- ept r make thv' crop yield of Emery county the greatest in Its history. Every man who has made an effort In this valley this wesson to raise a crop ha hceti abundantly rewarded. With these conditions In evidence and the prospects of a railroad next year almost crysisllaed Into a icrlatnty, the campaign ranter who pushe the calamity billion on the atump here this fall should be given a front. Emery County Irogrcsa. I dering tribe, who bad no settled home but chone some chieftain, renowned for hla courage, and under him journeyed about with their wive and children, flocks and herd. Among these was a tribe whose descendants we call s Turk, hut what they called them-elveIn that time I now forgotten. They grew tired of wandering and seltled down and began to build cities. The Arab, however, would not leave them In peace, but mastered them and made them pay tribute. They endured it for awhile, then they taw their way to liberty. The Arabs, being a very warlike people, made the Turks supply them every year with a certain number of strong young men to nerve aa soldiers, and the next year these young men were sent bark and new men were taken in their place. Boon the whole trbe knew how the Arabs fought, became good horsemen and clever raiders, and they persuaded one of their bravest chieftains, Beljuk, to rebel and so they conquered their conquerors, Persia was then a rich and powerful country, with grand and beautiful cities, and ruled over by Caliph noted for their wisdom. These Caliphs learned that the Turks were the handsomest men In the world, and so they ent out and hired some of them to come into Persia to be bodyguard for them. This ended In the Turks becoming mMtcra of the country, for they were wideawake, enterprising, and lived a plain life, while the Persian were lasy, self indulgent and cared little for iheir country. In Perils the Turk learned of Mohammed and his religion, and as both encouraged fighting and the pillaging nf all that did not agree with them, the Turks became Moil am medians, and remain so to this day. The kingdom founded by Sclijuk became great and powerful, and threatened to take in all of Asia and perhaps Africa, when there appeared upon it border one of (hn fiercest tribes of fighters ever known In the Ghengie world, lod hy the terrible Khan. This tribe swept through western Al. burning town and cities. and murdering and robbing, and they carrying desolation wherever we.it. The Turks, brave es they were, could uol stand before them, and fled from their homes, the tribe sralter-inSeveral in different directions. tribes scitled in southwestern Asia and joining together kept the Mongols, as Uhengls Kahn's tribe wa called, at far-awa- y NO PLACE FOR CALAMITY HOWLER. $120,759,769. GRANDMOTHER NEEDS hy the An indignant letter dictated by a clever old gentleman runs thus; "Sir, my stenographer, betng a lady, cannot take down what I think of you. I. being a gentleman, cannot express it; but you, being neither, ran Teadlly divine II." Which applies in a sense to the Tribune proprietor's course politically In the opinion of true Republicans; That there U a marked growth la is the exportation uf manufacture shown hy a comparison of the figures of 1941 with those of carl in year. The toll value of manufactures caponed lit ihe 7 month ending with July, Will, lx $285,495,723. or an average of more than 40 million dollars per month. In Ihe 7 momli ending , with July, limit, tbo total waa an a v ci age of I! 5 million per nHinili. At i hm rale of the oxiNirtx of cmnufai'i lire during (hn cal endar year limt would exceed Hiomc of 1943 by iilmiil tin million dollar, and bring the grand total for Ibe year far lu exec of any preceding year. While it true, a above stated, that l ho exports of manufacture tn the months of May, June and July have exceeded the exports of agrieullural products. It should not Ih Hint the total manufactures exported during the entire year will exceed die total value of agrieullural products exported. It I quite apparent., however, that the proportioj which manufactures' form of the total exports i steadily Inci'caxing and that the proportion which agricultural product form uf the toial export steadily decreasing. Future Greatneet Fourteen hundred yeare ago Central The Salt ke morning Demortatlc Kearns organ has an editorial on tha Retirement of Hill." It le In a position to present a more timely editorial with more foundation and withal of more lo the 'people of Utah on the Retirement of Kearua.' PITH OF THE of Asia waa peopled by many fierce, wan- ing Reptibllran Kearns organ might point out wherein It aided the candidacy of any Weberltei. iiiidv-rxto- jen er Vision How Hie Wonderful Dream Came True. Besides bewailing the fact that Weber County Republicans were slighted on the State ticket the Salt Lake morn- 1 partly manulactured goods show an Increase from bu.5on.onti yen tw G5,- 040.000 yen. Export of manufactured liti.isHi.-40goods show an increase from More half than 40.040,040. In yen of this gain is in silk goods, bui cot Ion lisvuPt have also been shipix-more lamely. Among the imports raw materials show Increases in almot-- ail directions. It. ports of hixuri'i, among which sugar la classed as tho main ltm. rose from 24 JRtn 'iu yea to 24 cn:ton yen. fthlrtinu and print,' however, showed a very decid ed decline. The miscci'aneoiia group, a, which cuDsista mainly of shows an increase from ti2.75ii.iii0 y u to 72,004 Onu yen. The imixuts for the six month valued at an i a crease of 7"o.ihhj yen aa compared wiib b Him half of 1903. Pay men's (or the war maier-1are doubtless respons-'iii.fur ih( laig iiH'il uf bullion and How He Had It dciiende on how many spelta be haa in Maine whether the iVcent oratorical Importation from Utah will he lm-rca- It la of interest to nwe that owing to Japan's command iff I ho sea her foxst-tiras the foreign trade has not rrsuh of i lie war, hut on the cona cmMidi-rahlexpansion, trary For the lir- -t six months of the present year ihe expuri were valued at 157.of over 1 1, Rod, 504.000 j n. an POO as compared with the corresponding period of last year, llaw materials. of which thr most Important are roal and ropprr, show a decline from to 20.7U1 .582 yen. hilt :9.4:e.059 Osmond, First of the Sultans ticket. spell-bind- Considerable haa been done to regen- erate Egypt In the past fifty yean, hut more progress ha been made on the lower course of the Colorado, a region which la much the same a the valley ot the Nile. Grass Valley Union. xl Hon. James Moyle la of the opinion that the optimism of Hon. William unless warranted Rnylance la put Ihe Utah Democratic Muylo head regarded aa a down east Democrats, THE AMERICAN NILE'S VALLEY. to establiah poker a a game of skill Instead of chance. In California this particular mode of gambling la not punished on account of lu classification. Pasadena News , Nearly 800 miles of telephone wire have already been put' up In Abyssinia, and a thousand miles more are being strung. $24!,-C07Ji52- TRADE. era In Honolulu leads the Oakland Enquirer to remark that the American game follows the flag, but It takes time It seems If Pence visit Salt Lake as he intend, Ihe people there are prepared to make him appear pound foolish. 1-- . FOREIGN In 1903 Spain produced 6,829,417,877 laiunda of grape on 3,538.277 acres. all of 11 waa made Into wine. EXPORTS. MANI'KACTURINO s .UFAN'M Story of an old lady who made a terrible scarecrow and then scared Into fits over her uwn handiwork. coin-pluU-- of New York. Osman went boldly to see the father "I think not.' of Muonbrigbt, and told him that one "Hs'e too old to i raw-night when he had fallen iato a deep That's :i right." be dreamed aaw that he sleep the "He occupies a while M v Q Mounbright sitting up in her U'Uirwr'ment is crowded." bower, and. suddenly out of ber heart "Thai the lault uj ( ,, . i there came a bright moon that sailed mine.'' aiNitit lu tjie blue sky until it found 'And there are people iDii;r. him. then slowly iink to rest within "Well, that' not my effn-hi breast, and he said that be dream"See here, madam, i i,ivin . lCl ,il ed that from li body there began to argue the matter!" grow a tree. It arose, tailor and taller, "It wouldnt do you any 0 4 and it blanches spread out over th gits it ith me. whole earth, and the rivers, aud the oil'll have to pa for tiun b -mountain and the seas. He aaw the "I never have yet, ana I'm nut rivers all covered with boat, and th to begin now. t0,L4 seas with ship laden wiib rich good. "Dent tu you expect wiB ' wide He plain covered with blos- time?" soming orchard)), where the birds 'That's not the question sang, aud whore happy people labored "If you Laten t bad to p4, fr . binding up the grain or gathering tbs you been very lin k, etei fruit. He saw beaiuiful cities with don du htuch traveling." mosque and minarets, palace and '1' lowers, and all these were under th ayrar.sheltering branches of the great three . "lou'M have to pay for h:m that grew out of hi hotly. or I shall be obliged to pu him , '"That won't help you o While he looked Ta 4 maiYcted lu thie dream, he saw the eruea nf the juonej out of me.1 You know what the ruic. Christian and the crescent of Mohamarf. Bi- med. and a wind coming front the cast am. 1 never "No. reed them." (lashed the crescent against the cross "How old lx that, boy?'' and against the crows of Constantine, "I don't know. I never and suatrered ihtm. In this dreatn he saw. too, the city fore. Yon hotter ask the old of Conataatinople, which wa then the man who's axlnep three nest tin Tm-on together at ihe laxt station." apital of the empire of the East, one got of the most splendid vitic in the Mrs Carrie Chapman Can. thrm whole world, and ruled over by EmtaLo-ident of peror whose courts were marvel or tion. wasthe Woman Suffrage citing diplomatic wickedness aud luxury. This Constan1 w children work. tinople, In his dream, became a huge making A Chicago woman," she raid hu diamond fcet between two seas that were sapphires, and these were lit a little boy who hates to practuw vJ, last fall she told me that ia great ring which God was offering ing. him. He waa Just about to put it ou matter of writing h could do noth-o- . with the lad. But in December, his finger when he awoke. I met her again, she said, eompiaro!- The father of the Mounbright Lady was much astonished at this wonderful Well. Harry spend quite two houn dream. He had never heard anything a day now at. his writing like it in hi life, and it wa all no con" How n the world, midregularly I, did n nected and yet o strange, that he bring this miracle to paar The woman winked thought it must moan something very " I told him. she mid.alightly. important. He waa a lawyer, and ought to maksm to have known something of the way in hit very best hand, a list ot an. in which people will lie when they are thing be wanted for Christina, utn trying to accomplish an object.' but haa been at It ever since. he a earn to bare thought this dream genuine. At all eveuu. he went to the fortune tellers and they declared that It meant that Osman wa to marry the Mounbright Lady aud to have iiutny ALL EIGHTH GRADE children, and that these were to conGRADUATES quer the whole world and carry the will receive 60 per cent os crescent even to Constantinople itself. ftn al! pictures taken within th The dream wa fold on the street next 30 days at GASBERG8 and in Ihe ntarket place, and finally R 278 25th 8b reached the ears of the Sultan himself. f STUDIO, Osman and the Moonbrlgjit Lady were married, for her father was eager for the match when he learned from the fortunetellers what the dream meant, and the Sultan sent for Osmah and gave him lands and wealth and command of many men. His power grew as the fame of his dream spread, and was It not "coming truer Had be not indeed married the lady, as the dream To unload schooners at th Lake Beer halt. predicted? It Is tha placa to get tha longest ul As the years .went on, Osman showed that he was a great' man, and when the tallest, the biggest and coldest schooa-e- r of bear In town for five cent. Sultan died leaving no children, Osman Choicest whiskies brandies sad vtai was made Sultan. It was he who beall kind of aoft drinks. FIm gan those conquests that made the and Call in Turks the masters of Constantinople lino ofascigars in town.and sampls w you pass by and sent them Into Europe to be ita goods. terror for many centuries and its Comer 25th aud Llaeoln avsnug hame to this day. It waa he who placed upon the sea those pirate ships known as "corsairs," that were as destructive to the commerce of the Christian upon the water the Turk were terrible upon land, and in his long life of seventy years be bnilt up the Turkish power on strong and l a Manager. GLA8MANN, AUGURT31, 190ft. re from only 3.S00.UU4 ven in EXPORTATION OF AMERICAN COAL. of 1303 to nearly half first the Mr. Henry S. Fleming, nei relary of n) jcu in the firtt half of the the Bituminous Coal Trade Associacurrent year. Di tion, in an article on fominen-ia- l Coal Mar the of NEW CURRENCY SYSTEM Magi-cIdo- , IN THE PHILIPPINES. kets." published in the Mining the folof New Yrnk, present To ad appearance the new currency ic wing Informal ion relative to the exaysleni. alatui the ready adoption of portation of American cnal: which some doubts were expressed, ta la 1942 our tidal expuils uf aiithi'-cltcoal were T.57u,4!'0 Iona, of which going into operation without friction 1.502,373 tuna were ship lied into CanHrai-in Ibe Philippine Islands, says ada. The total exports In 19i3 were reels. It was supiKwed tbat the na- 1.3si.8.r,3 bins, of which lJUi9J37S toni tive uf the ixUndx could not be In- were spiii to Canada. Our total export.) 5.448,-89duced readily to kui render the Mexi- of bllurniiipua coal In 1942 were of which 3,235,524 tons went tons, coins can doliars and the 8uuiiah Into Canada ( 3.25fl,lMio loua all rail with which they had been familiar over the lander between Ohio and Verfor years in favor of the new Philip- mont): 454,000 ions to Europe; 2"i.-00- 0 tom to South America and 551.440 proMjbttd by the Msiiwidn. pine Iona to Mexico and Central America. have to shown is This kiipiHiMlion In 1948 our total exports of bituminous been grouudh'ks in a recent hitter of coal were 5.210,0i0 tons, of which Hecrciaiy iilc to the chief uf the In- 3,492,000 went Into Canada, most of it 70,000 sular bureau in Washington, in which by the northern border; aboutto South tons to Kuniiie, 110,000 tons he says that the new currency scheme America and bCj.OUU ton to Mexico and has made greui progtess and that near- Central America. Alluding to the fart that Great Britly all of the bunincss bouses have husi-nes- a ain (a practically our only compel it)" hy com i viii com nt put iheir on the basis of Ihe new curren- among the foreign countries to whi h is said llml the Whole of the we export coal, Mr. Fleming saya: Il cy. The coal fields of Great Britain are old currency will uol lie eliminated vary fully developed and work already until Ihe lasing law gel a iairly to an 23u to 250 days per average of work, bin for all practical purposes year, while the region within reach of the new currency will have eliminated tidewater here have a large undeveluD-e- d Territory and do nut work an averthe old and taken Ha place by January age of over 200 daya ier year. An inWhen the process u 1, ltuj. crease of thirty days' working time front thirty to forty millions would produce nearly Itt.OOO.Oul) tons of dollars lu debased currency will available for export. have lieen eliminated and a currency baaed on the gold standard substituted, and IhU will have taken place EDITORIAL COMMENT within a year and a half. which THE EXAMINER WM. OfJDES, UTAH, WEDNESDAY MORNING, EXAMINER, . Turkish settleIn ihi smiihwei-terment. In the year 1258, there was born Turkish lo the chief of one of the tribes a son whom he called Osman. The chief was not a rich man. for he wa one of those who had wandered far with his people, and had come late ialo the southwest. The nlher Turks had been settled there for so many years that they rather looked upon him as a foreigner, and he had very little voice in the council of the nation, and little Influence. Osman grew up among the people one of the handsomest lads and one of the bravest among them. Tall and straight as an arrow, with dark-blu- e k eyea, clear olive skin and hair, he had a voice tbat was like music, and a smile ao sweet that it charmed young and old alike. None could ride a horse aa well, shoot an arrow aa far, or fling n atone disc with auch force a could Osman, among nil the boys of hi tribe. He was respectful to the old and a favorite with the young, but alas, he was poor, and wbea he fell in love with the moat beautiful woman among the Seljuks, all his accomplishments were as nothing, for her father was rich, and no poor suitor waa allowed lo pay court to hie daughter. This daughter la described by the old poets as The Muonbrigbt Lady," b disuse sbe waa the fairest in tbo world, and all other ladies were to her bright beauty aa the stars are to the moon. Her lipe were said to bo like the flower of the pomegranate; her voice the song of the nightingale; her perfumed tresses like a night in sum mer when the roses are in bloom; her eyes like the velvet darkness of midnight; her hand like the snow upon the mountain; and. her heart like white lily floating on an untroubled lake. This kind of description was common with the poets in those daya, and the poets of our own times say things that are Just as extravagant yet It seems certain that the Moon-briggreat beauty, and Lady waa like other great beauties who have many lovers, qbe delighted in torturto ing them by making no effort choose between them. Many a time Osman sang love songs tinder this lady's window, and sent ber the richest gifts he could afford, but her father laughed at him and the Nnnnhright object of his affection seemed to shine fur others as she did for him. At last Osman's constancy was re warded. The lady began to show him that she loved him better than any of the others, and finally she contrived to meet him In the garden, where they had a long and tender Interview, tn whirl) they mad a plan lo soften the heart of her father. Among the people of th east dream is considered to be a direct revelation from God, And there arc. In the or Orient, even today, soothsayer, fortune tellers, who Interpret dreams, the soothsayers did in Bible just times, and from dreams tell the future of the dreamer. Osman determined to have a wonder Hit dream. It may he that he actually did have it. but the rhanres were that be dreamed with hie eye wide open and that he carefully invented the dream and told it to his ladylove, and he helped him perfect IL coal-blac- 3G il esa I I j BsstCBSlG WANTED 1.000 MEN evwy-bod- y D. W. CATTJ Proprietor firm WILL YOU fonnd'inn. It was from this Osman that the present "Ottoman" Empire takes its name and thirty-liv- e Sultana of his blood have sat upon the throne of Turkey, an unbroken line from father to son to this very hour, the only country in thd world except Japan that can boast of such a continuous line of rulers. The Mounbright Lady who married Osman no doubt 'lived happily ever after, and though they have both been dead for more than 500 years, the story of their love and of the dream that founded an empire Is still sung by Turkish poets and poor Turkish lads who are in lovo and are warned thereby that if they have youth, strength and the favor of Allah they must be blessed in love and fortunate In war. And whether fortunate; or unfortunate. they are taught that Allah helps those who help themselves. LOU V. CHAPIN Invest In a place of unimproved kadi ! I -In Wabar Countyf Adjoining Improved farms? Half mils from R. R. Statfonf - 1 Right next ta Irrigation Canalf Providing you can buy aa ineaiMy payments? Say $10 or $18 or $20 par sMntht lf Or quartarlyt ' Or annual payments?, A And no Intereett And no taxes f Tha owner to pay taxes and m tinue to uo the land until It ia !M(y paid fort If So X Said place of land will coal fiM $400 for 20 acre. 8800 for 40 lcres. $1,200 for 81 acre SHORT STORIES. The railroad conductor ia supposed to be able to look through at the conscience of a traveler and find out if a ticket Is still due the railroad. One of them o (filial Mopped recently hy seat In which was a smell poy, kneeling. of conrae. so that hi shoe were oiling the covering nf the seat, and a woman whose face was a declaration v & SONS CO. HUNrER & KENNEDY Room 6, First National Bank Utah. Ogden; Building of Independence. She handed the man in braes button s single tirket. then folded her hand as If her duty wa done. But the conductor was not satisfied. His official glance took measure of the boy, who wa staring at the landscape through with which he bad greasy finger-markdecorated the window. , . I shall have to ask you for a ticket for that boy. madam." ( MONEY LOANED SALARIED FEOPlt Real Estate and Service quick, confidential private. No eomnitesk; CO. WE8TERN BROKER Ecclrt Bldg 321-Thona 634-x- . s 4 BIRCH. SPANISH CEDAR. s For Interior Flnlslu CARRIED IN STOCK BY . Eccles Lumber Co. Telephone 728 j Addrtss or Call oa QUARTERED OAK, I. L. CLARK 0 . POPLAR, GEORGIA PINE Wt wil placa on sals the largest and most varied collection of Now Fall Styles in TAILORED SUITS it has ever been our pleasure to offer oo early in the eeseon. The ladire of Ogden are invited to call and inspect this tins of suits. ysa Mt YELLOW ; : TOMORROW : : ( 154 Twenty-fourt- h Street Lumber Wo aim have a complete stock of Oregon Material. other Building and |